Acute Coronary Syndromes Clinical Trial
Official title:
Finding ACS With Serial Troponin Testing for Rapid Assessment of Cardiac Ischemic Symptoms
Study Objectives
The following items will be prospectively assessed.
Primary Endpoints
1. For patients presenting with clinical suspicion of Acute Coronary Syndromes (ACS), high
sensitivity-cardiac Troponin I (hs-cTnI) provides improved diagnostic accuracy for ACS
(including Acute Myocardial Infarction (AMI) and/or Unstable Angina (UA)) within the
first two (2) hours after emergency department presentation when compared to currently
available troponin assays.
2. For patients presenting with clinical suspicion of ACS, hs-cTnI provides improved
prognostic information with regard to 180 day event rates of Major Adverse Cardiac
Event outcomes, including cardiac deaths which are defined as all deaths except those
that are clearly non-cardiac in nature (e.g. trauma), when compared to a currently
available troponin assay.
Secondary Endpoints
1. For patients presenting with clinical suspicion of ACS, using the rate of rise of
hs-cTnI over time between presentation and 2 hours (delta hs-cTnI) allows for the
differentiation between ACS and other disease states.
2. For patients presenting with clinical suspicion of ACS, hs-cTnI provides improved
sensitivity for detecting AMI within the first two (2) hours after presentation when
compared to a currently available troponin assay.
3. For patients presenting with clinical suspicion of ACS, hs-cTnI provides improved
negative predictive value for ruling out ACS (AMI or UA) within the first 2 hours after
presentation when compared to a currently available troponin assay.
4. For alternative endpoints of cardiac mortality, and for alternative censor time points
of 30 days, 90 days, and 1 year, hs-cTnI provides improved prognostic information when
compared to the currently available troponin assay.
5. In cases where the emergency physician has limited diagnostic confidence, hs-cTnI AMI
diagnostic accuracy will be superior to local hospital standards for AMI determination.
6. In cases where the emergency physician has limited diagnostic confidence, the slope for
the hs-cTnI between presentation and 2 hours will add diagnostic accuracy for ACS
diagnosis over and above local hospital standards for ACS determination.
7. For patients presenting with clinical suspicion of ACS, the difference in diagnostic
accuracy for ACS (including AMI and/or UA) using hs-cTnI measurement from time of onset
of symptoms to emergency department presentation (e.g. 3 hours instead of 6 hours) will
be evaluated to assess any variation.
This study will evaluate the ability of a high sensitivity cardiac troponin I (hs-cTnI)
assay to detect and to rule-out high-risk ischemic cardiac injury in emergency room patients
experiencing signs and symptoms consistent with acute coronary syndromes (ACS).
Cardiovascular disease is still the most frequent cause of morbidity and mortality among
industrialized nations. In the U.S., there are nearly 100 million adults who suffer from
cardiovascular disease. Over 5 million patients present to emergency departments (EDs)
annually with a chief complaint consistent with ACS. A majority of these patients are found
to be experiencing non-cardiac chest pain (about 70-82% of patients). Myocardial infarction
(MI, including non-ST-segment elevation MI [NSTEMIs = about 6-10% of patients] and
ST-segment elevation MI [STEMIs = about 2-5% of patients]) occurs in about 8-15% of these
patients. Unstable angina (UA), which is often a precursor condition to MI, accounts for
10-15% of patients. Together, MI plus UA combine to define ACS (= about 18-30% patients).
MI is caused by rupture of an atherosclerotic plaque in a coronary artery, leading to
platelet aggregation and thrombus formation to an extent that oxygenation of the myocardial
tissue is completely interrupted (i.e., total occlusion), with the occurrence of some degree
of myocardial necrosis. High concentrations of cardiac enzymes and proteins (e.g., cardiac
troponin I or T [cTnI or cTnT], CK-MB, myoglobin) are observed in blood as the result of
significant irreversible injury to cardiac tissue distal to the site of rupture and
secondary to arterial occlusion. Current assays can detect STEMIs and NSTEMIs but, by
definition of the 2007 AHA/ACC updated guidelines for NSTEMI and UA, the NSTEMI threshold is
defined as the 99th percentile upper reference limit [URL] of a cardiac troponin (cTn)
assay's reference range in a healthy subject population, and they cannot detect what is
currently labeled "unstable angina (UA)" or ischemia without necrosis. In addition, it
typically takes 4-6 hours, after ischemic symptoms begin, for the cardiac troponin to rise
above the current commercial assay NSTEMI threshold (i.e., the upper reference limit [URL] =
the 99th percentile upper reference limit). These issues expose a sensitivity problem with
current generation cTn assays, including the most sensitive tests available.
