| Literature DB >> 28821170 |
Matthias Thielmann1, Vikram Sharma2,3, Nawwar Al-Attar4, Heerajnarain Bulluck3, Gianluigi Bisleri5, Jeroen Bunge6, Martin Czerny7, Péter Ferdinandy8,9, Ulrich H Frey10, Gerd Heusch11, Johannes Holfeld12, Petra Kleinbongard11, Gudrun Kunst13, Irene Lang14, Salvatore Lentini15, Rosalinda Madonna16,17, Patrick Meybohm18, Claudio Muneretto19, Jean-Francois Obadia20, Cinzia Perrino21, Fabrice Prunier22, Joost P G Sluijter23, Linda W Van Laake24, Miguel Sousa-Uva25, Derek J Hausenloy3,26,27,28,29,30.
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28821170 PMCID: PMC5808635 DOI: 10.1093/eurheartj/ehx383
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Heart J ISSN: 0195-668X Impact factor: 29.983
Causes of peri-operative myocardial injury in patients undergoing coronary artery bypass graft surgery
Plaque rupture in native coronary artery or graft Thrombus formation in the native coronary artery or graft Acute graft failure due to occlusion, kinking, overstretching, anastomotic stenosis or spasm of the grafted blood vessel Arterial graft spasm Tachyarrhythmia Cardiogenic or hypovolaemic shock Severe respiratory failure Severe anaemia Left ventricular hypertrophy Coronary artery or graft micro-embolism Inadequate cardioprotection from cardioplegia Cardiac handling during surgery Direct injury to the myocardium Surgical myectomy Inflammatory injury due to cardiopulmonary bypass Heart failure Severe pulmonary embolism Sepsis Critically ill patients Renal failure |
Adapted from reference 6.
Predictors of peri-operative myocardial infarction/graft-failure
Advanced age Female sex Impaired LV systolic function prior to surgery Left main stem or 3-vessel CAD Pre-operative MI Unstable angina Previous history of coronary revascularisation Poor target coronary artery quality Uncontrolled hyperglycaemia EUROSCORE >6 Longer surgery time Prolonged cardio-pulmonary bypass and/or aortic cross clamp time Coronary endarterectomy Concomitant aortic and/or valve surgery Inadequate myocardial protection during CABG Incomplete revascularisation Poor vein graft quality Small internal thoracic artery |
Major recent studies showing elevations in creatine kinase-MB fraction to be associated with mortality post-coronary artery bypass grafting surgery
| Study | Type of study and surgery | Number of patients | Cardiac biomarker (time) | Time from CABG when biomarker level taken | Major findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Costa (ARTS trial) | Multi-centre prospective study CABG only | 496 | CK-MB | 6,12,18 h | <1× URL 0.0% 30 d mortality 1.1% 1 yr mortality 1–3× URL 0.5% 30 d mortality 0.5% 1 yr mortality ≥3–5× URL 5.4% 30 d mortality 5.4% 1 yr mortality >5× URL 7.0% 30 d mortality 10.5% 1 yr mortality |
Klatte (GUARDIAN Trial) | Multi-centre prospective study CABG only | 2394 | CK-MB ECG | 8, 12, 16, 24 h | <5× URL 3.4% 6 mth mortality (RR 1.0) ≥5–10× URL 5.8% 6 mth mortality (RR 1.69) ≥10–20× URL 7.8% 6 mth mortality (RR 2.28) ≥20× URL 20.2% 6 mth mortality (RR 5.94 >5× URL + new Q waves worse 6 mth mortality (8.0% vs. 3.1%) |
Steuer | Prospective single centre, CABG only | 4911 | CK-MB | 24 h | >61 ug/L Relative Hazard 1.3 to 1.4 for late mortality (up to 6 years) |
| Brener | Retrospective single centre analysis, CABG only | 3812 | CK-MB | 24 h | ≤1× URL 7.2% 3 yr mortality 1–3× URL 7.7% 3 yr mortality 3–5× URL 6.3% 3 yr mortality 5–10× URL 7.5% 3 yr mortality >10× URL 20.8% 3 yr mortality >10× URL predicted 3 yr mortality (HR 1.3) |
