| Literature DB >> 27806987 |
Andrew R Chapman1, Philip D Adamson1, Nicholas L Mills1.
Abstract
Myocardial injury is common in patients without acute coronary syndrome, and international guidelines recommend patients with myocardial infarction are classified by aetiology. The universal definition differentiates patients with myocardial infarction due to plaque rupture (type 1) from those due to myocardial oxygen supply-demand imbalance (type 2) secondary to other acute illnesses. Patients with myocardial necrosis, but no symptoms or signs of myocardial ischaemia, are classified as acute or chronic myocardial injury. This classification has not been widely adopted in practice, because the diagnostic criteria for type 2 myocardial infarction encompass a wide range of presentations, and the implications of the diagnosis are uncertain. However, both myocardial injury and type 2 myocardial infarction are common, occurring in more than one-third of all hospitalised patients. These patients have poor short-term and long-term outcomes with two-thirds dead in 5 years. The classification of patients with myocardial infarction continues to evolve, and future guidelines are likely to recognise the importance of identifying coronary artery disease in type 2 myocardial infarction. Clinicians should consider whether coronary artery disease has contributed to myocardial injury, as selected patients are likely to benefit from further investigation and in these patients targeted secondary prevention has the potential to improve outcomes. Published by the BMJ Publishing Group Limited. For permission to use (where not already granted under a licence) please go to http://www.bmj.com/company/products-services/rights-and-licensing/.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27806987 PMCID: PMC5299097 DOI: 10.1136/heartjnl-2016-309530
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Heart ISSN: 1355-6037 Impact factor: 5.994
Figure 1Classification proposed by the third universal definition of myocardial infarction.1
Causes of myocardial necrosis stratified by aetiology
| Primary myocardial ischaemia | Supply or demand imbalance causing myocardial ischaemia | Injury not related to myocardial ischaemia | Multifactorial or indeterminate aetiology |
|---|---|---|---|
| Atherosclerotic plaque rupture Intraluminal coronary thrombus | Anaemia Cardiogenic Hypovolaemic Septic | Ablation | Acute/chronic heart failure Amyloidosis Sarcoidosis |
Adapted from Thygesen et al.1
Studies reporting incidence of myocardial infarction classified according to the universal definition
| Diagnostic classification (%) proportion of all patients with elevation in baseline cardiac troponin | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Population | Troponin assay and upper reference limit* | Number with elevated cardiac troponin concentrations (% of total study population) | Myocardial injury (%) | Type 1 MI (%) | Type 2 MI (%) | Type 3/4/5 MI (%) | Unclassified | |
| Javed | Unselected hospital inpatients with cTnI measured (n=2979)† | cTnI (>40 ng/L) ADVIA immunoassay (Siemens) | 701 (23.5%) | 461 (65.8%) | 143 (20.4%) | 64 (9.1%) | 9 (1.3%) | 24 (3.4%) |
| El-Haddad | Unselected hospital inpatients with cTnI measured (n=807) | cTnI (>160 ng/L) Beckman Access | 807 (100%) | Not reported | 512 (63.4%) | 295 (36.6%) | Nil | Nil |
| Saaby | Unselected hospital inpatients with cTnI measured (n=4499) | cTnI (>30 ng/L) Architect-STAT (Abbott Diagnostics) | 1961 (43.6%) | 1408 (71.8%) | 397 (20.2%) | 144 (7.3%) | 12 (0.7%) | Nil |
| Shah | Unselected hospital inpatients with cTnI measured (n=2165) | cTnI (>50 ng/L) Architect-STAT (Abbott Diagnostics) | 2165 (100%) | 522 (24.1%) | 1171 (54%) | 429 (19.9%) | 43 (2%) | Nil |
| White | Cardiology inpatients with ACS (2000–2006) (n=2201) | cTnI, cTnT, CK, CK-MB | 169 (7.7%) | Not reported | 106 (62.7%) | 7 (4.1%) | 56 (33.2%) | Nil |
| Szymanski | Cardiology inpatients with ACS (n=2882) | cTn (not specified) | 2882 (100%) | Not reported | 2824 (98%) | 58 (2%) | Nil | Nil |
| Stein | Cardiology and ICU inpatients with ACS (n=2818) | Not reported | 2818 (100%) | Not reported | 2691 (95.5%) | 127 (4.5%) | Nil | Nil |
| Baron | Hospital inpatients with ACS (n=19 763) | Not reported | 19 763 (100%) | Not reported | 17 488 (88.5%) | 1403 (7.1%) | 141 (0.7%) | 731 (3.7%) |
| Melberg | Hospital inpatients with ACS (n=1093) | cTnT (>30 ng/L) Roche Elecsys | 1093 (100%) | Not reported | 967 (88.5%) | 17 (1.6%) | 109 (9.9%) | Nil |
| Morrow | Clinical trial patients with ACS (n=13 608) | Not reported | 1218 (8.9%) | Not reported | 397 (32.6%) | 43 (3.5%) | 778 (63.9%) | Nil |
| Sandoval | Emergency department patients with cTnI measured (n=1112) | cTnI (>34 ng/L) OCD Vitros | 256 (23%) | Not reported | 66 (25.8%) | 190 (74.2%) | Nil | Nil |
| Smith | Emergency department patients with cTnI measured (n=662) | cTnI (>90 ng/L) Siemens Stratus | 139 (20.9%) | Not reported | 40 (28.8%) | 99 (71.2%) | Nil | Nil |
| Smith | Emergency department patients with suspected ACS (n=1096) | cTn (not specified) | 134 (12.2%) | Not reported | 127 (95%) | 7 (5%) | Nil | Nil |
| Bonaca | Emergency department presentations with suspected ACS (n=381) | cTnI (>100 ng/L) Siemens Centaur | 96 (25.2%) | Not reported | 86 (90%) | 10 (10%) | Nil | Nil |
| Shah | Unselected patients with suspected ACS (n=1126) | hs-TnI (F >16 g/L; M >34 ng/L) Architect-STAT high-sensitivity (Abbott Diagnostics) | 338 (30%) | 40 (11.8%) | 242 (71.6%) | 56 (16.6%) | Nil | Nil |
*All units are standardised to ng/L.
†Twenty-seven exclusions (missing data).
ACS, acute coronary syndrome; CK, creatine kinase; cTnI, cardiac troponin I; cTnT, cardiac troponin T; MI, myocardial infarction.
Figure 2Incidence of myocardial infarction and myocardial injury stratified by age in unselected consecutive hospital inpatients with myocardial necrosis. Reproduced from Shah et al.6
Figure 3Algorithm for the investigation of patients with elevated cardiac troponin concentrations in the context of an alternative acute illness. Change in cardiac troponin concentration on serial measurement is used to identify patients with acute and chronic myocardial injury. The definition of change in cardiac troponin will be dependent on the assay and should be consistent with the local pathway for the assessment of patients with an isolated presentation with suspected acute coronary syndrome. CAD, coronary artery disease.
Figure 4Pathway for the investigation of patients with isolated suspected acute coronary syndrome optimised for the ARCHITECTSTAT high-sensitivity cardiac troponin I assay. Reproduced from Shah et al.17