UA is also associated with plaque rupture but only partial coronary artery occlusion occurs,
resulting in ischemic pain but no (or unmeasureable) necrosis. No rise is observable in
cardiac marker levels on currently available assays (best limit of detection [LOD] of ~0.01
ng/mL [10 pg/mL] and best URL of ~0.03 ng/mL [30 pg/mL]). Since there is no test currently
available that accurately diagnoses UA, many UA patients are discharged home in the midst of
a high-risk ischemic event. (Note: Ischemia modified albumin [IMA] is on the market but is
not widely used due to its poor specificity.) The negative predictive value of the
diagnostic test is important in this regard, as increases in sensitivity may be offset if
there are also increases in false positive results.
As many as 2% (30,000 patients) to 4% (60,000 pts) of patients with MI or UA (~750,000 MI
patients + ~750,000 UA patients = ~1.5 million total patients at risk) are inadvertently
discharged from the ED with an associated short-term mortality of 10% to 26% (Duseja and
Feldman 2004). Missed acute cardiac ischemia is one of the major causes of malpractice
litigation against emergency physicians (Duseja and Feldman 2004). Even though chest pain
(and other symptoms consistent with ACS) patients represent only 6% of the ED patient
volume, it has been estimated that 20% of ED-related malpractice dollars are expended for
ischemic heart disease complications (Rusnak, et al 1989). Therefore, the misdiagnosis of
ischemic cardiac injury is of great importance from a human-life and economic perspective.
In the typical hospital ED today, cardiac biomarkers are drawn and the results are back to
the ED physician within about 1.5 hours (i.e., therapeutic turnaround time [TTAT]; "vein to
brain" time). Some hospitals have moved to point-of-care devices (with relatively low
sensitivity [URL = 0.080 ng/mL]) that can give results within 10-15 minutes and, on the
other extreme, some EDs that are still dependent on the central laboratory have a
therapeutic turnaround time of 2-4 hours. Most chest pain patients that continue to have
discomfort and other cardiac symptoms are held in the ED or chest pain (observation) unit
for 6 to 23 hours, before discharge, allowing serial cardiac markers to be drawn. Therefore,
keeping these time points in mind, a highly sensitive (e.g., URL = 0.003 ng/mL) and precise
cTn assay (e.g., <20-30%CV) that takes < 1 hour to give a result may be very useful for any
hospital ED.
Time is important but, in the case of ischemic heart disease, accurate information is more
important and is potentially life-saving. The information that the assay would give to the
ED physician would allow for accurate diagnosis of what is currently labeled "UA" and not
discharge a patient who actually requires close monitoring, treatment, or follow-up at a
cardiologist's office. Also, the diagnosis of an MI could be made much earlier (with high
sensitivity and specificity) than the 4-6 hours after ED presentation that it takes for cTn
to be detected by current assays.
With no cardiac marker assay available that can diagnose "UA" with appropriate accuracy and
precision, development of a cost-effective, timely (< 1 hr assay time) cardiac troponin
assay that allows accurate measurement of cTn at concentrations that are 10-100 fold below
the best of the current assays' detection limits has the potential to improve ACS patient
care. It will allow diagnosis of ischemic injury in "UA" patients in the ED so they can be
admitted appropriately to the hospital instead of being sent home to experience a possible
cardiac event or death. With current therapeutic capabilities (e.g., LMWHs, beta-blockers,
glycoprotein IIb/IIIa inhibitors, other anti-platelet agents) that are known to lower the
risk of future cardiac events and mortality, it can be expected that the earlier detection
of MI and diagnosis of "UA" may lead to reductions in morbidity and mortality in ACS
patients.
The need for a highly sensitive assay for cardiac troponin is predicated on the observation
that the URL of the true reference range in nominally healthy subjects is significantly
below the concentrations that current assays can measure. A new nanoparticle-based, highly
sensitive cTnI assay (i.e., nano-assay) appears to offer a significant technological
advantage over the current macroparticle-based, sensitive assays. The new highly sensitive
assay's LOD is ~800 fg/mL (800 fg/mL = 0.8 pg/mL = 0.0008 ng/mL) for cardiac troponin I, as
compared to 10 pg/mL (0.010 ng/mL) for the most sensitive cTnI assay currently on the
market. The new assay has an imprecision (%CV), at the LOD, of <20-30%, as compared to >>30%
at the LOD for the most sensitive cTnI assay currently on the market. The URL of the
reference range in healthy subjects for the new assay is about 2.8 pg/mL (0.0028 ng/mL),
compared to 30 pg/mL (0.030 ng/mL) for the most sensitive cTnI assay currently on the
market. Under these differences in analytical performance, it is likely that the majority of
patients with what is currently labeled "UA" will reveal detectable troponin concentrations
that exceed the nano-assay's threshold limit (i.e., 2.8 pg/mL = 0.0028 ng/mL) on the
nanoparticle-based, highly sensitive cTnI assay but non-detectable levels of troponin on the
current macroparticle-based, sensitive cTnI assays.
