The newer, highly-sensitive troponin assays have their pitfalls. Specifically, specificity. However, most of the issues associated with diminished specificity are iatrogenic – transitioning from use of troponin as a dichotomous test that used to tell us “yes” to one that does a better job of telling us “no”.
This is a pre-planned substudy as part of a prospective evaluation of patients with chest pain and non-diagnostic ECG, prospectively evaluated for acute coronary syndrome. These authors looked at hsTnI, but, rather than using the 99th percentile as their cut-off for “negative”, they evaluate the utility of an undetectable hsTnI – which, for this Siemens assay, was <0.006 µg/L. Based on 1,076 patients evaluated, 647 had an undetectable troponin at initial presentation. Of these, 4 patients had a subsequently detectable troponin and were adjudicated as acute MI, 3 of which had coronary artery disease and received revascularization.
What was special about those four patients? Each of them presented within 2 hours of symptom onset. All told, 399 patients presented more than 2 hours after the onset of symptoms, had an undetectable troponin, and were free of MACE at 7 and 30 days. These results are generally consistent with other work looking at the sensitivity of the (duh) highly-sensitive troponin assays – capable of conferring an excellent instant rule-out.
So, if you’re asking the question – does this patient have an acute MI? – you’re in good shape. However, if you’re using highly-sensitive troponin assays, you’ll also need to be smart about appropriately interpreting the indeterminate range – or your patients will ultimately suffer as a result of decreased specificity and downstream over-testing. Lastly, this is only valid as a diagnostic tool for acute MI – the extent to which it provides prognostic or diagnostic information regarding acute coronary syndromes, coronary artery disease, or ischemic heart disease is still being refined.
“Does undetectable troponin I at presentation using a contemporary sensitive assay rule out myocardial infarction? A cohort study”
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25552547