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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT02709135
Other study ID # IRB00036229
Secondary ID
Status Completed
Phase
First received
Last updated
Start date December 2016
Est. completion date August 30, 2018

Study information

Verified date September 2018
Source Wake Forest University Health Sciences
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Observational

Clinical Trial Summary

Approximately 8-10 million patients complaining of chest pain present to an Emergency Department (ED) annually in the United States. These patients are a challenge to healthcare providers, who are tasked with determining whether these symptoms are due to an acute coronary syndrome (ACS) or a non-ACS cause.In an effort to improve the quality and value of care for patients with acute chest pain, our group recently validated a risk stratification pathway, the HEART Pathway, which is designed to focus cardiac testing and admissions on higher-risk patients, who are more likely to benefit from testing.While the HEART score has been well validated in the ED setting, it has yet to be implemented in a prehospital setting. Paramedics are often the first providers to evaluate and begin treating patients with symptoms concerning for ACS. Current pre-hospital risk stratification is largely based on a combination of ECG results and paramedic gestalt. Since ECGs without signs of a STEMI (ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction) are poor predictors of ACS, paramedics often have difficulty distinguishing high-risk patients from low-risk patients.Thus, multidisciplinary leaders within Emergency Medicine, Cardiology, and Prehospital Medicine have agreed that a limited/pilot evaluation of the HEART Score with Abbott's i-STAT® point-of-care (POC) troponin testing in the prehospital setting is needed. To establish the feasibility and accuracy of HEART score and POC testing in the prehospital setting the investigators propose a quality surveillance study of a limited implementation of the HEART score with POC troponin testing.


Description:

Approximately 8-10 million patients complaining of chest pain present to an Emergency Department (ED) annually in the United States. These patients are a challenge to healthcare providers, who are tasked with determining whether these symptoms are due to an acute coronary syndrome (ACS) or a non-ACS cause. Missing the diagnosis of ACS is associated with high rates of morbidity, mortality, and malpractice claims. Therefore, to avoid missing the diagnosis of ACS, patients with chest pain typically undergo extensive evaluations at an estimated cost of $10-13 billion annually. However, less than 10% of these patients are ultimately diagnosed with ACS. As the US healthcare system shifts towards a value-based model, it is clear that the current care patterns for acute chest pain, which fail to focus health system resources, such as hospitalization and cardiac testing, on patients most likely to benefit, are not sustainable. In an effort to improve the quality and value of care for patients with acute chest pain, our group recently validated a risk stratification pathway, the HEART Pathway, which is designed to focus cardiac testing and admissions on higher-risk patients, who are more likely to benefit from testing. The HEART Pathway, which utilizes an easy to use clinical decision aid (the HEART score) and serial troponin measurement, has been shown to significantly reduce objective cardiac testing (stress testing and coronary angiography), shorten hospital length of stay, and increase the early discharge rate from the Emergency Department among patients with acute chest pain. These important efficiency gains occur without missing ACS and without increasing return visits to the ED or downstream admissions to the hospital over a 30 day period. While the HEART score has been well validated in the ED setting, it has yet to be implemented in a prehospital setting. Paramedics are often the first providers to evaluate and begin treating patients with symptoms concerning for ACS. Current pre-hospital risk stratification is largely based on a combination of ECG results and paramedic gestalt. Since ECGs without signs of a STEMI are poor predictors of ACS, paramedics often have difficulty distinguishing high-risk patients from low-risk patients. Therefore, integrating objective risk stratification tools, such as the HEART score and point-of-care troponin testing, into Emergency Medical Services (EMS) triage and destination plans represents an opportunity to improve care. Furthermore, expanding use of the HEART score to paramedics in the pre-hospital setting is a natural extension of our prior work, especially given the growing sophistication of mobile integrated healthcare ("community paramedicine") over the last decade. Thus, multidisciplinary leaders within Emergency Medicine, Cardiology, and Prehospital Medicine have agreed that a limited/pilot evaluation of the HEART Score with Abbott's i-STAT® point-of-care (POC) troponin testing in the prehospital setting is needed. The investigators anticipate that a standardized approach to paramedic risk stratification using the HEART score with Abbott's i-STAT® POC troponin testing will be feasible and achieve high accuracy for the detection of ACS. Ultimately the investigators believe this planned implementation will improve the quality and value of chest pain care. Placing these tools in the hands of our first responders will identify patients with ACS earlier and speed the delivery of potentially life-saving care. For example, EMS triage and destination plans (chest pain treatment and transportation triage and destination plans) could be amended so that patients with positive POC troponins or high HEART scores could be transported directly to a hospital with cardiac catheterization capabilities, avoiding delays and costs associated with inter-facility transfers. However, before EMS triage and destination plans can fully incorporate the HEART score and POC troponin testing, first the feasibility of such an implementation must be established by collecting quality surveillance data. To establish the feasibility and accuracy of HEART score and POC testing in the prehospital setting the investigators propose a quality surveillance study of a limited implementation of the HEART score with POC troponin testing. This pilot will include paramedics from three demographically distinct counties (Forsyth, Surry, and Stokes counties) in North Carolina, who will begin using the HEART score and i-STAT POC Troponin as part of their risk assessment for patients with acute chest pain. However, EMS triage and transportation plans will not be altered based on the HEART score assessment until feasibility and accuracy have been established. To ensure the feasibility and accuracy of paramedic chest pain risk assessment the investigators will be performing surveillance of electronic health records (EHR) and contacting patients by phone (which is a common practice in EMS quality assurance). Quality surveillance participants (n=500) will be identified retrospectively and quality assurance data will be collected electronically using EHR (EMS records, and Wake Forest Baptist Health health records) and via telephone follow-up calls (which are customary in EMS quality assurance projects).