| Marso | Single centre registry post-hoc analysis CABG only | 3667 | CK-MB | Single measurement mean 15.2 h | ≤1× URL 0.6% 30 d mortality >1–3× URL 1.1% 30 d mortality >3× URL 2.2% 30 d mortality >4× URL associated with increased long-term mortality 5.1 yr (RR 1.3) |
| Ramsay | Multi-centre prospective randomized trial CABG only | 800 | CK-MB | 4,8, 16, 20,24, 30, 36 h Day 2, 4, 7, 30 | 0–5× URL 0.9% 30 d mortality 5–10× URL 0.7% 30 d mortality 10–20× URL 0.9% 30 d mortality >20× URL 6.0% 30 d mortality AUC and peak CK-MB correlated very well. |
| Engoren | Retrospective analysis CABG only | 1161 | CK-MB | 10–18 h | >8× URL HR 1.3 increased 1 yr mortality |
| Newall | Observational cohort study CABG only | 2860 | CK-MB | Single value up to 24 h | 3–6× URL HR 2.1 for 1 yr mortality >6× URL HR 5.0 for 1 yr mortality |
| Mahaffey | Pooled analysis of four trials CABG only | 1406 | CK-MB | Single value up to 24 h | <3× URL 2.5% 30 d mortality; 3.7% 6 mth mortality 3–5× URL 2.9% 30 d mortality; 4.7% 6 mth mortality 5–8× URL 3.1% 30 d mortality; 6.1% 6 mth mortality ≥8× URL 8.6% 30 d mortality; 9.6% 6 mth mortality |
| Muehlschlegel | Prospective single centre study CABG only | 545 | CK-MB | Daily from day 1 to 5 | 24 h 1.23 for each 25 mg/L increase of 5 yr mortality ECG changes alone did not predict 5 year mortality. |
| Petaja | Meta-analysis CABG and/or valve surgery | 21 657 | CK-MB | Variable (peak or absolute value at various time points post-op) | CK-MB ≥5× URL –RR of short term mortality 3.69% (CI 2.17–6.26); RR of long term (6–60 m) mortality 2.66% (CI 1.95–3.63) |
| Vikenes | Prospective single centre study CABG and/or valve surgery | 205 | CK-MB | 1–3, 4–8, 24, 48 and 72 h | CK-MB elevation ≥ 5× URL was associated with worst long term event free survival (median follow-up 92 mths). |
| Domanski | Meta-analysis CABG only | 18 908 | CK-MB (<24 h) | Single value < 24 h | 1–5× URL 1.69% RR of 30 d mortality 5–10× URL 2.98% RR of 30 d mortality 10–20× URL 4.47% RR of 30 d mortality 20–40× URL 8.73% RR of 30 d mortality ≥40× URL 27.01% RR of 30 d mortality CK-MB levels were significantly associated with 1 year mortality; there was a non-significant trend for association with 5 year mortality |
| Søraas | Registry analysis, single centre study CABG only | 1350 | CK-MB cTnI | 7,20, 44 h | There was no difference in mortality between those with CK-MB ≥7.8× URL vs. ≤4× URL CK-MB levels at 44 h postoperatively had a greater predictive value for mortality than at 7 or 20 h. Peak CK-MB levels predicted long-term mortality (median 6.1 years) after univariate but not multivariate analysis (including cTnI). |
| Farooq | Post hoc analysis of SYNTAX trial data; CABG only | 474 | CK-MB | 6, 12 h (CK-MB was measured only if CK ≥ 2× URL | CK-MB <3/≥3× URL separated patients into low and high-risk groups based on 4-year mortality (All-cause mortality 2.3% vs. 9.5% CK-MB ≥3× URL was associated with significantly higher frequency of high SYNTAX Score tertile (≥33) |
AUC, area under the curve; CABG, coronary artery bypass grafting; CMR, cardiac MRI; CK-MB, creatine kinase-MB fraction; d, day; ECG, electrocardiogram; ECHO, echocardiocardiogram; HR, hazards ratio; h, hour; LGE, late gadolinium enhancement; LV, left ventricle; MACE, major adverse cardiac events; MI, myocardial infarction; mth, month; ng, nanogram; ONBEAT, on-pump beating heart; CABG ONSTOP, on-pump CABG; OR, odds ratio; post-op, post-operative; PMI, perioperative myocardial injury; RR, relative risk; TEE, transoesophageal echocardiogram; cTnI, Troponin I; cTnT, Troponin T; UA, unstable angina; URL, upper reference limit; yr, year.
