The American journal of cardiology
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Most patients presenting to the emergency department with possible cardiac symptoms have low cardiac troponin (cTn) concentrations. A combination of biomarkers that improves risk stratification in patients at very low risk for major adverse cardiovascular events (MACEs) would be beneficial. In this multicenter prospective cohort study, specimens from 598 subjects presenting to 5 emergency departments with suspected acute coronary syndromes were collected on arrival and serially for traditional and novel biomarkers. ⋯ Prognostic values of BNP and PlGF were incremental (none increased, 2 of 212, 0.9%; only PlGF increased, 30 of 170, 17.6%; only BNP increased, 33 of 153, 21.6%; BNP and PlGF increased, 18 of 86, 20.9%). Considering only initial emergency department samples, 97% and 96% of patients with normal PlGF, BNP, and cTnI levels were event-free at 30 and 365 days, respectively. In conclusion, the combination of BNP, PlGF, and eGFR is the most accurate in risk-stratifying patients with suspected acute coronary syndrome.
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Multicenter Study Comparative Study
Prognosis based on creatine kinase isoenzyme MB, cardiac troponin I, and right ventricular size in stable patients with acute pulmonary embolism.
Prognosis of stable patients with acute pulmonary embolism (PE) has been assessed with cardiac troponin I (cTnI) and right ventricular (RV) function or size. Whether creatine kinase-MB isoenzyme (CK-MB) would add to the prognostic assessment is uncertain. We retrospectively assessed in-hospital mortality from PE in 392 stable patients to test the hypothesis that CK-MB would be of greater prognostic value than cTnI or RV size and we assessed whether combinations would increase prognostic value. ⋯ In conclusion, cardiac biomarkers contributed to prognosis only in patients with RV dilatation. CK-MB was the strongest predictor of death from PE but its prevalence was low, thus limiting its value as a single prognostic indicator. The combination of high CK-MB, high cTnI, and RV dilatation tended to indicate the highest mortality.