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 511
Est. completion date August 30, 2018
Est. primary completion date August 30, 2018
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender All
Age group 21 Years and older
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria: - age greater than or equal to 21 years - Non-traumatic chest discomfort or other symptoms consistent with possible - Patient being transported to Wake Forest Baptist Health ED for further care Exclusion Criteria: - ST-segment elevation in contiguous leads on any electrocardiogram - Inter-facility transfers - Short Pre-hospital times: anticipated scene + transportation time less than 5 mins - Unstable vitals signs - Known terminal diagnosis with life expectancy less than 1 year - Concomitant non-cardiac medical, surgical, or psychiatric emergency

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Locations

Country Name City State
United States Wake Forest School Of Medicine Winston-Salem North Carolina

Sponsors (1)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
Wake Forest University Health Sciences

Country where clinical trial is conducted

United States, 

References & Publications (25)

Backus BE, Six AJ, Kelder JC, Bosschaert MA, Mast EG, Mosterd A, Veldkamp RF, Wardeh AJ, Tio R, Braam R, Monnink SH, van Tooren R, Mast TP, van den Akker F, Cramer MJ, Poldervaart JM, Hoes AW, Doevendans PA. A prospective validation of the HEART score for chest pain patients at the emergency department. Int J Cardiol. 2013 Oct 3;168(3):2153-8. doi: 10.1016/j.ijcard.2013.01.255. Epub 2013 Mar 7. — View Citation

Backus BE, Six AJ, Kelder JC, Mast TP, van den Akker F, Mast EG, Monnink SH, van Tooren RM, Doevendans PA. Chest pain in the emergency room: a multicenter validation of the HEART Score. Crit Pathw Cardiol. 2010 Sep;9(3):164-9. doi: 10.1097/HPC.0b013e3181ec36d8. — View Citation

Farkouh ME, Smars PA, Reeder GS, Zinsmeister AR, Evans RW, Meloy TD, Kopecky SL, Allen M, Allison TG, Gibbons RJ, Gabriel SE. A clinical trial of a chest-pain observation unit for patients with unstable angina. Chest Pain Evaluation in the Emergency Room (CHEER) Investigators. N Engl J Med. 1998 Dec 24;339(26):1882-8. — View Citation

Fleischmann KE, Goldman L, Johnson PA, Krasuski RA, Bohan JS, Hartley LH, Lee TH. Critical pathways for patients with acute chest pain at low risk. J Thromb Thrombolysis. 2002 Apr;13(2):89-96. Review. — View Citation

Goldstein JA, Gallagher MJ, O'Neill WW, Ross MA, O'Neil BJ, Raff GL. A randomized controlled trial of multi-slice coronary computed tomography for evaluation of acute chest pain. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2007 Feb 27;49(8):863-71. Epub 2007 Feb 12. — View Citation

Havas S. The ACCORD Trial and control of blood glucose level in type 2 diabetes mellitus: time to challenge conventional wisdom. Arch Intern Med. 2009 Jan 26;169(2):150-4. doi: 10.1001/archinternmed.2008.518. — View Citation

Heller GV, Stowers SA, Hendel RC, Herman SD, Daher E, Ahlberg AW, Baron JM, Mendes de Leon CF, Rizzo JA, Wackers FJ. Clinical value of acute rest technetium-99m tetrofosmin tomographic myocardial perfusion imaging in patients with acute chest pain and nondiagnostic electrocardiograms. J Am Coll Cardiol. 1998 Apr;31(5):1011-7. — View Citation

Hollander JE, Blomkalns AL, Brogan GX, Diercks DB, Field JM, Garvey JL, Gibler WB, Henry TD, Hoekstra JW, Holroyd BR, Hong Y, Kirk JD, O'Neil BJ, Jackson RE; Multidisciplinary Standardized Reporting Criteria Task Force. Standardized reporting guidelines for studies evaluating risk stratification of ED patients with potential acute coronary syndromes. Acad Emerg Med. 2004 Dec;11(12):1331-40. — View Citation