Major recent studies showing elevations in Troponin T to be associated with mortality post-coronary artery bypass grafting surgery
| Study | Type of study and surgery | Number of patients | Cardiac biomarker (time) | Time from CABG when biomarker level taken | Major findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Januzzi | Prospective single centre study CABG only | 224 | cTnT CK-MB | Immediately post-op, 6–8 h and 18–24 h | cTnT level in the highest quintile (≥1.58 ng/mL; ≥15× URL) immediately post-op or at 18–24 h predicted in-hospital death. CK-MB levels did not offer additional prognostic benefit to cTnT in multivariate analysis |
| Lehrke | Prospective single centre study CABG and/or valve surgery | 204 | cTnT | 4, 8 h then every day for 7 days | cTnT >0.46 μg/L (>46× URL) at 48 h after surgery was the optimum discriminator for long-term cardiac mortality (28 mths, OR 4.93) |
| Kathiresan | Prospective single centre study CABG only | 136 | cTnT CK-MB | Immediately post-op, 6–8 h and 18–24 h post-op | cTnT >1.58 μg/L at 18–24 h was the optimum discriminator for 1 year cardiac mortality (OR 5.45) Elevations in CK-MB were not predictive of mortality |
| Nesher | Retrospective observational single centre study Cardiac surgery (CABG and/or valve) | 1918 | cTnT | Single sample <24 h | cTnT level ≥0.8 μg/L (8× URL) was most discriminatory for MACE (30 day death, electrocardiogram-defined infarction, and low output syndrome) (OR 2.7) 0–3.9× URL 0.5% 30 day mortality 5–5.9× URL 1.6% 30 day mortality 6–7.9× URL 1.0% 30 day mortality 8–12.9× URL 1.8% 30 day mortality >13× URL 6.8% 30 day mortality |
| Muehlschlegel | Retrospective analysis CABG only | 1013 | cTnT | Daily from day 1 to 5 | 24 h cTnT rise > 110× URL HR 7.2 of 5 yr mortality cTnT at 24 h were independent predictors of 5 year mortality in a multivariate model (No additional benefit of measuring cTn beyond 24 h). Majority of patients had peak cTnI and CK-MB levels at 24 h. ECG changes alone did not predict 5 year mortality. |
| Mohammed | Prospective single centre study, retrospective analysis CABG only | 847 | cTnT | 6–8 and 18–24 h | A cTnT of < 1.60 (<160× URL) had good negative predictive value for poor 30 day outcomes (death or heart failure) |
| Petaja | Meta-analysis CABG and/or valve surgery | 2,547 | cTnT | <48 h post op | ≥7–16× URL: Short term mortality 3.2% vs. 0.5% for <7–16× URL elevation (RR 4.68–6.4); Long term mortality (12–28 mth) 16.1% vs. 2.3% (RR 5.7–10.09). (Pooled RR of mortality could not be calculated) |
| Søraas | Registry analysis, single centre study CABG only | 1,350 | cTnT CK-MB | 7,20, 44 h post op | Patients with peak cTnT ≥ 5.4× URL had much higher long-term mortality (median 6.1 years) than those with <5.4× URL cTnT elevation. cTnT levels at 44 h postoperatively had a greater predictive value for long-term mortality than at 7 or 20 h. Peak Trop T levels predicted long-term mortality after multivariate analysis. |
| Wang | Retrospective analysis CABG only | 560 | hs-cTnT ECG/ECHO changes | 12–24 h after CABG | In a multivariate model >10× URL rise in hs-TNT + ECG/ECHO evidence of recent MI or regional ischaemia predicted 30 day (HR 4.9) and long-term mortality (median follow-up 1.8 years) (HR 3.4). > 10× URL rise in hs-cTnT was seen in 90% patients. |
