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Clinical decision aids and computed tomography coronary angiography in patients with suspected acute coronary syndrome

Clinical decision aids and computed tomography coronary angiography in patients with suspected acute coronary syndrome
Clinical decision aids and computed tomography coronary angiography in patients with suspected acute coronary syndrome
Background: the HEART score, the T-MACS model and the GRACE score support early decision-making for acute chest pain, which could be complemented by CT coronary angiography (CTCA). However, their performance has not been directly compared.

Methods: in this secondary analysis of a multicentre randomised controlled trial of early CTCA in intermediate-risk patients with suspected acute coronary syndrome, C-statistics and performance metrics (using the predefined cut-offs) of clinical decision aids and CTCA, alone and then in combination, for the index hospital diagnosis of acute coronary syndrome and for 30-day coronary revascularisation were assessed in those who underwent CTCA and had complete data.

Results: among 699 patients, 358 (51%) had an index hospital diagnosis of acute coronary syndrome, for which the C-statistic was higher for CTCA (0.80), followed by the T-MACS model (0.78), the HEART score (0.74) and the GRACE score (0.60). The negative predictive value was higher for the absence of coronary artery disease on CTCA (0.90) or a T-MACS estimate of <0.05 (0.83) than a HEART score of <4 (0.81) and a GRACE score of <109 (0.55). For 30-day coronary revascularisation, CTCA had the greatest C-statistic (0.80) with a negative predictive value of 0.96 and 0.92 in the absence of coronary artery disease and obstructive coronary artery disease, respectively. The combination of the T-MACS estimates and the CTCA findings was most discriminative for the index hospital diagnosis of acute coronary syndrome (C-statistic, 0.88) and predictive of 30-day coronary revascularisation (C-statistic, 0.85). No patients with a T-MACS estimate of <0.05 and normal coronary arteries had acute coronary syndrome during index hospitalisation or underwent coronary revascularisation within 30 days.

Conclusions: in intermediate-risk patients with suspected acute coronary syndrome, the T-MACS model combined with CTCA improved discrimination of the index hospital diagnosis of acute coronary syndrome and prediction of 30-day coronary revascularisation.

Trial registration number: NCT02284191.
1472-0205
488-494
Wang, Kang-Ling
5ed1e42c-c20e-4cd4-bb58-90e069ae1bd8
Taggart, Caelan
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McDermott, Michael
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O'Brien, Rachel
daa843a7-7fc6-4457-9882-60eff6396dde
Oatey, Katherine
bf711588-c6f4-4032-ad33-9b743c4e25f2
Keating, Liza
a1c5f887-6f5d-4caa-b6d1-e1ebc5d3f507
Storey, Robert F.
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Felmeden, Dirk
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Curzen, Nick
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Kardos, Attila
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Roobottom, Carl
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Smith, Jason
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Goodacre, Steve
a4c9c41f-44a4-4de9-ac6d-7c4c0daa5b05
Newby, David E.
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Gray, Alasdair J.
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RAPID-CTCA Investigators Collaborators
Wang, Kang-Ling
5ed1e42c-c20e-4cd4-bb58-90e069ae1bd8
Taggart, Caelan
6a27f609-614e-48fc-a834-b1d48843d6f9
McDermott, Michael
8d3f3759-c28a-45fb-b9e4-de2898259c28
O'Brien, Rachel
daa843a7-7fc6-4457-9882-60eff6396dde
Oatey, Katherine
bf711588-c6f4-4032-ad33-9b743c4e25f2
Keating, Liza
a1c5f887-6f5d-4caa-b6d1-e1ebc5d3f507
Storey, Robert F.
892bb08c-5356-4fd8-a77c-2accce8e10f8
Felmeden, Dirk
116b66e8-a109-4172-ac5a-e72cc69fe2e7
Curzen, Nick
70f3ea49-51b1-418f-8e56-8210aef1abf4
Kardos, Attila
a23428f1-301f-4adb-b980-65f31dd9fef2
Roobottom, Carl
80aa86b6-c2d2-4c2a-adf6-22701dd67f19
Smith, Jason
39b927aa-7a59-434a-85bb-ddbf4408b950
Goodacre, Steve
a4c9c41f-44a4-4de9-ac6d-7c4c0daa5b05
Newby, David E.
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Gray, Alasdair J.
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Wang, Kang-Ling, Taggart, Caelan, McDermott, Michael, O'Brien, Rachel, Oatey, Katherine, Keating, Liza, Storey, Robert F., Felmeden, Dirk, Curzen, Nick, Kardos, Attila, Roobottom, Carl, Smith, Jason, Goodacre, Steve, Newby, David E. and Gray, Alasdair J. , RAPID-CTCA Investigators Collaborators (2024) Clinical decision aids and computed tomography coronary angiography in patients with suspected acute coronary syndrome. Emergency Medicine Journal, 41 (8), 488-494. (doi:10.1136/emermed-2024-213904).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: the HEART score, the T-MACS model and the GRACE score support early decision-making for acute chest pain, which could be complemented by CT coronary angiography (CTCA). However, their performance has not been directly compared.