Kline JA, Mitchell AM, Runyon MS, Jones AE, Webb WB. Electronic medical record review as a surrogate to telephone follow-up to establish outcome for diagnostic research studies in the emergency department. Acad Emerg Med. 2005 Nov;12(11):1127-33. Epub 2005 Sep 15. — View Citation

Mahler SA, Hiestand BC, Goff DC Jr, Hoekstra JW, Miller CD. Can the HEART score safely reduce stress testing and cardiac imaging in patients at low risk for major adverse cardiac events? Crit Pathw Cardiol. 2011 Sep;10(3):128-33. doi: 10.1097/HPC.0b013e3182315a85. — View Citation

Mahler SA, Miller CD, Hollander JE, Nagurney JT, Birkhahn R, Singer AJ, Shapiro NI, Glynn T, Nowak R, Safdar B, Peberdy M, Counselman FL, Chandra A, Kosowsky J, Neuenschwander J, Schrock JW, Plantholt S, Diercks DB, Peacock WF. Identifying patients for early discharge: performance of decision rules among patients with acute chest pain. Int J Cardiol. 2013 Sep 30;168(2):795-802. doi: 10.1016/j.ijcard.2012.10.010. Epub 2012 Oct 30. — View Citation

Mahler SA, Riley RF, Hiestand BC, Russell GB, Hoekstra JW, Lefebvre CW, Nicks BA, Cline DM, Askew KL, Elliott SB, Herrington DM, Burke GL, Miller CD. The HEART Pathway randomized trial: identifying emergency department patients with acute chest pain for early discharge. Circ Cardiovasc Qual Outcomes. 2015 Mar;8(2):195-203. doi: 10.1161/CIRCOUTCOMES.114.001384. Epub 2015 Mar 3. — View Citation

McCaig LF, Nawar EW. National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey: 2004 emergency department summary. Adv Data. 2006 Jun 23;(372):1-29. — View Citation

Miró O, Antonio MT, Jiménez S, De Dios A, Sánchez M, Borrás A, Millá J. Decreased health care quality associated with emergency department overcrowding. Eur J Emerg Med. 1999 Jun;6(2):105-7. — View Citation

Owens PL, Barrett ML, Gibson TB, Andrews RM, Weinick RM, Mutter RL. Emergency department care in the United States: a profile of national data sources. Ann Emerg Med. 2010 Aug;56(2):150-65. doi: 10.1016/j.annemergmed.2009.11.022. Epub 2010 Jan 15. — View Citation

Pines JM, Isserman JA, Szyld D, Dean AJ, McCusker CM, Hollander JE. The effect of physician risk tolerance and the presence of an observation unit on decision making for ED patients with chest pain. Am J Emerg Med. 2010 Sep;28(7):771-9. doi: 10.1016/j.ajem.2009.03.019. Epub 2010 Feb 25. — View Citation

Pope JH, Aufderheide TP, Ruthazer R, Woolard RH, Feldman JA, Beshansky JR, Griffith JL, Selker HP. Missed diagnoses of acute cardiac ischemia in the emergency department. N Engl J Med. 2000 Apr 20;342(16):1163-70. — View Citation

Roger VL, Go AS, Lloyd-Jones DM, Adams RJ, Berry JD, Brown TM, Carnethon MR, Dai S, de Simone G, Ford ES, Fox CS, Fullerton HJ, Gillespie C, Greenlund KJ, Hailpern SM, Heit JA, Ho PM, Howard VJ, Kissela BM, Kittner SJ, Lackland DT, Lichtman JH, Lisabeth LD, Makuc DM, Marcus GM, Marelli A, Matchar DB, McDermott MM, Meigs JB, Moy CS, Mozaffarian D, Mussolino ME, Nichol G, Paynter NP, Rosamond WD, Sorlie PD, Stafford RS, Turan TN, Turner MB, Wong ND, Wylie-Rosett J; American Heart Association Statistics Committee and Stroke Statistics Subcommittee. Heart disease and stroke statistics--2011 update: a report from the American Heart Association. Circulation. 2011 Feb 1;123(4):e18-e209. doi: 10.1161/CIR.0b013e3182009701. Epub 2010 Dec 15. Erratum in: Circulation. 2011 Feb 15;123(6):e240. Circulation. 2011 Oct 18;124(16):e426. — View Citation

