Acute Coronary Syndrome (ACS) Clinical Trial
Official title:
Determining the Optimum Treatment Cutoffs for Cardiac Troponin Assays in Patients Presenting to the Emergency Department With Suspected Cardiac Ischemia
Blood tests may be able to quickly identify and exclude patients that are having a heart attack. Using these tests in the Emergency Department (ED) may lead to faster treatment, a reduced wait time, and quicker discharge for patients presenting with symptoms suggestive of a heart attack.
Myocardial ischemia is a reduction in coronary blood flow insufficient for heart cell
(myocardiocyte) demand. Prolonged ischemia results in myocardiocyte injury, death and
necrosis i.e., myocardial infarction (MI). Cardiovascular disease resulting in myocardial
ischemia is a major cause of morbidity and mortality worldwide. Acute coronary syndrome (ACS)
is a spectrum of clinical presentations of acute myocardial ischemia ranging from
ST-elevation MI (STEMI) to non-STEMI (NSTEMI) and unstable angina (UA). Because ACS portends
a high-risk of death, treatment is time sensitive and delays to diagnosis and definitive care
may decrease survival. However, the treatment-associated risk of bleeding, stroke and death
also necessitate an accurate diagnosis of ACS.
Chest pain is the most common symptom of ACS and is the main cause of emergency department
(ED) visits by the middle-aged and the second most common presenting complaint in other age
groups accounting for up to 500,000 ED visits in Canada and 5 million in the United States of
America (USA) each year. In 2005, the number of ED visits for chest pain increased by 20%
over the previous decade and, as the median age of the western world's population increases
over the next decade, EDs will assess more chest pain patients for ACS than ever before.
Because chest pain is a common presenting complaint and a symptom of many non-ACS conditions,
the diagnosis of ACS is challenging. STEMI is diagnosed by specific electrocardiogram (ECG)
findings whereas NSTEMI and UA are clinically indistinguishable because of the similarity in
symptoms and transient or non-specific ECG findings at presentation. Differentiation of
NSTEMI from the less severe UA is based on whether the ischemic myocardial injury is severe
enough to release detectable concentrations of a myocardiocyte-specific protein, cardiac
troponin (cTn). Therefore, patients with ACS symptoms and a non-diagnostic ECG are diagnosed
with NSTEMI if their troponin level is above the cutoff concentration while similar patients
with troponin levels below the cutoff are diagnosed with UA but both are admitted for
treatment. However, patients with atypical symptoms with cTn concentrations below the cutoff
represent a clinical dilemma and are usually discharged from the ED without any treatment or
understanding of their risk of an ACS-related event within the next days, weeks or months.
Within the next year, many Canadian laboratories will replace their current cTn tests with
the new high-sensitivity cardiac troponin assays (hs-cTn) that are analytically more
sensitive and more precise at lower concentrations. This change could have a significant
impact on EDs and the healthcare system in general. First and foremost, application of the
current cutoff definition for NSTEMI to the newer hs-cTn assays will produce an increase in
the prevalence of NSTEMI that may or may not be a true increase. This will result in more
patients admitted to hospital and given high-risk therapies but with unknown overall changes
in morbidity and mortality. Second, recent evidence suggests that the newer assays can help
diagnose MI earlier and incremental hs-cTn measurements are potentially prognostic for future
cardiovascular events (CVE) including death. Therefore, this inevitable change in assays has
the potential to stress current healthcare resources or significantly improve ACS diagnosis
and subsequent outcomes. The primary barrier to achieving optimum clinical benefit from the
implementation of hs-cTn is the current lack of information. Specifically, the studies on
hs-cTn assay cutoffs for early MI diagnosis in North American populations are limited and
published research on hs-cTn assays for risk stratification in the ED is non-existent.
The investigators primary objective is to determine which hs-cTn concentration(s) are most
predictive of a composite outcome of CVE over time in ED patients presenting with ACS
symptoms. In the same population, the investigators also will determine if an early change in
cTn and hs-cTn concentrations is more predictive than the peak cTn and hs-cTn concentrations
of the composite outcome over time. The investigators intention is that physicians will be
able to apply the prognostic cTn and hs-cTn cutoffs from their study results to prescribe the
most time-appropriate interventions for their patients. The expected effect of generalized
application of the investigators results being positive changes in patient safety, survival,
secondary ACS prevention and even ED overcrowding.
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