Methods: in this secondary analysis of a multicentre randomised controlled trial of early CTCA in intermediate-risk patients with suspected acute coronary syndrome, C-statistics and performance metrics (using the predefined cut-offs) of clinical decision aids and CTCA, alone and then in combination, for the index hospital diagnosis of acute coronary syndrome and for 30-day coronary revascularisation were assessed in those who underwent CTCA and had complete data.

Results: among 699 patients, 358 (51%) had an index hospital diagnosis of acute coronary syndrome, for which the C-statistic was higher for CTCA (0.80), followed by the T-MACS model (0.78), the HEART score (0.74) and the GRACE score (0.60). The negative predictive value was higher for the absence of coronary artery disease on CTCA (0.90) or a T-MACS estimate of <0.05 (0.83) than a HEART score of <4 (0.81) and a GRACE score of <109 (0.55). For 30-day coronary revascularisation, CTCA had the greatest C-statistic (0.80) with a negative predictive value of 0.96 and 0.92 in the absence of coronary artery disease and obstructive coronary artery disease, respectively. The combination of the T-MACS estimates and the CTCA findings was most discriminative for the index hospital diagnosis of acute coronary syndrome (C-statistic, 0.88) and predictive of 30-day coronary revascularisation (C-statistic, 0.85). No patients with a T-MACS estimate of <0.05 and normal coronary arteries had acute coronary syndrome during index hospitalisation or underwent coronary revascularisation within 30 days.

Conclusions: in intermediate-risk patients with suspected acute coronary syndrome, the T-MACS model combined with CTCA improved discrimination of the index hospital diagnosis of acute coronary syndrome and prediction of 30-day coronary revascularisation.

Trial registration number: NCT02284191.

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Accepted/In Press date: 16 May 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 10 June 2024
Published date: 22 July 2024

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 492649
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/492649
ISSN: 1472-0205
PURE UUID: 134f7953-6a2e-4b22-a9d9-a608e8d08d3e
ORCID for Nick Curzen: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-9651-7829

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Date deposited: 09 Aug 2024 16:32
Last modified: 10 Aug 2024 01:40

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Contributors

Author: Kang-Ling Wang
Author: Caelan Taggart
Author: Michael McDermott
Author: Rachel O'Brien
Author: Katherine Oatey
Author: Liza Keating
Author: Robert F. Storey
Author: Dirk Felmeden
Author: Nick Curzen ORCID iD
Author: Attila Kardos
Author: Carl Roobottom
Author: Jason Smith
Author: Steve Goodacre
Author: David E. Newby
Author: Alasdair J. Gray
Corporate Author: RAPID-CTCA Investigators Collaborators

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