Rosamond W, Flegal K, Furie K, Go A, Greenlund K, Haase N, Hailpern SM, Ho M, Howard V, Kissela B, Kittner S, Lloyd-Jones D, McDermott M, Meigs J, Moy C, Nichol G, O'Donnell C, Roger V, Sorlie P, Steinberger J, Thom T, Wilson M, Hong Y; American Heart Association Statistics Committee and Stroke Statistics Subcommittee. Heart disease and stroke statistics--2008 update: a report from the American Heart Association Statistics Committee and Stroke Statistics Subcommittee. Circulation. 2008 Jan 29;117(4):e25-146. Epub 2007 Dec 17. Erratum in: Circulation. 2010 Jul 6;122(1):e10. Kissela, Bret [corrected to Kissela, Brett]. — View Citation

Six AJ, Backus BE, Kelder JC. Chest pain in the emergency room: value of the HEART score. Neth Heart J. 2008 Jun;16(6):191-6. — View Citation

Sørensen JT, Terkelsen CJ, Steengaard C, Lassen JF, Trautner S, Christensen EF, Nielsen TT, Bøtker HE, Andersen HR, Thygesen K. Prehospital troponin T testing in the diagnosis and triage of patients with suspected acute myocardial infarction. Am J Cardiol. 2011 May 15;107(10):1436-40. doi: 10.1016/j.amjcard.2011.01.014. Epub 2011 Mar 15. — View Citation

Sprivulis PC, Da Silva JA, Jacobs IG, Frazer AR, Jelinek GA. The association between hospital overcrowding and mortality among patients admitted via Western Australian emergency departments. Med J Aust. 2006 Mar 6;184(5):208-12. Erratum in: Med J Aust. 2006 Jun 19;184(12):616. — View Citation

Stengaard C, Sørensen JT, Ladefoged SA, Christensen EF, Lassen JF, Bøtker HE, Terkelsen CJ, Thygesen K. Quantitative point-of-care troponin T measurement for diagnosis and prognosis in patients with a suspected acute myocardial infarction. Am J Cardiol. 2013 Nov 1;112(9):1361-6. doi: 10.1016/j.amjcard.2013.06.026. Epub 2013 Aug 14. — View Citation

Thygesen K, Alpert JS, Jaffe AS, Simoons ML, Chaitman BR, White HD; Joint ESC/ACCF/AHA/WHF Task Force for the Universal Definition of Myocardial Infarction, Katus HA, Lindahl B, Morrow DA, Clemmensen PM, Johanson P, Hod H, Underwood R, Bax JJ, Bonow RO, Pinto F, Gibbons RJ, Fox KA, Atar D, Newby LK, Galvani M, Hamm CW, Uretsky BF, Steg PG, Wijns W, Bassand JP, Menasché P, Ravkilde J, Ohman EM, Antman EM, Wallentin LC, Armstrong PW, Simoons ML, Januzzi JL, Nieminen MS, Gheorghiade M, Filippatos G, Luepker RV, Fortmann SP, Rosamond WD, Levy D, Wood D, Smith SC, Hu D, Lopez-Sendon JL, Robertson RM, Weaver D, Tendera M, Bove AA, Parkhomenko AN, Vasilieva EJ, Mendis S. Third universal definition of myocardial infarction. Circulation. 2012 Oct 16;126(16):2020-35. doi: 10.1161/CIR.0b013e31826e1058. Epub 2012 Aug 24. — View Citation

Venturini JM, Stake CE, Cichon ME. Prehospital point-of-care testing for troponin: are the results reliable? Prehosp Emerg Care. 2013 Jan-Mar;17(1):88-91. doi: 10.3109/10903127.2012.717166. Epub 2012 Sep 6. — View Citation

* Note: There are 25 references in allClick here to view all references

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Major Adverse Cardiac Events (MACE) at 30 days The primary outcome is MACE at 30 days. MACE is a composite outcome of cardiac death, acute myocardial infarction, and coronary revascularization. 30 Days
Secondary Rate of objective cardiac testing Objective cardiac testing will be defined by any stress testing modality, coronary computed tomography (CT) angiography, or invasive coronary angiography. 30 Days
Secondary Length of Stay Length of stay (LOS) will be the time from ED arrival to hospital discharge for all patients, whether admitted or not. 30 Days
Secondary Rate of hospitalization at index Index visit hospitalization will be defined as an inpatient or observation admission (including Observation Unit evaluations with stress testing or cardiac imaging). 30 Days
Secondary Rate of cardiac related hospital admissions and ED visits during follow-up Hospital admissions and ED visits occurring during the 30 day follow up period will be categorized as cardiac-related if a cardiac procedure is performed, the primary reason for admission/visit is chest pain, possible ACS, or a discharge diagnosis relates to chest pain, myocardial infarction (MI), acute coronary syndrome, heart failure, dysrhythmias, pericardial disease, or other cardiac disease. Cardiac procedures include cardiac imaging / stress testing (excluding resting echo), coronary revascularization, and pacemaker or defibrillator insertion. 30 Days
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