The aim of this study was to ascertain the impact of gender specific hs-TnI thresholds in a clinical setting and determine the clinical characteristics and discharge diagnosis for individuals presenting to the Emergency Department (ED) with elevated troponin I with the Abbott high-sensitivity troponin I (hs-TnI) assay, but non-elevated troponin I on the previous generation assay (STAT TnI-II). Medical records of individuals presenting to the Royal Perth Hospital ED with elevated hs-TnI between 12 November 2013 and 24 December 2013 were retrospectively reviewed. The 99th percentile hs-TnI thresholds were ≥26 ng/L for males and ≥16 ng/L for females. TnI-II assays were performed concomitantly. In total, 1449 individuals [855 (59%) males] had 3580 troponin measurements. hs-TnI was elevated in 1569 (43.8%) measurements. Elevated hs-TnI with normal TnI-II was found in 120 (8.3%) individuals: 77 (64%) females and 43 (36%) males. Eight (6.7%) individuals were diagnosed with acute coronary syndrome (ACS): four (9.3%) males and four (5.2%) females. Other cardiac aetiologies were found in 33 (42%) females and 17 (40%) males. Individuals with elevated hs-TnI had high rates of hypertension (80%), diabetes mellitus (33%), cardiac failure (23%), aspirin use (53%) and lipid lowering therapy (52%). Significantly fewer females than males with discrepant troponin I results had previous ischaemic heart disease. The hsTnI assay identifies 8% more individuals with elevated troponin in an acute setting, with a female predominance (64%). However, only 6.7% of these individuals with multiple cardiovascular risk factors were diagnosed with ACS, a ∼0.5% increase overall. Outcome studies are required to determine if the Australian hs-TnI thresholds are clinically appropriate.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pathol.2017.03.004 | DOI Listing |
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