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Adoption of high-sensitivity cardiac troponin for risk stratification of patients with suspected myocardial infarction: a multicentre cohort study

Adoption of high-sensitivity cardiac troponin for risk stratification of patients with suspected myocardial infarction: a multicentre cohort study
Adoption of high-sensitivity cardiac troponin for risk stratification of patients with suspected myocardial infarction: a multicentre cohort study

Background: Guidelines recommend high-sensitivity cardiac troponin to risk stratify patients with possible myocardial infarction and identify those eligible for discharge. Our aim was to evaluate adoption of this approach in practice and to determine whether effectiveness and safety varies by age, sex, ethnicity, or socioeconomic deprivation status. Methods: A multi-centre cohort study was conducted in 13 hospitals across the United Kingdom from November 1st, 2021, to October 31st, 2022. Routinely collected data including high-sensitivity cardiac troponin I or T measurements were linked to outcomes. The primary effectiveness and safety outcomes were the proportion discharged from the Emergency Department, and the proportion dead or with a subsequent myocardial infarction at 30 days, respectively. Patients were stratified using peak troponin concentration as low (<5 ng/L), intermediate (5 ng/L to sex-specific 99th percentile), or high-risk (>sex-specific 99th percentile). Findings: In total 137,881 patients (49% [67,709/137,881] female) were included of whom 60,707 (44%), 42,727 (31%), and 34,447 (25%) were stratified as low-, intermediate- and high-risk, respectively. Overall, 65.8% (39,918/60,707) of low-risk patients were discharged from the Emergency Department, but this varied from 26.8% [2200/8216] to 93.5% [918/982] by site. The safety outcome occurred in 0.5% (277/60,707) and 11.4% (3917/34,447) of patients classified as low- or high-risk, of whom 0.03% (18/60,707) and 1% (304/34,447) had a subsequent myocardial infarction at 30 days, respectively. A similar proportion of male and female patients were discharged (52% [36,838/70,759] versus 54% [36,113/67,109]), but discharge was more likely if patients were <70 years old (61% [58,533/95,227] versus 34% [14,428/42,654]), from areas of low socioeconomic deprivation (48% [6697/14,087] versus 43% [12,090/28,116]) or were black or asian compared to caucasian (62% [5458/8877] and 55% [10,026/18,231] versus 46% [35,138/75,820]). Interpretation: Despite high-sensitivity cardiac troponin correctly identifying half of all patients with possible myocardial infarction as being at low risk, only two-thirds of these patients were discharged. Substantial variation in the discharge of patients by age, ethnicity, socioeconomic deprivation, and site was observed identifying important opportunities to improve care. Funding: UK Research and Innovation.

Data linkage, Healthcare data, Healthcare outcomes, High-sensitivity cardiac troponin, Myocardial infarction
2666-7762
McDermott, Michael
8cf08ee8-0ec8-4915-9901-6be029ded62e
Kimenai, Dorien M
ed1a657f-81e9-454b-865c-96d32698b198
Anand, Atul
08dd99d7-fcbd-4a44-8bd8-ef5253d100b0
Huang, Zen
cc25eba5-67d9-495b-aa3f-fa8af0cbe908
Houston, Andrew
8190f8c2-e36e-4485-b541-8a703e7082e5
Williams, Sophie
a8505fe4-73cd-40a9-acb8-20140d85b1ab
Evison, Felicity
6eb161fb-cc0a-48d8-bfe3-194990bca9d7
Gallier, Suzy
e4275fe9-9eef-48c0-b867-7806988a92df
Carenzo, Catalina
a20d7b80-5684-4625-be5c-2fceff5de920
Glampson, Ben
400f8f65-50ac-425d-b58e-f8459fa10233
Hasan, Madina
e8ece746-fe50-45ea-bd7a-87dcea6155be
Robertson, Alexander
ac51ccff-80e7-445f-bd70-cbb3ede4ff9b
Phillips, Thomas
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Davis, Cai
a4aa4473-7285-41d5-8807-11717fdddb05
Sapey, Elizabeth
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Mayer, Erik
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Mason, Suzanne
47319da9-4302-4180-a031-c2c6363c7d98
Stammers, Matthew
a4ad3bd5-7323-4a6d-9c00-2c34f8ae5bd3
Mills, Nicholas L
b013a4c9-7308-4fc0-8152-86c3e101444d
HDRUK Regional Linked Data Driven Evidence Network
McDermott, Michael
8cf08ee8-0ec8-4915-9901-6be029ded62e
Kimenai, Dorien M
ed1a657f-81e9-454b-865c-96d32698b198
Anand, Atul
08dd99d7-fcbd-4a44-8bd8-ef5253d100b0
Huang, Zen
cc25eba5-67d9-495b-aa3f-fa8af0cbe908
Houston, Andrew
8190f8c2-e36e-4485-b541-8a703e7082e5
Williams, Sophie
a8505fe4-73cd-40a9-acb8-20140d85b1ab
Evison, Felicity
6eb161fb-cc0a-48d8-bfe3-194990bca9d7
Gallier, Suzy
e4275fe9-9eef-48c0-b867-7806988a92df
Carenzo, Catalina
a20d7b80-5684-4625-be5c-2fceff5de920
Glampson, Ben
400f8f65-50ac-425d-b58e-f8459fa10233
Hasan, Madina
e8ece746-fe50-45ea-bd7a-87dcea6155be
Robertson, Alexander
ac51ccff-80e7-445f-bd70-cbb3ede4ff9b
Phillips, Thomas
30ef6ddd-1f4a-4791-89e5-37c092fcba51
Davis, Cai
a4aa4473-7285-41d5-8807-11717fdddb05
Sapey, Elizabeth
7e4891fd-1941-4b33-9cc6-e2c2acaa20c9
Mayer, Erik
e58e8434-a880-46ea-ab69-7ef569310d29
Mason, Suzanne
47319da9-4302-4180-a031-c2c6363c7d98
Stammers, Matthew
a4ad3bd5-7323-4a6d-9c00-2c34f8ae5bd3
Mills, Nicholas L
b013a4c9-7308-4fc0-8152-86c3e101444d