| Gober | Retrospective study from registry data CABG only | 290 | cTnT CK-MB | 8,16 h post op | cTnT > 0.8 ng/mL (>80× URL) at 6–8 h was predictive of in hospital adverse outcomes and long term (4yr) mortality (OR 4.0). However, cTnT measured at 6–8 h was inferior to cTnT taken at 20 h in its prognostic ability. |
AUC, area under the curve; CABG, coronary artery bypass grafting; CMR, cardiac MRI; CK-MB, creatine kinase-MB fraction; d, day; ECG, electrocardiogram; ECHO, echocardiocardiogram; HR, hazards ratio; h, hour; LGE, late gadolinium enhancement; LV, left ventricle; MACE, major adverse cardiac events; MI, myocardial infarction; mth, month; ng, nanogram; ONBEAT, on-pump beating heart; CABG ONSTOP, on-pump CABG; OR, odds ratio; post-op, post-operative; PMI, perioperative myocardial injury; RR, relative risk; TEE, transoesophageal echocardiogram; cTnI, Troponin I; cTnT, Troponin T; UA, unstable angina; URL, upper reference limit; yr, year.
Major recent studies showing elevations in Troponin I to be associated with mortality post-coronary artery bypass grafting surgery
| Study | Type of study and surgery | Number of patients | Cardiac biomarker (time) | Other features | Major findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Greenson | Single centre prospective study; CABG or Aortic valve replacement | 100 | cTnI CK-MB | Pre-op, 24 h and 48 h, then daily until discharge or 1 week | Peak cTnI > 60 ng/mL (> 120× URL) predictive of cardiac events up to 30 days post op |
| Holmvang | Single centre prospective study, CABG only | 103 | cTnT cTnI CK-MB Myoglobin | Every 2 h in first 20 h, 24, 30, 36 and 48 h, 72 and 98 h | ECG changes unable to differentiate between patients with or without graft failure. CK-MB and cTnT (but not cTnI or Myoglobin) levels were significantly higher in patients with graft failure vs. those without. Optimal discrimination values were 30 mcg/L for CK-MB (sensitivity 67%, specificity 65%) and 3 mcg/L for cTnT (sensitivity 67%, specificity 76%). In multivariate analysis cTnT > 3 mcg/L was significantly associated with graft failure (sensitivity of 75% compared to 20% for clinical criteria) |
| Eigel | Prospective single centre study; CABG only (Excluded MI within 7 days) | 540 | cTnI | Prior to induction of anaesthesia and at termination of CPB | cTnI level > 0.495 ng/L (> 9.9× URL for assay) measured at the end of CPB was predictive of in-hospital adverse outcomes (MI/death) |
| Lasocki | Single centre prospective study; CABG or valve surgery (Acute MI < 7 days were excluded) | 502 | cTnI ECG changes | 20 h post-op | cTnI < 32.5× URL ∼2.5% in hospital mortality cTnI ≥ 32.5× URL ∼22.5% in hospital mortality cTnI > 100× URL 44% in hospital mortality |
| Thielmann | Single centre prospective study: CABG only | 2,078 | cTnI | 1, 6, 12,24 h post op | cTnI was a more sensitive and specific marker of graft failure at a level above 21.5 ng/mL (> 43× URL ng/mL) at 12 h and 33.4 ng/mL (>66.8× URL) at 24 h, compared to myoglobin and CK/CK-MB. CK-MB and EKG changes (ST-segment deviations or new Q wave) did not predict graft failure |
