Projects per year
Abstract
Aims The aim of this study was determine the incidence of major adverse cardiac events within 30 and 365-days among patients discharged from emergency departments (EDs), following a single high-sensitivity cardiac troponin I test result below or close to the limits of detection (LoD) Methods Patients ≥20 years old who presented to four EDs from mid-2014 to end-2015, underwent a single high-sensitivity troponin and results test and were discharged were included. Data from ED presentations, hospital admissions, mortality records, and pathology laboratories were linked and harmonized. High-sensitivity troponin levels were categorized as below (<2 ng/L) or close to (<5 ng/L) the LoD. The primary outcome was cardiovascular death and myocardial infarction (MI), identified using ICD-10AM codes. In a cohort of 6633 patients, 49% had high-sensitivity troponin levels below the LoD (<2 ng/L), and 79% had levels <5 ng/L. There were no primary outcome events at 30-day follow-up among patients with high-sensitivity troponin results below 2 or 5 ng/L. At 365-days, there were 5 (0.15%) and 11 (0.21%) primary outcome events for patients with high-sensitivity troponin results below 2 and 5 ng/L, indicating negative predictive values of 99.85% andConclusion These findings confirm that patients with a single very low level of high-sensitivity troponin on presentation to EDs are at low risk of MI and cardiovascular death at 30 and 365 days, supporting the safety of a triage strategy incorporating a single high-sensitivity troponin result below the LoD to identify patients at low-risk, who may be suitable for expedited discharge.
Original language | English |
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Article number | oeae094 |
Number of pages | 5 |
Journal | European Heart Journal Open |
Volume | 4 |
Issue number | 6 |
Early online date | 20 Nov 2024 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - Nov 2024 |
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Dive into the research topics of 'Single high-sensitivity troponin-I for ruling out acute coronary syndrome: a detection limit approach'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.Projects
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Is highly-sensitive troponin testing advancing clinical practice, improving outcomes and cost-effective in the investigation and management of chest pain in the Emergency Department?
Briffa, T. (Investigator 01), Cullen, L. (Investigator 02), Chew, D. (Investigator 03), Knuiman, M. (Investigator 04), Fatovich, D. (Investigator 05), Hickman, P. (Investigator 06), Parsonage, W. (Investigator 07), Nedkoff, L. (Investigator 08), Sanfilippo, F. (Investigator 09), Hillis, G. (Investigator 10) & Karnon, J. (Investigator 11)
NHMRC National Health and Medical Research Council
1/04/17 → 31/12/22
Project: Research