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Emergency Department Triage and Evaluation of the Patient with Chest Pain Department of Emergency Medicine University of Pennsylvania Health System Judd E. Hollander, MD Professor, Clinical Research Director Department of Emergency Medicine University of Pennsylvania ED Visits 130,000,000 visits annually 3,000,000 likely noncardiac sent home 40,000 MIs 8,000,000 chest pain 5,000,000 suspected or actual cardiac Goals of Triage Identify patients with AMI Identify patients with unstable angina Identify patients at high risk of cardiovascular complications – resource utilization in hospital • CCU vs. monitored vs. floor beds Identify patients safe for ED release – need for treatment Your Risk Tolerance… 5% 2% 1% Why Do More? The missed AMI rate is inversely proportional to the admission rate for ED chest pain patients Kontos MC & Jesse RL. Am J Cardiol 2000;85:32B-39B Outline Gut Impression Clinical Parameters Electrocardiography Cardiac Markers Disposition with or without Telemetry Prior Testing Acute Cardiac Imaging Initial Impression = “Noncardiac Pain” Patients with initial emergency impression of “noncardiac chest pain” 2,992 85 itrACS 17,737 patients enrolled Conclusion: Even patients thought to have noncardiac pain can suffer adverse cardiac events, especially if risk factors are present 2.8% had adverse cardiac events (infarction, revascularization, or death) within 30 days Miller CD, et al. Ann Emerg Med. 2004;44:565. Clinical Parameters Department of Emergency Medicine University of Pennsylvania Health System Clinical Parameters Identifying low risk patients Lee et al. 1985 Arch IM 1985;145:65. 596 ED patients MI USA Other Clinical Parameters MI USA Other Lee et al. Arch IM 1985;145:65. Clinical Parameters MI USA Other Lee et al. Arch IM 1985;145:65. Clinical Parameters: Risk Factors Risk factors do not affect likelihood of AMI – 1700 patients • Cholesterol • Hypertension • Family history Slight increase in risk in men only – Diabetes mellitus • 2.4 (1.2 - 4.8) – Family history • 2.1 (1.4 - 3.3) Jayes et al. J Clin Epidemiol 1992;45:621. Clinical Parameters: Risk Factors CRF Burden and ACS (AUC=0.591) Han et al. Ann Emerg Med 2007;49:145. Costochondritis 122 patients evaluated for ARA definition of costochondritis – pain caused by pressure enough to blanch skin – whether or not it precisely reproduced CC 6% of patients had AMI Disla et al. Arch Intern Med. 1994;154:2466. “Clear Cut Alt Diagnosis” Of 1995 pts, 599 pts had an Alt Dx Presence of an Alternative Diagnosis – Reduced the likelihood of 30 day death, MI, revascularization • 8.8 to 4.0% • Risk ratio, 0.45 (95% confidence interval, 0.29-0.69) 4% risk of 30 death, MI, revascularization is not low enough to allow safe release from the ED Hollander et al. Acad Emerg Med., 2007:14:215 Clinical Parameters History and physical examination are not real helpful in identifying patients with AMI. Electrocardiograms Lee et al. 1985 Arch IM 1985;145:65. Electrocardiograms Patients admitted to CCU Morbidity and mortality related to ECG Slater et al. Am J Cardiol 1987;60:766. Electrocardiograms % Patients admitted to CCU (n=469) 25 20 46 Neg ECG n=167 15 Pos ECG n=302 10 18 18 5 4 0 1 1 0 VF Sus VT NS VT Cond Dist Brush et al. NEJM 1985;312:1137. Late Electrocardiograms Does the NPV of the ECG increase with time? Normal ECG over time Symptom duration NPV 0-3 hrs 93% 3-6 hrs 93% 6-9 hrs 93% 9-12 hrs 94% Singer et al. Annals EM 1997;29:575. Combination of Clinical Parameters and Electrocardiography Department of Emergency Medicine University of Pennsylvania Health System Chest Pain Study Group Chest Pain Study Group Risk Heavily dependent on ECG No group of patients at less than 1% risk of AMI Cardiac risk factors not useful Defined high and low risk as 7% cut-off May be useful for triage No patients deemed safe for release from ED Lee et al. NEJM 1991;324:1239. Young Patients-Validated