| Paparella | Prospective Single centre study; CABG only (Patients with UA/MI < 7 days included) | 230 | cTnI | Pre-op, 1,6,12,24 and 36 h post-op, daily from day 2 to 7 | cTnI >260× URL (13 ng/L) predicted in-hospital mortality but not 2 year mortality; Peak cTnI generally observed 24 h after surgery |
| Onorati | Prospective single centre study; CABG only | 776 | cTnI ECG changes (New Q wave or reduction in R waves > 25%) & ECHO feature of MI | Pre-op and 12, 24, 48 and 72 h post-op | cTnI >3.1 μg/L (> 310× URL) at 12 h predicted increased in-hospital and 12 month mortality; Additional ECG and ECHO criteria of MI predicted worst outcome |
| Thielmann | Prospective single centre study CABG only patients undergoing re-angiography post-op | 94 | cTnI CK-MB | Pre-op, 1, 6, 12, 24, 36 and 48 h post-op | cTnI was the best discriminator between PMI ′in general′ and ′inherent′ release of cTnI after CABG with a cut-off value of 10.5 ng/mL (> 21× URL) and between graft-related and non-graft-related PMI with a cut-off value of 35.5 ng/mL (>71× URL). CK-MB level and ECG changes/TEE could not differentiate between those with or without graft failure. |
| Croal | Prospective CABG+ valve/other cardiac surgery | 1365 | cTnI ECG changes | 2 and 24 h | cTnI at 24 h best predictor ≥53× URL 2.37 OR 30-day mortality, 2.94 OR 1 yr mortality, 1.94 OR 3 yr mortality ≥27× URL 1.05 OR 30-day mortality, 1.14 OR 1 yr mortality, 1.37 OR 3 yr mortality |
| Provenchère | Prospective single centre study CABG and/or valve surgery | 92 | cTnI | 20 h post op | cTnI levels were not predictive of 1 year mortality in a multivariate model. |
| Fellahi | Prospective single centre study; CABG only | 202 | cTnI | Per-op and 24 h post-op | cTnI ≥ 13 ng/mL (≥ 21.66 x URL) did not predict in-hospital mortality, but was predictive of 2 year mortality (18% vs. 3%; OR 7.3). Best cut off to predict death ranged from 12.1 to 13.4 ng/mL (20.16–21.66× URL) |
| Adabag | Retrospective analysis CABG and/or valve surgery | 1186 | cTnI CK-MB | Ever 8 h for 24 h post-op, longer if no peak in 24 h | cTnI level independently associated with operative (30 day) mortality; CK-MB had a weaker association with operative mortality |
| Muehlschlegel | Prospective single centre study CABG only surgery | 1013 | cTnI | Daily from day 1 to 5 | 24 h cTnI rise ≥ 138× URL HR 2.8 for 5 yr mortality cTnT at 24 h were independent predictors of 5 year mortality in a multivariate model (No additional benefit of measuring cTn beyond 24 h). ECG changes alone did not predict 5 year mortality. |
| Petaja | Meta-analysis CABG and/or Cardiac surgery | 2348–3271 | cTnI | Up to 7 days post op | Short-term mortality (<6 mths) 8.1% ≥ 21× URL vs. 1.5% <21× URL Long-term mortality (6–36 mths): 10.6% vs. 3.1% (RR 1.06–11.00%) |
| Hashemzadeh | Prospective single centre study CABG +/- Valve surgery (Excluded MI within 7 days) | 320 | cTnI | Immediately and 20 h post-op | 20 h post-op cTnI had better prognostic value than immediate post-op levels. 20 h cTnI level was an independent predictor of in-hospital mortality above a value of 14 ng/mL (>10× URL) |
| Van Geene | Registry retrospective analysis;CABG and/or valve surgery | 938 (Separate validation subset, n = 579) | cTnI | 1 h post-op | 1 h post-op cTn values correlated with hospital mortality with the best cut-off value of 4.25 μ/L (Type of assay and URL for assay not known) |
