Troponin T does not rule out myocardial damage until 12 hours after the onset of chest pain

Date First Published:
March 1, 2000
Last Updated:
May 24, 2001
Report by:
Katrina Richell-Herren, Research Fellow (Manchester Royal Infirmary)
Search checked by:
Sue Maurice, Manchester Royal Infirmary
Three-Part Question:
In [patients with cardiac chest pain and a normal ECG] is [a troponin T measurement at 12 hours] sensitive enough to [rule out myocardial damage in the first 12 hours]?
Clinical Scenario:
A 50 year old man attends the emergency department with a 12 hour history of chest pain that may be cardiac in origin. His ECG is normal. You want to rule out possible myocardial damage and wonder whether a single troponin T measurement taken at this time is sensitive enough to do this.
Search Strategy:
Medline 1966-01/00 using the OVID interface.
Search Details:
({exp diagnosis OR diagnosis.mp} AND troponin$.mp) LIMIT to human AND english.
Outcome:
590 papers found of which 581 were irrelevant or of insufficient quality. The remaining 9 papers are shown in the table.
Relevant Paper(s):
Study Title Patient Group Study type (level of evidence) Outcomes Key results Study Weaknesses
Rapid accurate diagnosis of acute myocardial infarction in patients with non-traumatic chest pain withn one hour of admission. Mair J, Smidt J, Lechleitner P at al. 1995, Austria 114 emergency department patients with chest pain Diagnostic test study AMI Sensitivity 46% on admission Only admitted patients. Troponin cut-off set at 0.032 ng/l
Value of myoglobin, troponin T and CK-MB mass in ruling out acute myocardial infarction in the emergency room. De Winter RJ, Koster RW, Sturk A at al. 1995, Netherlands 309 emergency department patients with chest pain Diagnostic test study AMI Sensitivity 67% in patients with less than 75% chance of AMI Unclear if gold standard blinded. Risk assessment was by clinical judgement. Patients with abnormal ECGs included
Early diagnostic efficiency of cardiac troponin I and troponin T for acute myocardial infarction. Tucker JF, Collins RA, Anderson AJ at al. 1997, USA 177 emergency department patients within 24h of onset of chest pain Diagnostic test study AMI Sensitivity 33.3% at 1h<br><br>Sensitivity 33.3% at 2h<br><br>Sensitivity 59.3% at 6h<br><br>Sensitivity 96.3% at 12-24h<br><br>Specificity 86.7% at 12-24h Only admitted patients.
Evaluation of a bedside whole blood rapid troponin T assay in the Emergency Department. Rapid evaluation by assay of cardiac troponin T (REACTT). REACTT investigators study group. 1997, USA 926 emergency department patients with chest pain
Rapid bedside test vs laboratory test
Diagnostic test study AMI Sensitivity 19.6% vs 25% on admission<br><br>Sensitivity 59% vs 69.6% at 3h<br><br>Sensitivity 69.7% vs 79.8% at 6h 206 patients excluded due to lack of data. Discharged patients not followed up with same gold standard
Emergency room triage of patients with acute chest pain by means of rapid testing for cardiac troponin T or I. Hamm CW, Goldman BU, Heeschen C at al. 1997, Germany 773 emergency department patients within 12h of onset of chest pain, with no ST elevation Observational Death or non-fatal AMI within 30 days 44% predicted on arrival<br><br>79% predicted after 4h No indipendent gold standard applied to all patients. Inadequate follow up of discharged patients. Sensitivity could not be calculated
Clinical utility of troponin T levels and echocardiography in the Emergency Department. Moher ER 3rd, Ryan T, Segar DS at al. 1998, USA 100 patients with chest discomfort Diagnostic test study AMI Sensitivity 90% at 4h Cumulative sensitivities at 4h.
Measurement of cardiac troponin T is an effective method for predicting complications among emergency department patients with chest pain. Sayre MR, Kaufmann KH, Chen IW at al. 1998, USA 667 patients with chest pain Diagnostic test study AMI Sensitivity 88% at 12h post admission<br><br>Sensitivity 97% at 24h post admission Only admitted patients studied.
Diagnostic marker cooperative study for the diagnosis of myocardial infarction. Zimmerman J, Fromm R, Meyer D at al. 1999, USA 955 emergency department patients with chest pain Diagnostic test study AMI Sensitivity 87% at 10h post onset
Cardiac troponin T as a marker for myocardial ischaemia in patients seen at the Emergency Department for acute chest pain. Johnson PA, Goldmman L, Sacks DB at al. 1999, USA 1477 emergency department patients with chest pain Diagnostic test study AMI in the 24h following presentation Sensitivity 99% at 24h<br><br>Specificity 86% at 24h 174 cases excluded
Author Commentary:
No study has evaluated the point at which troponin T becomes sensitive enough to effectively rule-out acute myocardial infarction in emergency department patients. However no study has shown a high enough sensitivity (> 95%) to allow use as a SnNout at less than 12-24 hours.
Bottom Line:
Troponin T is not sensitive enough to rule out myocardial damage in the first 12 hours after onset of chest pain.
References:
  1. Mair J, Smidt J, Lechleitner P at al.. Rapid accurate diagnosis of acute myocardial infarction in patients with non-traumatic chest pain withn one hour of admission.
  2. De Winter RJ, Koster RW, Sturk A at al.. Value of myoglobin, troponin T and CK-MB mass in ruling out acute myocardial infarction in the emergency room.
  3. Tucker JF, Collins RA, Anderson AJ at al.. Early diagnostic efficiency of cardiac troponin I and troponin T for acute myocardial infarction.
  4. REACTT investigators study group.. Evaluation of a bedside whole blood rapid troponin T assay in the Emergency Department. Rapid evaluation by assay of cardiac troponin T (REACTT).
  5. Hamm CW, Goldman BU, Heeschen C at al.. Emergency room triage of patients with acute chest pain by means of rapid testing for cardiac troponin T or I.
  6. Moher ER 3rd, Ryan T, Segar DS at al.. Clinical utility of troponin T levels and echocardiography in the Emergency Department.
  7. Sayre MR, Kaufmann KH, Chen IW at al.. Measurement of cardiac troponin T is an effective method for predicting complications among emergency department patients with chest pain.
  8. Zimmerman J, Fromm R, Meyer D at al.. Diagnostic marker cooperative study for the diagnosis of myocardial infarction.
  9. Johnson PA, Goldmman L, Sacks DB at al.. Cardiac troponin T as a marker for myocardial ischaemia in patients seen at the Emergency Department for acute chest pain.