Impact of more conservative European Society of Cardiology guidelines on the management of patients with acute chest pain

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Abstract

Objective: Early diagnosis or rule-out of acute coronary syndrome (ACS) is a key competence of emergency medicine. Changes in the NSTE-ACS guidelines of the European Society of Cardiology (ESC) in 2015 and 2020 both warranted a henceforth more conservative approach regarding high-sensitivity troponin t (hsTnt) testing. We aimed to assess the impact of more conservative guidelines on the frequency of early rule-out and prolonged observation with repeated hsTnt testing at a high-volume tertiary care emergency department. Patients and Methods: We conducted a pre- and post-changeover analysis 3 months before and 3 months after transition from less (hsTnt cut-off 30 ng/L, 3-hour rule-out) to more conservative (hsTnt cut-off 14 ng/L, 1-hour rule-out) guidelines in 2015, comparing proportions of patients requiring repeated testing. Results: We included 5442 cases of symptoms suspicious of acute cardiac origin (3451 before, 1991 after, 2370 (44%) female, age 55 (SD 19) years). The proportion of patients fulfilling early-rule out criteria decreased from 68% (2348 patients) before to 60% (1195 patients) with the 2015 guidelines (P

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Kienbacher, C. L., Fuhrmann, V., van Tulder, R., Havel, C., Schreiber, W., Rasoul-Rockenschaub, S., … Roth, D. (2021). Impact of more conservative European Society of Cardiology guidelines on the management of patients with acute chest pain. International Journal of Clinical Practice, 75(6). https://doi.org/10.1111/ijcp.14133

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