| Literature DB >> 28418520 |
John W Pickering1, Martin P Than1, Louise Cullen1, Sally Aldous1, Ewoud Ter Avest1, Richard Body1, Edward W Carlton1, Paul Collinson1, Anne Marie Dupuy1, Ulf Ekelund1, Kai M Eggers1, Christopher M Florkowski1, Yonathan Freund1, Peter George1, Steve Goodacre1, Jaimi H Greenslade1, Allan S Jaffe1, Sarah J Lord1, Arash Mokhtari1, Christian Mueller1, Andrew Munro1, Sebbane Mustapha1, William Parsonage1, W Frank Peacock1, Christopher Pemberton1, A Mark Richards1, Juan Sanchis1, Lukas P Staub1, Richard Troughton1, Raphael Twerenbold1, Karin Wildi1, Joanna Young1.
Abstract
Background: High-sensitivity assays for cardiac troponin T (hs-cTnT) are sometimes used to rapidly rule out acute myocardial infarction (AMI). Purpose: To estimate the ability of a single hs-cTnT concentration below the limit of detection (<0.005 µg/L) and a nonischemic electrocardiogram (ECG) to rule out AMI in adults presenting to the emergency department (ED) with chest pain. Data Sources: EMBASE and MEDLINE without language restrictions (1 January 2008 to 14 December 2016). Study Selection: Cohort studies involving adults presenting to the ED with possible acute coronary syndrome in whom an ECG and hs-cTnT measurements were obtained and AMI outcomes adjudicated during initial hospitalization. Data Extraction: Investigators of studies provided data on the number of low-risk patients (no new ischemia on ECG and hs-cTnT measurements <0.005 µg/L) and the number who had AMI during hospitalization (primary outcome) or a major adverse cardiac event (MACE) or death within 30 days (secondary outcomes), by risk classification (low or not low risk). Two independent epidemiologists rated risk of bias of studies. Data Synthesis: Of 9241 patients in 11 cohort studies, 2825 (30.6%) were classified as low risk. Fourteen (0.5%) low-risk patients had AMI. Sensitivity of the risk classification for AMI ranged from 87.5% to 100% in individual studies. Pooled estimated sensitivity was 98.7% (95% CI, 96.6% to 99.5%). Sensitivity for 30-day MACEs ranged from 87.9% to 100%; pooled sensitivity was 98.0% (CI, 94.7% to 99.3%). No low-risk patients died. Limitation: Few studies, variation in timing and methods of reference standard troponin tests, and heterogeneity of risk and prevalence of AMI across studies.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28418520 DOI: 10.7326/M16-2562
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Intern Med ISSN: 0003-4819 Impact factor: 25.391