American Heart Journal
Volume 155, Issue 2 , Pages 208-214, February 2008

The clinical need for high-sensitivity cardiac troponin assays for acute coronary syndromes and the role for serial testing

  • Alan H.B. Wu, PhD

      Affiliations

    • Department of Laboratory Medicine, Clinical Chemistry Laboratory, San Francisco General Hospital, University of California, San Francisco, CA
    • Corresponding Author InformationReprint requests: Alan H. B. Wu, PhD, San Francisco General Hospital, Room 2M27, 1001 Potrero Ave, San Francisco, CA 94110.
  • ,
  • Allan S. Jaffe, MD

      Affiliations

    • Cardiovascular Division and Division of Laboratory Medicine, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN

Received 10 August 2007; accepted 12 October 2007. published online 10 December 2007.

Background

Cardiac troponin is the biomarker of choice for the serologic diagnosis of acute coronary syndromes. International cardiology and laboratory medicine guidelines have suggested that the cutoff concentration be set at the 99th percentile of a healthy population, with an assay imprecision of 10% or less. Unfortunately, most commercial troponin assays do not have the sensitivity and precision to reliably detect troponin in sera of healthy subjects. Therefore, there is a need to develop troponin assays with higher sensitivity, which cannot be achieved while also improving the assay's precision.

Methods and Results

Novel prototype analytical testing devices have been developed that are 5- to 10-fold more sensitive than existing commercial troponin assays. These tests should enable an earlier detection of myocardial infarction relative to the time of presentation and detect a higher percentage of emergency department chest pain patients who are at risk for short-term major adverse cardiac events. However, use of a high-sensitivity troponin assay will also result in detection of more patients who have cardiac necrosis due to a nonischemic etiology.

Conclusions

Serial troponin testing will be necessary to determine the clinical significance of low levels of troponin release with use of high-sensitivity assays. Guidelines will need to be established to determine a change in troponin results that is statistically and clinically significant, and new considerations for the time interval needed between blood collections. This will enable the use of future high-sensitivity troponin assays to be more valuable.

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PII: S0002-8703(07)00830-7

doi:10.1016/j.ahj.2007.10.016

American Heart Journal
Volume 155, Issue 2 , Pages 208-214, February 2008