• Emerg Med J · Aug 2013

    Multicenter Study Clinical Trial

    Mid-regional pro-adrenomedullin improves disposition strategies for patients with acute dyspnoea: results from the BACH trial.

    • Martin Möckel, Julia Searle, Oliver Hartmann, Stefan D Anker, W Frank Peacock, Alan H B Wu, Alan Maisel, BACH Writing group, Anna Slagman, Jörn Ole Vollert, Jana Papassotiriou, Inder Anand, Robert Christenson, Lori B Daniels, Gerasimos S Filippatos, Christopher Hogan, Nils Morgenthaler, Christian Mueller, Sean-Xavier Neath, Leong Ng, Richard Nowak, Mark Richards, Salvatore Di Somma, and Piotr Ponikowski.
    • Department of Cardiology and Emergency Medicine Unit, Charité-Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Berlin, Germany.
    • Emerg Med J. 2013 Aug 1;30(8):633-7.

    ObjectivesTo assess the value of mid-regional pro-adrenomedullin (MR-proADM) in guiding patient disposition from the emergency department (ED), as one of the key factors of hospital resource utilisation, in undifferentiated patients with acute dyspnoea.MethodsWe used clinical and outcome data from a large international biomarker study (BACH trial) and analysed data of all 1557 patients of the European and US sites presenting with acute dyspnoea. Patients were discharged or transferred from the ED to different levels of care (general ward, monitoring unit, intensive care unit). This original patient disposition was compared with the hypothetical disposition based on an adapted method of net reclassification improvement (NRI), which upgraded or downgraded patients from one level of care to the other based on the MR-proADM test result.ResultsMR-pro-ADM was significantly higher in patients who died during the follow-up than in survivors (p<0.0001). When applying the adapted NRI model, 30 additional patients from the European Union (EU) and 55 additional patients from USA were theoretically discharged (increase of 16.5%) if MR-proADM had been used for patient management. The overall NRI, adding up the rates of upgrades and downgrades, in the EU was 16.0% (95% CI 8.2% to 23.9%). A total of n=72 (9.9%) patients changed disposition when adding MR-pro ADM. In the USA, the overall NRI was 12.0% (5.7%-18.4%) and a total of n=81 (11.2%) patients changed disposition.ConclusionsMR-proADM has the potential to guide initial disposition of undifferentiated ED patients with acute dyspnoea and might therefore be helpful to improve resource utilisation and patient care.

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