| Domanski | Meta-analysis CABG only | 18,908 | cTnI | <24 h post op | 5 to < 10× URL 1.00 RR of 30 d mortality 10 to < 20× URL 1.89 RR of 30 d mortality 20 to < 40× URL 2.22 RR of 30 d mortality 40 to < 100× URL 3.61 RR of 30 d mortality ≥100× URL 10.91 RR of 30 d mortality |
| Ranasinghe | Retrospective analysis of 2 prospective randomized controlled clinical trials | 440 | cTnI | 6, 12, 24, 48, 72 h post-op | cTnI levels at 12, 24, 48 and 72 h were all independent predictors of mortality HR ranging from 1.02 to 1.10 for these time points (>4.8 yr follow-up period). Cumulative area under to curve for cTn release up to 72 h was the best predictor of mortality in this model (HR 1.45). Peak cTnI of > 13 ng/mL (URL not defined) did not predict mid-term mortality. |
AUC, area under the curve; CABG, coronary artery bypass grafting; CMR, cardiac MRI; CK-MB, creatine kinase-MB fraction; d, day; ECG, electrocardiogram; ECHO, echocardiocardiogram; HR, hazards ratio; h, hour; LGE, late gadolinium enhancement; LV, left ventricle; MACE, major adverse cardiac events; MI, myocardial infarction; mth, month; ng, nanogram; ONBEAT, on-pump beating heart; CABG ONSTOP, on-pump CABG; OR, odds ratio; post-op, post-operative; PMI, perioperative myocardial injury; RR, relative risk; TEE, transoesophageal echocardiogram; cTnI, Troponin I; cTnT, Troponin T; UA, unstable angina; URL, upper reference limit; yr, year.
Major studies using cardiac magnetic resonance to assess Type 5 myocardial infarction following coronary artery bypass graft surgery
| Study | Number of patients | Type of surgery | Cardiac biomarkers | Incidence of MI (LGE on CMR) | Major findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Steuer | 23 | CABG | CKMB/cTnT/cTnI Days 1, 2, and 4 after surgery | 18/23 (78%) CMR 4–9 days | First study to use CMR to visualise PMI following CABG surgery. Median LGE mass in patients with PMI was 4.4 g (2.5% of LV). Mixed pattern of LGE with transmural, subendocardial and patchy features. Moderate correlation between elevations in CK-MB, cTnT, cTnI at day 1 and LGE mass. Four patients with transmural LGE all had CK-MB ≥5× URL No pre-op CMR scan performed which may explain the higher than expected incidence of LGE on post-surgery CMR. |
| Selvanayagam | 53 | CABG (on pump vs. off pump) | cTnI At 1, 6, 12, 24, 48 and 120 h after surgery | 9/26 (35%) (on pump) CMR day 6 (range 4–17) 12/27 (44%) (off pump) CMR day 6 (range 4–17) | New median LGE mass in patients with PMI was 6.3±3.6 g on pump and 6.4 ± 4.0 g off pump Moderate correlation between elevations in AUC cTnI and LGE mass ( Only 4 of the 21 patients with LGE on CMR had new Q waves on ECG. Pre-op CMR revealed 47–53% patients had LGE prior to surgery (mean LGE mass 19 g). |
| Pegg | 40 | CABG (ONBEAT—on pump beating heart vs. ONSTOP—on pump cardioplegia) | cTnI and CK-MB At 1, 6, 12, 24, 48, and 120 h after surgery | 6/17 (35%) (ONBEAT) CMR day 6 or 7 (range 6–11.5) 12/23 (52%) (ONSTOP) CMR day 6 or 7 (range 6–11.5) | New median LGE mass in patients with PMI was 8.2 ± 5.2 g ONSTOP and 9.8 ± 9.0 g ONBEAT Good correlation between AUC and 24 h cTnI, CK-MB and new LGE mass. Mixed pattern of LGE with transmural and subendocardial features. Pre-op CMR revealed 100% patients had LGE prior to surgery. cTnI value >6.6 µg/L (165× URL) at 24 h detection of Type 5 MI on LGE-CMR. cTnI better than CK-MB for quantifying myocardial injury |
