Early kinetics of cardiac troponin in suspected acute myocardial infarction

  • María Rubini Giménez
  • Karin Wildi
  • Desiree Wussler
  • Luca Koechlin
  • Jasper Boeddinghaus
  • Thomas Nestelberger
  • Patrick Badertscher
  • Raphael Sedlmayer
  • Christian Puelacher
  • Tobias Zimmermann
  • Jeanne du Fay de Lavallaz
  • Pedro Lopez-Ayala
  • Kathrin Leu
  • Katharina Rentsch
  • Òscar Miró
  • Beatriz López
  • F Javier Martín-Sánchez
  • José Bustamante
  • Damian Kawecki
  • Jiri Parenica
  • Jens Lohrmann
  • Wanda Kloos
  • Andreas Buser
  • Dagmar I Keller
  • Tobias Reichlin
  • Raphael Twerenbold
  • Christian Mueller

Abstract

INTRODUCTION AND OBJECTIVES: Release kinetics of high-sensitivity cardiac troponin (hs-cTn) T and I in patients with acute myocardial infarction (AMI) are incompletely understood. We aimed to assess whether hs-cTnT/I release in early AMI is near linear.

METHODS: In a prospective diagnostic multicenter study the acute release of hs-cTnT and hs-cTnI within 1 and 2hours from presentation to the emergency department was quantified using 3 hs-cTnT/I assays in patients with suspected AMI. The primary endpoint was correlation between hs-cTn changes from presentation to 1 hour vs changes from presentation to 2hours, among all AMI patients and different prespecified subgroups. The final diagnosis was adjudicated by 2 independent cardiologists, based on serial hs-cTnT from the serial study blood samples and additional locally measured hs-cTn values.

RESULTS: Among 2437 patients with complete hs-cTnT data, AMI was the adjudicated diagnosis in 376 patients (15%). For hs-cTnT, the correlation coefficient between 0- to 1-hour change and 0- to 2 hour change was 0.931 (95%CI, 0.916-0.944), P <.001. Similar findings were obtained with hs-cTnI (Architect) with correlation coefficients between 0- to 1-hour change and 0- to 2 hour change of 0.969 and hs-cTnI (Centaur) of 0.934 (P <.001 for both). Findings were consistent among type 1 and type 2 AMI and in the subgroup of patients presenting very early after chest pain onset.

CONCLUSIONS: Patients presenting with early AMI showed a near linear release of hs-cTnT and hs-cTnI. This near linearity provides the pathophysiological basis for rapid diagnostic algorithms using 0- to 1-hour changes as surrogates for 0- to 2 hour or 0- to 3 hour changes. Registered at ClinicalTrials.gov (Identifier: NCT00470587).

Bibliographical data

Original languageEnglish
ISSN1885-5857
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 06.2021
Externally publishedYes

Comment Deanary

Copyright © 2020 Sociedad Española de Cardiología. Published by Elsevier España, S.L.U. All rights reserved.

PubMed 32451223