HDRUK Regional Linked Data Driven Evidence Network (2024) Adoption of high-sensitivity cardiac troponin for risk stratification of patients with suspected myocardial infarction: a multicentre cohort study. The Lancet Regional Health – Europe, 43, [100960]. (doi:10.1016/j.lanepe.2024.100960).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: Guidelines recommend high-sensitivity cardiac troponin to risk stratify patients with possible myocardial infarction and identify those eligible for discharge. Our aim was to evaluate adoption of this approach in practice and to determine whether effectiveness and safety varies by age, sex, ethnicity, or socioeconomic deprivation status. Methods: A multi-centre cohort study was conducted in 13 hospitals across the United Kingdom from November 1st, 2021, to October 31st, 2022. Routinely collected data including high-sensitivity cardiac troponin I or T measurements were linked to outcomes. The primary effectiveness and safety outcomes were the proportion discharged from the Emergency Department, and the proportion dead or with a subsequent myocardial infarction at 30 days, respectively. Patients were stratified using peak troponin concentration as low (<5 ng/L), intermediate (5 ng/L to sex-specific 99th percentile), or high-risk (>sex-specific 99th percentile). Findings: In total 137,881 patients (49% [67,709/137,881] female) were included of whom 60,707 (44%), 42,727 (31%), and 34,447 (25%) were stratified as low-, intermediate- and high-risk, respectively. Overall, 65.8% (39,918/60,707) of low-risk patients were discharged from the Emergency Department, but this varied from 26.8% [2200/8216] to 93.5% [918/982] by site. The safety outcome occurred in 0.5% (277/60,707) and 11.4% (3917/34,447) of patients classified as low- or high-risk, of whom 0.03% (18/60,707) and 1% (304/34,447) had a subsequent myocardial infarction at 30 days, respectively. A similar proportion of male and female patients were discharged (52% [36,838/70,759] versus 54% [36,113/67,109]), but discharge was more likely if patients were <70 years old (61% [58,533/95,227] versus 34% [14,428/42,654]), from areas of low socioeconomic deprivation (48% [6697/14,087] versus 43% [12,090/28,116]) or were black or asian compared to caucasian (62% [5458/8877] and 55% [10,026/18,231] versus 46% [35,138/75,820]). Interpretation: Despite high-sensitivity cardiac troponin correctly identifying half of all patients with possible myocardial infarction as being at low risk, only two-thirds of these patients were discharged. Substantial variation in the discharge of patients by age, ethnicity, socioeconomic deprivation, and site was observed identifying important opportunities to improve care. Funding: UK Research and Innovation.

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Accepted/In Press date: 28 May 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 13 June 2024
Published date: 1 August 2024
Additional Information: Publisher Copyright: © 2024 The Author(s)
Keywords: Data linkage, Healthcare data, Healthcare outcomes, High-sensitivity cardiac troponin, Myocardial infarction

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 494325
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/494325
ISSN: 2666-7762
PURE UUID: 63d577e0-a4c0-4461-856e-58ef31850f99
ORCID for Matthew Stammers: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-3850-3116

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Date deposited: 03 Oct 2024 16:47
Last modified: 04 Oct 2024 02:12

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Contributors

Author: Michael McDermott
Author: Dorien M Kimenai
Author: Atul Anand
Author: Zen Huang
Author: Andrew Houston
Author: Sophie Williams
Author: Felicity Evison
Author: Suzy Gallier
Author: Catalina Carenzo
Author: Ben Glampson
Author: Madina Hasan
Author: Alexander Robertson
Author: Thomas Phillips
Author: Cai Davis
Author: Elizabeth Sapey
Author: Erik Mayer
Author: Suzanne Mason
Author: Matthew Stammers ORCID iD
Author: Nicholas L Mills
Corporate Author: HDRUK Regional Linked Data Driven Evidence Network

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