Of 4492 visits for CP, 1023 visits were pts<40 yrs If no cardiac risk factors and no prior cardiac history (n=436) – 6 USA (1.4%) initial diagnosis – 2 AMI (0.5%) during index visit – 30 days – no death, AMI, PCI or CABG (0.5%, 95% CI, 0-1.1%). Normal ECG and no prior cardiac history (n=593) – 6 USA (1%) initial diagnosis – 1 AMI (0.17%) during index visit – no AMI, PCI or CV deaths during follow up (0%, 95% CI, 0-0.5%). – Risk of 30 day adverse events 0.3 (0-0.8%) No prior history, no risks, normal ECG (n=299) – 3 USA (1%), no AMI – No 30 day adverse events (0%; 0-1%) Add initial marker – Only 1 ACS, nothing else for any of the groups (0.14%; 0.1-0.2%) Marsan et al. AEM 2005;128:26. Clinical Parameters: Risk Factors .763 .602 .518 CRF Burden and ACS Han et al. Ann Emerg Med 2007;49:145. TIMI Risk Score TIMI Risk Score for UA – – – – – – – Age > 65 3 or more CRF’s Known CAD > 50% ST segment changes on ECG 2 or more anginal events in past 24 hours ASA use within 7 days prior Elevated cardiac markers TIMI Risk in the ED # of TIMI Risk Factors Chase, et al. Ann Emerg Med. 2006:48:252 High Sensitivity Cardiac Markers Department of Emergency Medicine University of Pennsylvania Health System TnI-Ultra: 60d AMI/CV Death 371 patients with symptoms suggestive of ACS cTnI N # Events Rate, % RR <0.006 108 (29%) 2 1.9 - 0.006-0.04 >0.04-0.10 174 (47%) 38 (10%) 11 9 6.4 24.1 3.3 13.0 >0.10 51 (14%) 28 55.1 34.9 Apple et al. Clin Chem 2008;54:723 High Sensitivity Troponin 718 patients with potential AMI; 123 had AMI Presentation Sens = 84-95% Spec = 80-84% Reichlin et al. NEJM 2009;361:858 High Sensitivity Troponin 1818 patients with potential AMI; 413 had AMI Presentation Sens = 90% Spec = 90% Within 3 hours Sens = 100% Keller et al. NEJM 2009;361:868 hsTnI in UA: Protect TIMI 30 Wilson et al. Am Heart J 2009;158:386 2009 100 potential ACS patients 35% discharged 65% admitted 85% bogus 15% real The Future 100 potential ACS patients 35% discharged 90% Sens 80% Spec 44 8 35 discharged 71 discharged 65% admitted 85% bogus 15% real 55 not sick (IM) 10 real (cards) 19 (trop FP) 9-10 real Stuck with Admissions? Department of Emergency Medicine University of Pennsylvania Health System Evidence Based Work Arounds Observation Unit Rationale Cannot identify a group of clinical and/or ECG variables that identifies patients at such low risk for AMI/complications that they can be safely released from the ED No single test sufficiently excludes risk of AMI or complications Attempts to shorten evaluation Telemetry Hollander et al – Prospective study AJC 1997;110 – 460 CP pts with normal or nonspecific ECG’s • 4 CV complications (1 VT/VF post op; 1 SVT in CHF pt; 2 sinus pauses of 2.4 and 4 seconds without intervention) Schull et al – Retrospective study AEM 2000;7:647 – 8932 pts admitted to tele ward • 20 cardiac arrest – 9 detected by monitor • 3 survival to discharge – 1 definitely detected by monitor; 1 detected by neighbor when he fell to floor; 1 no record of when it began on monitor (?detected) Telemetry: HUP Data Total Patients (n=3686) ICU/cath lab Telemetry Floor Home 424 (12%) 1748 (47%) 110 (3%) 1383 (38%) Goldman < 7 Goldman > 7 1157 (66%) 591 (34%) Markers positive Markers negative 130 (11%) 1027 (89%) Hollander et al. Annals EM 2004;43:71. Telemetry: HUP Data Sustained VT/VF Bradydysrrhythmias requiring treatment 0% (95 CI, 0-0.3%) Preventable CV Death 0% (95 CI, 0-0.3%) Hollander et al. Annals EM 2004;43:71. Telemetry: HUP Outcomes Initial Hospitalization No. Percent Myocardial infarction 15 Unstable angina 121 Percutaneous intervention 11 Stent Placement 10 CABG 4 Death 2 1.5% 12% 1.1% 1.0% 0.4% 0.2% Hollander et al. Annals EM 2004;43:71. It’s Not My Heart I Had a Test Already Department of Emergency Medicine University of Pennsylvania Health System Stress Tests and ED Disposition 92% 100 90 72% Percent 80 67% 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 Abnormal Normal None Disposition (% admitted) Nerenberg et al. AmJEM 2007;25:39. Stress Tests & 30-Day Outcomes 12 10.1% Percent 10 8 4.8% 6 5.2% 4 2 0 Abnormal Normal None 30-Day Adverse Cardiovascular Outcomes (%) Nerenberg et al. AmJEM 2007;25:39. Maybe It Keeps Them Away? Shaver et al demonstrated that patients evaluated with stress testing were just as likely to: – Return to the ED (39 vs 40%) – Be admitted to the hospital (29 vs 32%) – Receive cardiac catheterization (12.5 vs 10.4%) Shaver et al. Acad EM 2005;11:1272 Better Than Stress Testing deFillipi et al found that compared with patients who were evaluated with stress testing, patients evaluated with coronary angiography (CA) had: – – – – Fewer repeat ED visits Fewer hospitalizations Higher satisfaction rates Better understanding of their disease deFillipi et al. JACC 2001 Acute Cardiac Imaging (in the ED) Department of Emergency Medicine University of Pennsylvania Health System Echocardiography Detects wall motion abnormality – sensitivity moderate high Cannot distinguish old from new – many “false positives” May miss non-Q wave AMI – usually small infarcts Never compared to physician judgment or cardiac markers to assess incremental value Sestamibi Imaging 338 ED chest pain patients with normal scans – None had a cardiac death during 1 year period – None had an MI – 7 required coronary revascularization 100 abnormal scans – 7 AMI – 30 revascularization within one year Tatum et al. Annals EM 1997;29:116. Sestamibi Imaging Relative risks of abnormal scans – AMI 50 (2.8-890) – Revascularization 14.5 (6-34) – Death by 1 year 30 (1.6-570) Sensitivity for AMI – 100% (64-100) Specificity – 78% (74-82) Tatum et al. Annals EM 1997;29:116. ER Assessment of Sestamibi (ERASE) RCT of 2475 ED chest pain patients with normal or nondiagnostic ECGs – Usual ED evaluation (n=1260) – Usual evaluation & resting MPI (n= 1215) Primary outcome – Appropriateness of initial triage decision Udelson JE et al. JAMA. 2002;288:2693 ERASE Sensitivity for MI and acute ischemia were not significantly different Patients in the acute MPI arm had a significantly lower hospitalization rate Costs reduced in the MPI arm by an average of $70/patient 100 NS 97 96 NS 83 81 MPI Standard P<.01 75 52 50 42 25 0 MI ACS Admit Udelson JE et al. JAMA. 2002;288:2693 Coronary CTA Accuracy Correlation with cardiac catheterization Study Scanner Sensitivity Specificity Janne d’Othee All 95% 85% Janne d’Othee 64 slice 98% 91% Heuschmid Dual source 96% 87% Weustnik Dual source 99% 87% Scheffel Dual source 96% 98% Coronary CTA Prognosis Meta-analysis 9592 patients Median f/u 20 months MACE Sensitivity = 99% LR - = 0.008 Hulton et al. JACC 2011:57:1237 No / noncritical disease Hollander et al. – 100% NPV for D/AMI/revasc in 525 patients at 30 days Hoffman et al. – 100% NPV for ACS in 73 pts over 5 months Rubinshtein et al. – 100% NPV for 35 pts over 15 months Pundziate et al. – 100% NPV for 20 pts over 13 months No / noncritical disease Goldstein et al. – 100% NPV for D/AMI/revasc in 67 patients at 30 days Hoffman et al. (ROMICAT) – Any plaque • 100% NPV for ACS/events in 183 pts over 6 months – Stenosis < 50% • 98% NPV for ACS/events in 300 pts over 6 months CT Coronary Angiography Largest cohort study – 525 of 568 patients with negative CTA – 30 day follow-up No cardiac deaths (95% CI, 0-0.8%) No AMI (95% CI, 0-0.8%) No revascularization (95% CI, 0-0.8%) Hollander et al Ann EM 2009;53:295. All CTA (n=568) Ca>400, no contrast injection (n=6) CTA with contrast injection (n=562) No stenosis or maximal stenosis < 50% (n=508) Maximal stenosis 50-69% (n=41) Maximal stenosis >70% (n=13) 5 None Stress Cath None Stress 473 32 3 18 21 3 - + - + 32 0 16 5 - + - 3 0 0 Cath None Stress 5 3 5 2 50-69% 3* Cath 1 6 + 3 + - 50-69% + 1 0 4 2 CT Coronary Angiography RCT of CCTA v MPI post CDU (n=197) – Normal CCTA discharged home (75%) – 9 with severe disease to catheterization – Intermediate disease to stress test CCTA reduced LOS (3.4 v 15.0 hours) CCTA reduced costs ($1586 v $1872) Re-evaluation of chest pain (2% v 7%) Goldstein et al JACC 2007;49:863-871 CT STAT CCTA (n=361) MPI (n=338) Time to Diagnosis 7.9 hrs 6.2 hrs ED Cost $2137 $3458 Death within 6 months 0 0 AMI within 6 months 1 (0.3%) 5 (1.5%) ED revisit, cardiac 2 (0.6%) 4 (1.3%) 0 0 82% 90% 2/268 (0.8%) 1/266 (0.4%) Rehospitalization, cards Normal test MACE with nl test Goldstein et al . JACC 2011;58:1414-22 Main Outcomes: Efficacy CTA (N=98) Obs/CTA (N=102) Obs/Stress (N=154) Tele Testing (N=289) $4154 Total Facility Cost $ (IQR) 1240 (723-1943) 2318 (2000-3041) 4024 (3322-4751) 2913 (1713-5592) LOS hours (IQR) 8.1 (5.9-13.7) 20.9 (15.1-26.5) 26.2 (21.3-32.1) 30.2 (24.0-73.1) Chang et al. AEM 2008;15:649. Main Outcomes: Safety % CAD % Death/MI % Rehosp CTA (N=98) Obs/CTA (N=102) Obs/Stress (N=154) Tele (N=289) 5.1 (1.7-11.5) 5.9 (2.2-12.4) 5.8 (2.7-10.8) 6.6 (4.0-10.1) 0 (0-3.7) 0 (0-3.6) 0.7 (0.1-3.6) 3.1 (1.4-5.8) 0 (0.0-4.0) 3.2 (0.7-9.0) 2.3 (.06-12.0) 12.2 (8.5-16.7) Chang et al. AEM 2008;15:649. Fagan’s Nomogram for MACE Hulton et al. JACC 2011:57:1237 CT Coronary Angiography Volume rendered (VR) LAO view: Normal LAD and diagonal branches VR images provide an overview of the coronary arteries but can not be used on their own to exclude stenosis. CT Coronary Angiography Thin-slab MIP (maximum intensity projection): No stenosis in proximal LAD, circumflex and ramus medianus (RM) arteries. CT Coronary Angiography L Main: Calcified plaque with 50% stenosis of the left main LAD: Mixed calcified and noncalcified plaque resulting in 70% stenosis Diagonal: mild stenosis LCx: Patent CT Coronary Angiography Low density noncalcified plaque (arrow) causing >50% stenosis of the proximal right coronary artery. CT Coronary Angiography Severe RCA lesion ACRIN Randomized 2:1 to Coronary CTA Coronary CTA group Coronary CTA Clinical bloods (c/w guidelines) at time 0 & 90-180 minutes Banked bloods at T0, 90-180 and 6 hours Dispo per physicians Traditional care group Anything but coronary CTA Banked bloods at T0, 90-180 and 6 hours Dispo per physicians Results March 26 at ACC ROMICAT 2 – March 27 Putting It Together Department of Emergency Medicine University of Pennsylvania Health System Triage Clinical Presentation ECG Past history – CAD Available technology Required medications – Fibrinolytics – IV nitrates – Heparin Triage Risk stratification – – – – – TIMI Risk Score HEART Score GRACE or PURSUIT Lee and Goldman algorithm Clinical impression Adjunctive Testing – Markers – Imaging Triage High risk patients – – – – – – – ECG abnormalities Heart failure Dysrrhythmias Unstable vital signs Need for IV drips Positive markers or MPI scans in the ED Positive CCTA with good story Admit to Cardiac Care Unit Triage Lowest risk patients – – – – – Young patients Normal electrocardiograms Low risk story TIMI Score <3 Normal markers and sestamibi scans, if done Triage to – Observation unit – Nonmonitored beds – Home if lowest possible risk • Normal CCTA goes home • individual and institutional cut-off for misses Triage Intermediate Risk Patients – – – – – Equivocal stories Abnormal but not diagnostic ECG’s TIMI Score > 3 Markers normal or slightly elevated Scans with old abnormalities (CAD) Most should be admitted to monitored beds Unstable Angina Distinguish real unstable angina from need to “rule out” AMI Single atypical episode of chest pain – “rule out MI” – unstable angina? Summary ACS versus anything else for dispo/triage CTA to allow discharge AMI is ANY elevation in markers above normal STEMI or NSTEMI drive treatment Words of wisdom? (without evidence) Short cuts to “r/o MI” – 90 minute to 3 hour “rule outs” • Rising or delta cardiac markers Incidental abnormal ECG’s – Always make referral – QTc intervals Admission diagnosis also should include – “rule out life threatening conditions” Stable angina – Whatever it is – it is stable for outpt evaluation The ROS curse