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Optimal cutoff-value of Siemens cardiac troponin I assay in patients with kidney disease for the early diagnosis of acute myocardial infarction

Abstract

Purpose: The recent introduction of more sensitive cardiac troponin (cTn) assays improved the early diagnosis of acute myocardial infarction (AMI). However, its diagnostic utility has never been tested in patients with kidney disease (KD), who are known to have elevated levels of cTn already in the absence of AMI, which may lead to a lower diagnostic value of more sensitive cTn in this high-risk subgroup. Methods: We conducted an international multicenter study to examine the diagnostic accuracy of the Siemens cTnI Ultra assay in 1997 consecutive patients presenting to the emergency department with symptoms suggestive of AMI, of whom 343 (17%) were determined to have KD (MDRD GFR <60ml/min/1.73m2) and to derive the optimal cutoff-value for the diagnosis of AMI in patients with KD. The diagnostic accuracy was further compared to a conventional cTn assay (Roche Troponin T fourth generation). The final diagnosis was adjudicated by two independent cardiologists based on hs-cTnT. Results: AMI was the final diagnosis in 35% (n=120) of all KD-patients as compared to 18% in patients with normal kidney function (p<0.001). Among KD-patients with other diagnoses than AMI, baseline hs-cTnI-levels were elevated above the 99thpercentile in 20%, In patients with KD the diagnostic accuracy at presentation, quantified by the area under the receiver-operator-characteristic curve (AUC), was significantly greater for Siemens cTnI as compared to the standard cTnT assay (AUC for cTnI, 0.88 vs. AUC for the standard assay, 0.82, p=0.013). In patients presenting within three hours after the onset of chest pain, the superiority of Siemens cTnI over conventional cTnT was even more pronounced (AUC 0.86 vs. 0.72, p=0.005). In KD, the optimal hs-cTnI cutoff derived from the ROC curve was 46 ng/l compared to 19 ng/l in patients with normal kidney function (standard 99th percentile 40 ng/l, provided by the manufacturer). Conclusions: The Siemens cTnI Ultra assay has a very high diagnostic accuracy also in KD-patients and is superior to a conventional cTnT-assay. Mild cTnI elevations are common in non-AMI patients. The optimal cutoff-level in KD-patients seems to be around the 99th percentile of a standard population, whereas the optimal cutoff-level in patients with normal kidney function tends to be only half of the suggested cutoff-value. ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT0047058

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