| Literature DB >> 31547767 |
Brett L Wanamaker1, Milan M Seth1, Devraj Sukul1, Simon R Dixon2, Deepak L Bhatt3, Ryan D Madder4, John S Rumsfeld5, Hitinder S Gurm1.
Abstract
Background Troponin release in ST-segment-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) has predictable kinetics with early levels reflective of ischemia duration. Little research has examined the value of admission troponin levels in STEMI patients undergoing primary percutaneous coronary intervention. We investigated the relationship between troponin on presentation and mortality in a large, real-world cohort of STEMI patients undergoing primary percutaneous coronary intervention. Methods and Results We used multivariable adaptive regression modeling to examine the association between admission troponin levels and in-hospital mortality for patients who underwent primary percutaneous coronary intervention for STEMI. We adjusted for known clinical risk factors using a validated mortality risk model derived from the NCDR (National Cardiovascular Data Registry) CathPCI database, and this same model was used to calculate patients' predicted mortality based on clinical and demographic factors. Patients were then stratified by troponin groups to compare predicted versus observed mortality. Of the 14 061 patients included in the cohort, 47.2% had initial troponin levels that were undetectable or within the reference range. Admission troponin was an independent predictor of in-hospital mortality, and any value above the reference range was associated with increased mortality (1.8% versus 5.1%, [standardized difference, 18.2%]). Patients with the highest predicted risk for mortality (13% predicted) in the highest admission troponin grouping experienced an observed mortality of 19.5%. Patients in low troponin groupings consistently demonstrated lower than predicted mortality based on their clinical and demographic risk profile. Conclusions Nearly half of patients undergoing primary percutaneous coronary intervention had normal troponin on presentation and had a relatively good outcome. Mortality increases with elevated admission troponin levels, regardless of baseline clinical risk. The substantial number of patients who present with markedly elevated troponin and their relatively worse outcomes highlights the need for continued improvement in prehospital STEMI detection and care.Entities:
Keywords: myocardial infarction; percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty; troponin
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31547767 PMCID: PMC6806038 DOI: 10.1161/JAHA.119.013551
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Am Heart Assoc ISSN: 2047-9980 Impact factor: 5.501
Figure 1Patient inclusion diagram for study cohort. ED indicates emergency department; PCI, primary percutaneous coronary intervention; STEMI, ST‐segment‐elevation myocardial infarction.
Baseline Demographic and Clinical Characteristics of Patients With Troponin Fold 0 to 1 and >1 on Presentation
| Troponin Fold 0 to 1 N=6645 | Troponin Fold >1 N=7416 | Absolute Standardized Difference (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Demographic characteristics | |||
| Age, y | 60.16±12.43 | 63.11±13.54 | 22.6 |
| Male | 4863 (73.2%) | 4869 (65.7%) | 16.4 |
| Female | 1782 (26.8%) | 2547 (34.3%) | 16.4 |
| Black or African American | 856 (12.9%) | 926 (12.5%) | 1.19 |
| White | 5654 (85.1%) | 6345 (85.6%) | 1.33 |
| Uninsured | 728 (11.0%) | 706 (9.5%) | 4.74 |
| History and clinical characteristics | |||
| Hypertension | 4547 (68.4%) | 5190 (70.0%) | 3.47 |
| Dyslipidemia | 4218 (63.5%) | 4480 (60.5%) | 6.32 |
| Diabetes mellitus | 1567 (23.6%) | 2003 (27.0%) | 7.88 |
| Tobacco use | 3081 (46.4%) | 3135 (42.3%) | 8.2 |
| Previous MI | 1721 (25.9%) | 1482 (20.0%) | 14.1 |
| Previous PCI | 1845 (27.8%) | 1474 (19.9%) | 18.6 |
| Previous HF | 343 (5.2%) | 487 (6.6%) | 5.98 |
| Peripheral artery disease | 418 (6.3%) | 596 (8.0%) | 6.78 |
| Chronic lung disease | 823 (12.4%) | 925 (12.5%) | 0.27 |
| Cardiogenic shock at time of PCI | 305 (4.6%) | 471 (6.4%) | 7.75 |
| Creatinine, mg/dL | 1.04±0.38 | 1.10±0.51 | 11.8 |
| Pre‐PCI | |||
| Troponin I, ng/mL | 0.04±0.07 | 5.88±17.63 | 46.8 |
| Troponin T, ng/mL | 0.02±0.01 | 0.70±1.32 | 73.0 |
| Pre‐PCI TIMI | |||
| 0 flow | 4276 (64.3%) | 4637 (62.5%) | 3.78 |
| 1 flow | 596 (9.0%) | 649 (8.8%) | 0.77 |
| 2 flow | 757 (11.4%) | 959 (12.9%) | 4.71 |
| 3 flow | 739 (11.2%) | 824 (11.1%) | 0.03 |
| In‐hospital mortality | 117 (1.8%) | 375 (5.1%) | 18.2 |
Variables expressed as mean±SD or n (%). HF indicates heart failure; MI, myocardial infarction; PCI, percutaneous coronary intervention; TIMI, thrombolysis in myocardial infarction.
Figure 2The association between admission troponin and mortality across the study cohort. Left y‐axis: estimated mortality (black curve) derived using LOESS regression. Right y‐axis: percent of cases in each troponin fold range (blue histogram bars). Vertical red lines identify nodes in the multivariable adaptive regression analysis. LOESS indicates Locally Estimated Scatterplot Smoothing.
Figure 3Troponin fold groupings and NCDR CathPCI risk quartile mortality heatmap. The x‐axis divides patients by troponin fold on presentation, with groupings determined by multivariable adaptive regression. The y‐axis divisions separate patients of each troponin grouping into quartiles of predicted risk based on the NCDR CathPCI prediction model. Observed mortality (%) is expressed with gradations of color found on the right heatmap calibration bar. NCDR indicates National Cardiovascular Data Registry; Tn, troponin fold.
Symptom‐to‐Door and Door‐to‐Device Times by Troponin Fold on Presentation
| Troponin Folds | Median Symptom‐to‐Door in Minutes (IQR) | Median Door‐to‐Device in Minutes (IQR) |
|---|---|---|
| 0 to 0.5 | 68 (47–120) | 63 (49–77) |
| 0.5 to 1 | 72 (47–130) | 67 (53–81) |
| 1 to 10 | 99 (59–183) | 69 (54–84) |
| >10 | 150 (66–387.5) | 73 (58–91) |
Spearman correlation between troponin (folds) and symptom‐to‐door time (minutes) ρ=0.2858, P<0.0001. Spearman correlation between troponin (folds) and door‐to‐device time (minutes) ρ=0.1465, P<0.0001. IQR indicates interquartile range.