Left Bundle Branch Block Clinical Trial
Official title:
Correlation of Clinical Outcomes With ECG Findings in Patients With Left Bundle Branch Block Being Evaluated for Acute Coronary Syndrome - a Prospective Cohort Study
Purpose of the study:
The goal of this study is to evaluate the relationship of electrocardiogram (ECG) findings
with clinical outcomes in a cohort of patients with left bundle branch block (LBBB) who are
being evaluated for acute coronary syndrome (ACS) in the Emergency Department (ED).
Background and significance:
The significance of specific ECG findings in patients with LBBB being evaluated for ACS has
been inadequately studied, and this gap in knowledge is a barrier to optimal management of
this population. Due to the speed, availability, low cost, and non-invasive nature of the
ECG, it would be ideal to identify ECG characteristics that help to risk stratify these
patients in order to inform clinical decision-making, reduce unnecessary invasive testing,
and conserve resources.
Methods:
In this prospective observational study the investigators will identify a consecutive series
of adult patients with LBBB presenting to the ED with suspicion of ACS. The investigators
will collect data including demographics, cardiac risk factors, initial ECG measurements,
lab and radiographic results, procedure results, and clinical outcomes such as 30-day death
or myocardial infarction (MI). The investigators will analyze the data using a cohort study
design to calculate odds ratios between ECG characteristics and the outcomes of interest.
Purpose of the study:
The goal of this study is to identify initial electrocardiogram (ECG) findings (including
ST/S ratio and T-wave morphology) that predict clinical outcomes (myocardial infarction,
positive stress test, revascularization and death), in a cohort of Emergency Department (ED)
patients with left bundle branch block (LBBB) who are being evaluated for acute coronary
syndrome (ACS).
Design & procedures:
The investigators will prospectively identify all adult (18yrs and older) patients
presenting to their institution's ED who are being evaluated for ACS and have LBBB on ECG.
The investigators will collect data on demographics (including age, but not date of birth),
cardiac risk factors, date and time of presentation to the ED, ECG measurements, lab and
radiographic results (cardiac biomarker data including date and time of the sample, stress
test results, coronary imaging results, coronary catheterization results) and clinical
outcomes such as 30-day death or MI. They will collect copies of ECGs and measure the
following: ST/S ratio (ratio of the amplitude of ST segment deviation to the S wave
amplitude); T-wave morphology (entirely discordant, entirely concordant, or biphasic to the
PR interval); and standard ST segment deviation. A logistic regression analysis will be used
to identify which ECG features are associated with 30-day death, MI, and revascularization.
In the sub-cohort of subjects with negative "modified Sgarbossa criteria" a subanalysis will
identify the outcome rates for the following specific sub-populations: those less than 2
consecutive partially-concordant T-wave leads and those with 2 or more consecutive
partially-concordant T-wave leads.
Selection of Subjects:
The population will be patients age 18 or older who present to the ED with LBBB and
suspected ACS. The investigators expect the mean age of the study population to be
approximately 60 years old, with most patients between 40 and 90. They anticipate that these
patients will on average have multiple medical comorbidities given that those with LBBB and
ACS are reported to be a sicker, older population with more cardiac risk factors than the
usual ACS patient without LBBB. Patients under age 18 will be excluded because they
extremely rarely have ACS and/or LBBB. The investigators anticipate 300 subjects.
Inclusion criteria: age 18 and older, LBBB on ECG, presenting to the ED and being evaluated
for ACS.
Exclusion criteria: prisoners, institutionalized individuals, patients who are incapable of
giving legally effective consent, patients who cannot understand spoken English.
Consent process:
After the initial screening process, if the potential subject meets the inclusion/exclusion
criteria and does not object to learning more about the study during initial discussion with
their primary provider, then one of the key personnel trained and authorized to consent will
approach the potential subject to discuss the study by explaining the following: the purpose
of the study and the future benefits it may provide in subsequent patients, the prospective
and observational nature of the study, the study procedures, the risks of loss of
confidentiality, and the safeguards against that risk. All information will be clearly
printed in plain language on the consent form. The potential subject will then be given the
choice to enroll in the study.
Only the potential subject will be allowed to provide consent. The potential subject will
have until discharge or transfer from the Emergency Department to decide whether or not to
participate in the study. The minimal risks and minimal subject involvement justify this
practical and logical time requirement. The consent process will occur in the potential
subject's room in the Emergency Department.
Data Analysis & Statistical Considerations:
The data will be analyzed with a cohort study design, calculating odds ratios between ECG
characteristics and outcomes. The two primary ECG characteristics investigated will be 1)
presence of at least 2 consecutive leads with at least a partially concordant T-wave
(biphasic or entirely concordant), and 2) the ST/S ratio (the ratio of the ST-segment
deviation to the S or R wave amplitude, whichever greater). Secondary ECG features measured
will include heart rate, rhythm, intervals, bundle branch blocks, PR and ST segment
deviations and concordance/discordance, P/Q/R/S/T amplitudes, QRS durations, QT intervals, T
wave inversions, segment contours and concavity/convexity. The primary outcomes of interest
will be 1) positive cardiac troponin T biomarker levels on index visit, and 2) positive
stress test results on index visit. Secondary outcomes will include the rates of 30-day
myocardial infarction, 30-day death, and 30-day revascularization.
The investigators will present summary statistics on subject demographics, ECG findings,
lab/imaging/procedure results, and outcomes. They will determine association between
dichotomous outcomes of cardiac biomarker (cTNT) levels, stress test, MI, death,
revascularization, and normally distributed continuous clinical and demographic
characteristics using t-tests for normally distributed continuous data or Wilcoxon tests for
non-normally distributed data, and with categorical characteristics using Fisher's exact or
Chi-squared tests. Associations between continuous variables will be assessed using Spearman
or Pearson correlations. Significance of the tests will be assessed at alpha = 0.05.
Analysis will be conducted using SAS 9.3 (SAS Institute, Inc., Cary, NC).
;
Observational Model: Cohort, Time Perspective: Prospective
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