| Lim | 28 | CABG | cTnI and CK-MB At 1, 6, 12, 24 h after surgery | 9/28 (32%) CMR day 7 (4–10) | cTnI > 83.3× URL at 1 h and peak cTnI/CK-MB at 24 h correlated with new LGEcTnI better than CK-MB in predicting new LGE at both 1 and 24 hNone of the 9 patients with new LGE had Q waves on ECGPre-op CMR performed |
| van Gaal | 32 | CABG | cTnI and CK-MB At 1, 6, 12, 24 h after surgery | 9/32 (28%) CMR day 7 (4–10) and 6 months. | New mean LGE mass 8.7 g on acute scan—no significant change in LGE mass at 6 months There was a strong correlation between the absolute peak cTnI 24 h post-procedure and LGE. Pre-op CMR performed |
| Alam | 69 | CABG (Elafin vs. placebo) | cTnI At 2, 6, 24 and 48 h after surgery | 25% CMR day 5 | No difference in AUC cTnI or new LGE mass with Elafin (potent endogenous neutrophil elastase inhibitor—an anti-inflammatory agent) No data on LGE mass given Pre-op CMR performed |
| Hueb | 136 | CABG (on pump vs. off pump) | cTnI and CK-MB At 6, 12, 24, 36, and 48 h after surgery | 13/69 (19%) (on pump) CMR day 6 14/67 (21%) (off pump) on CMR day 6 | No data on LGE mass given CK-MB better than cTnI in predicting patients with LGE following CABG surgery The best cut-off for cTnI in predicting Type 5 MI (new LGE on CMR) for on-pump CABG was 162.5× URL and for off-pump CABG was 112.5× URL. The best cut-off for CK-MB in predicting LGE (Type 5 MI) for on-pump CABG was 8.5× URL and for off-pump CABG was 5.1× URL. New Q waves in ECG present in only 7/136 (5%) patients Pre-op CMR performed |
AUC, area under the curve; CABG coronary artery bypass grafting; CMR, cardiac MRI; CK-MB, creatine kinase-MB fraction; d, day; ECG, electrocardiogram; ECHO, echocardiocardiogram; HR, hazards ratio; h, hour; LGE, late gadolinium enhancement; LV, left ventricle; MACE, major adverse cardiac events; MI, myocardial infarction; mth, month; ng, nanogram; ONBEAT, on-pump beating heart; CABG ONSTOP, on-pump CABG; OR, odds ratio; post-op, post-operative; PMI, perioperative myocardial injury; RR, relative risk; TEE, transoesophageal echocardiogram; cTnI, Troponin I; cTnT, Troponin T; UA, unstable angina; URL, upper reference limit; yr, year.
Overview of definitions for peri-operative myocardial injury and Type 5 myocardial infarction
| Diagnostic criteria | Cardiac biomarker | Threshold for isolated elevation in cardiac biomarker (with no ECG or imaging changes of MI) | Threshold for elevation in cardiac biomarker with ECG and imaging changes of MI |
|---|---|---|---|
Universal definition Type 5 MI | Troponins only | N/A | ≥10× URL |
Universal definition Peri-operative myocardial injury | Troponins only | <10× URL | N/A |
SCAI Clinically relevant MI | CK-MB and Troponins | ≥10× URL (CK-MB) ≥70× URL (cTn) | ≥5× URL (CK-MB) ≥35× URL (troponin) |
ESC Joint WG Criteria Prognostically significant peri-operative myocardial injury | Troponins only | ≥7× URL (cTnT) ≥20× URL (cTnI) (Does not apply to hs-cTnT) | ≥10× URL |
URL, upper reference limit.