In a pilot study, banked serial serum samples of ten NSTEMI patients from the Hospital of
the University of Pennsylvania ED were evaluated on a research version of the nano-assay.
These serial samples were "troponin-negative" on an older laboratory assay (laboratory assay
URL = 0.6 ng/mL = 600pg/mL) for the first 1-3 blood draws. Samples from these patients at
presentation, 90min, and 180min were measured by a current sensitive assay (Siemens [Dade
Behring] Stratus CS) sensitive assay URL = 0.070ng/mL = 70pg/mL) and by the experimental
highly sensitive assay (highly sensitive assay URL=0.0028 ng/mL = 2.8 pg/mL). None (0%), two
(20%), and ten (100%) of the ten NSTEMI patients were found to be cTnI positive at
presentation on the laboratory, sensitive, and highly sensitive assays, respectively. All 10
patients measured at >35pg/mL on the highly sensitive assay at presentation. Three of the
patients remained "cTnI negative" for >180 min on the current sensitive assay.
In another research study, samples from 100 chest pain patients with known ACS (i.e., 50
NSTEMI and 50 "UA" patients) were evaluated. Comparison was made between the laboratory
device and the highly sensitive nano-assay with a URL of 0.0028 ng/mL (2.8 pg/mL). Using the
current laboratory assay (Siemens [Dade Behring] Dimension; URL = 0.100 ng/mL = 100 pg/mL),
the 50 NSTEMI patients were cTnI negative on the first draw, and the 50 "UA" patients were
cTnI negative throughout their stay in the ED and/or hospital. At presentation (t = 0 hrs),
7 hrs, and 24 hrs, none (0%) of the "UA" patients were found to be positive for cTnI on the
laboratory instrument. Using the nano-assay with the same "UA" patients' serum samples, 48%,
64%, and 82% were positive for cTnI at presentation, 2 hrs, and 7 hrs, respectively. For the
NSTEMI patients at presentation (t = 0 hrs), 7 hrs, and 24 hrs, none (0%), 56%, and 98%,
respectively, of the patients were found to be positive for cTnI on the laboratory
instrument. Using the nano-assay with the same NSTEMI patients' serum, 76%, 98%, and 100%
were positive for cTnI at presentation, 2 hrs, and 7 hrs, respectively.
These preliminary results demonstrate the potential strength of this highly sensitive cTnI
assay to reveal an abnormal [cTnI] at ED presentation that may progress to MI (i.e., NSTEMI
or STEMI) and to detect acute ischemic insult that may not progress to MI (i.e., "UA"). This
high sensitivity protein assay may enhance the clinical utility of testing for ACS in the ED
and other cardiac care settings (e.g., earlier detection leading to directed therapies,
improve risk stratification, earlier rule-out of non-cardiac-related chest pain [NCCP],
detection of re-infarction).
The definition of myocardial infarction used in this study will be the meaning that was
recently updated and published in the November 27, 2007 issue of Circulation (Thygesen, et
al 2007). Page 18 of this study protocol contains this definition. The definition is based
on cardiac troponin as the biomarker of choice with any value above the 99th percentile of
an assay's reference range population considered abnormal. Therefore, if the nano-assay's
URL is much lower than the current assay's URL, all values that are above the nano-assay's
URL but below the current assay's URL that were considered "UA" on the current assay should
now be considered myocardial infarction when measured on the nano-assay. This may result in
the "UA" category being removed as an ACS categorization.
There are also recent studies (Zethelius, et al 2006; Waxman, et al 2006) that show very low
cTnI values (<30-40 pg/mL) can predict future cardiac events and mortality in the
asymptomatic elderly male population (>70 years) and in symptomatic ED patients with cTnI
levels that remain in the reference (normal) ranges of current assays. A highly sensitive
assay that could detect "silent" cardiac damage in these cTnI ranges in the cardiologist's
office and ED settings could be a predictor of future risk that could direct appropriate
therapeutics and preventative care.
;
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