Early diagnosis of acute coronary syndrome

  • Hugo Katus
  • André Ziegler
  • Okan Ekinci
  • Evangelos Giannitsis
  • Wendy Gattis Stough
  • Stephan Achenbach
  • Stefan Blankenberg
  • Martina Brueckmann
  • Paul Collinson
  • Dorin Comaniciu
  • Filippo Crea
  • Wilfried Dinh
  • Grégory Ducrocq
  • Frank A Flachskampf
  • Keith A A Fox
  • Matthias G Friedrich
  • Kathy A Hebert
  • Anders Himmelmann
  • Mark Hlatky
  • Dominik Lautsch
  • Bertil Lindahl
  • Daniel Lindholm
  • Nicholas L Mills
  • Giorgio Minotti
  • Martin Möckel
  • Torbjørn Omland
  • Véronique Semjonow

Beteiligte Einrichtungen

Abstract

The diagnostic evaluation of acute chest pain has been augmented in recent years by advances in the sensitivity and precision of cardiac troponin assays, new biomarkers, improvements in imaging modalities, and release of new clinical decision algorithms. This progress has enabled physicians to diagnose or rule-out acute myocardial infarction earlier after the initial patient presentation, usually in emergency department settings, which may facilitate prompt initiation of evidence-based treatments, investigation of alternative diagnoses for chest pain, or discharge, and permit better utilization of healthcare resources. A non-trivial proportion of patients fall in an indeterminate category according to rule-out algorithms, and minimal evidence-based guidance exists for the optimal evaluation, monitoring, and treatment of these patients. The Cardiovascular Round Table of the ESC proposes approaches for the optimal application of early strategies in clinical practice to improve patient care following the review of recent advances in the early diagnosis of acute coronary syndrome. The following specific 'indeterminate' patient categories were considered: (i) patients with symptoms and high-sensitivity cardiac troponin <99th percentile; (ii) patients with symptoms and high-sensitivity troponin <99th percentile but above the limit of detection; (iii) patients with symptoms and high-sensitivity troponin >99th percentile but without dynamic change; and (iv) patients with symptoms and high-sensitivity troponin >99th percentile and dynamic change but without coronary plaque rupture/erosion/dissection. Definitive evidence is currently lacking to manage these patients whose early diagnosis is 'indeterminate' and these areas of uncertainty should be assigned a high priority for research.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
ISSN0195-668X
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 01.11.2017

Anmerkungen des Dekanats

Published on behalf of the European Society of Cardiology. All rights reserved. © The Author 2017. For permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.

PubMed 29029109