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Risk stratification in patients with acute chest pain using three high-sensitivity cardiac troponin assays

Authors :
Haaf, Philip
Reichlin, Tobias
Twerenbold, Raphael
Hoeller, Rebeca
Rubini Gimenez, Maria
Zellweger, Christa
Moehring, Berit
Fischer, Catherine
Meller, Bernadette
Wildi, Karin
Freese, Michael
Stelzig, Claudia
Mosimann, Tamina
Reiter, Miriam
Mueller, Mira
Hochgruber, Thomas
Sou, Seoung Mann
Murray, Karsten
Minners, Jan
Freidank, Heike
Osswald, Stefan
Mueller, Christian
Haaf, Philip
Reichlin, Tobias
Twerenbold, Raphael
Hoeller, Rebeca
Rubini Gimenez, Maria
Zellweger, Christa
Moehring, Berit
Fischer, Catherine
Meller, Bernadette
Wildi, Karin
Freese, Michael
Stelzig, Claudia
Mosimann, Tamina
Reiter, Miriam
Mueller, Mira
Hochgruber, Thomas
Sou, Seoung Mann
Murray, Karsten
Minners, Jan
Freidank, Heike
Osswald, Stefan
Mueller, Christian
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Aims Several high-sensitivity cardiac troponin (hs-cTn) assays have recently been developed. It is unknown which hs-cTn provides the most accurate prognostic information and to what extent early changes in hs-cTn predict mortality. Methods and results In a prospective, international multicentre study, cTn was simultaneously measured with three novel [high-sensitivity cardiac Troponin T (hs-cTnT), Roche Diagnostics; hs-cTnI, Beckman-Coulter; hs-cTnI, Siemens] and a conventional assay (cTnT, Roche Diagnostics) in a blinded fashion in 1117 unselected patients with acute chest pain. Patients were followed up 2 years regarding mortality. Eighty-two (7.3%) patients died during the follow-up. The 2-year prognostic accuracy of hs-cTn was most accurate for hs-cTnT [area under the receivers operating characteristic curve (AUC) 0.78 (95% CI: 0.73-0.83) and outperformed both hs-cTnI (Beckman-Coulter, 0.71 (95% CI: 0.65-0.77; P = 0.001 for comparison), hs-cTnI (Siemens) 0.70 (95% CI: 0.64-0.76; P < 0.001 for comparison)] and cTnT 0.67 (95% CI: 0.61-0.74; P < 0.001 for comparison). Absolute changes of hs-cTnT were more accurate than relative changes in predicting mortality, but inferior to presentation values of hs-cTnT. Combining changes of hs-cTnT within the first 6 h with their presentation values did not further improve prognostic accuracy. Similar results were obtained for both hs-cTnI assays regarding the incremental value of changes. Hs-cTn concentrations remained predictors of death in clinically challenging subgroups such as patients with pre-existing coronary artery disease, impaired renal function, and patients older than 75 years. Conclusion High-sensitivity cardiac Troponin T is more accurate than hs-cTnI in the prediction of long-term mortality. Changes of hs-cTn do not seem to further improve risk stratification beyond initial presentation values

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1156691490
Document Type :
Electronic Resource