6533b824fe1ef96bd1280abc

RESEARCH PRODUCT

“Ultra-sensitive” cardiac troponins: Requirements for effective implementation in clinical practice

Fabian Sanchis-gomarGiuseppe Lippi

subject

medicine.medical_specialtyAcute coronary syndromeCardiac troponinClinical BiochemistryClinical Chemistry TestsReview030204 cardiovascular system & hematologyCulpritacute coronary syndromecardiac troponin; myocardial infarction; acute coronary syndrome; diagnostics03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineTroponin TLimit of DetectionInternal medicinecardiac troponinmedicinediagnosticsHumansIn patient030212 general & internal medicineMyocardial infarctionUltra sensitiveacute coronary syndrome; cardiac troponin; diagnostics; myocardial infarctionbusiness.industryHealthy populationBiochemistry (medical)Troponin Imedicine.diseaseClinical Practicemyocardial infarctionCardiologybusinessAlgorithms

description

The measurement of cardiac troponins, either cardiac troponin I or T, has become the culprit of clinical decision making in patients with suspected acute coronary syndrome (ACS), especially in those with non-ST elevation myocardial infarction (NSTEMI). The leading analytical mainstays of cardiac troponin immunoassays include the limit of blank (LoB), limit of detection (LoD), functional sensitivity, the 99th percentile of a healthy reference population, along with the percentage of “ostensibly healthy” subjects displaying measurable values 50% in the general healthy population. The very recent commercialization of methods with further improved analytical sensitivity (i.e., “ultra-sensitive” assays), which allow to measure cardiac troponin values in the vast majority of healthy subjects, is now challenging the diagnostic paradigm based on early rule-out of subjects with cardiac troponin values comprised between the 99th percentile and LoD. New diagnostic strategies, entailing assay-specific cut-offs, must hence be developed and validated in large multicenter studies. The aim of this article is to provide an update on commercially available HS and “ultra”-sensitive techniques for measuring cardiac troponins, along with possible implications of increasingly enhanced analytical sensitivity on diagnostic algorithms for evaluating patients with suspected ACS.

10.11613/bm.2018.030501http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC6214691