First study to validate Access hsTnI’s clinical performance within five established accelerated diagnostic pathways for the assessment of patients with symptoms suggestive of ACS in 2 hours
In 2015, the European Society of Cardiology (ESC) published their new clinical guidelines for the management of ACS in patients presenting without persistent ST-segment elevation.2 The 2-hour rule-out protocol, first investigated by the same expert group, was recommended by the 2015 ESC guidelines for rapid rule-out by combining the risk score with ECG and hsTnI results. This study validated Access hsTnI’s clinical performance in the existing 2-hour diagnostic pathways for suspected ACS patients, using the Access hsTnI’s 99th percentile upper reference limit from Beckman Coulter’s assay insert as the clinical cutoff value in accordance with international guidelines.2,3
“High-sensitivity assays such as Beckman Coulter’s Access hsTnI have enabled emergency clinicians to make significant changes to assessment practices for patients with suspected ACS. The value of adopting this new assay into clinical care may be realized by using validated, accelerated diagnostic protocols, which have been shown to safely improve patient care,” said Louise Cullen, MBBS—an emergency department physician and joint principal researcher in the ASPECT and ADAPT trials from Brisbane, Australia.
About the study
The investigators from Royal Brisbane and Women’s Hospital performed a comparison between five accelerated diagnostic pathways using patient data from the Australian cohort of the ADAPT study and the Improved Assessment of Chest-pain trial. Access hsTnI was measured with presentation and 2-hour blood samples in more than 1,800 patients. The eligible patient cohort is young, with a low prevalence of acute myocardial infarction (AMI, 5.3%) and ACS (7.7%).
The study confirms that Access hsTnI provides similar sensitivity, when used in the accelerated diagnostic pathways, compared to previously investigated high-sensitivity assays. The results show that the new Vancouver Chest Pain Rule and No Objective Testing Rule can safely rule out low-risk ACS patients (28.2% and 34.5%, respectively) within two hours when used in conjunction with Access hsTnI. No cases of AMI were detected in these low-risk patients in the 30-day follow-up. The use of sex-specific cutoff values had minimal effect on the results.
ACS has been a huge healthcare burden in many countries. It is estimated more than 5.5 million people present to ED each year with chest pain while only 13% have a final diagnosis of ACS. This study suggests adding Access hsTnI to existing diagnostic pathways can improve resource use in chest-pain evaluations.
About Access hsTnI from Beckman Coulter
The clinical utility of cardiac troponin continues to evolve as assays become more sensitive. Beckman Coulter is committed to respond to the evolving clinical needs for more efficient patient triage in EDs. The newly released Access hsTnI assay is designed to aid in the diagnosis of AMI patients, using the established 99th percentile cutoffs, in accordance with local regulations and guidelines.
“This new study provides independent confirmation of the results obtained during our clinical trials of Access hsTnI. Doctors can now interpret low levels of troponin over time periods as short as two hours with greater confidence. This enables doctors to make faster and more accurate decisions regarding whether or not a myocardial infarction has occurred, particularly at lower levels of troponin,” said Michael Samoszuk, M.D., chief medical officer, Beckman Coulter.