Language

English

Publication Date

6-13-2024

Journal

BMJ Open

DOI

10.1136/bmjopen-2023-083752

PMID

38871661

PMCID

PMC11177684

PubMedCentral® Posted Date

6-13-2024

PubMedCentral® Full Text Version

Post-print

Abstract

Introduction: Clinical assessment in emergency departments (EDs) for possible acute myocardial infarction (AMI) requires at least one cardiac troponin (cTn) blood test. The turn-around time from blood draw to posting results in the clinical portal for central laboratory analysers is ~1-2 hours. New generation, high-sensitivity, point-of-care cardiac troponin I (POC-cTnI) assays use whole blood on a bedside (or near bedside) analyser that provides a rapid (8 min) result. This may expedite clinical decision-making and reduce length of stay. Our purpose is to determine if utilisation of a POC-cTnI testing reduces ED length of stay. We also aim to establish an optimised implementation process for the amended clinical pathway.

Methods and analysis: This quality improvement initiative has a pragmatic multihospital stepped-wedge cross-sectional cluster randomised design. Consecutive patients presenting to the ED with symptoms suggestive of possible AMI and having a cTn test will be included. Clusters (comprising one or two hospitals each) will change from their usual-care pathway to an amended pathway using POC-cTnI-the 'intervention'. The dates of change will be randomised. Changes occur at 1 month intervals, with a minimum 2 month 'run-in' period. The intervention pathway will use a POC-cTnI measurement as an alternate to the laboratory-based cTn measurement. Clinical decision-making steps and logic will otherwise remain unchanged. The POC-cTnI is the Siemens (Erlangen Germany) Atellica VTLi high-sensitivity cTnI assay. The primary outcome is ED length of stay. The safety outcome is cardiac death or AMI within 30 days for patients discharged directly from the ED.

Ethics and dissemination: Ethics approval has been granted by the New Zealand Southern Health and Disability Ethics Committee, reference 21/STH/9. Results will be published in a peer-reviewed journal. Lay and academic presentations will be made. Māori-specific results will be disseminated to Māori stakeholders.

Trial registration number: ACTRN12619001189112.

Keywords

Humans, Acute Coronary Syndrome, Biomarkers, Clinical Decision-Making, Cross-Sectional Studies, Emergency Service, Hospital, Length of Stay, Myocardial Infarction, Point-of-Care Systems, Point-of-Care Testing, Quality Improvement, Risk Assessment, Troponin I, ACCIDENT & EMERGENCY MEDICINE, Myocardial infarction, Adult cardiology, Ischaemic heart disease, Emergency Departments

Published Open-Access

yes

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