Journal of the American College of Emergency Physicians Open (Jun 2024)

Influence of time‐to‐diagnosis on time‐to‐percutaneous coronary intervention for emergency department ST‐elevation myocardial infarction patients: Time‐to‐electrocardiogram matters

  • Maame Yaa A. B. Yiadom,
  • Wu Gong,
  • Brian W. Patterson,
  • Christopher W. Baugh,
  • Angela M. Mills,
  • Nicholas Gavin,
  • Seth R. Podolsky,
  • Bryn E. Mumma,
  • Mary Tanski,
  • Gilberto Salazar,
  • Caitlin Azzo,
  • Stephen C. Dorner,
  • Kelsea Hadley,
  • Sean M. Bloos,
  • Gabrielle Bunney,
  • Timothy J. Vogus,
  • Dandan Liu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/emp2.13174
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 3
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Abstract Objectives Earlier electrocardiogram (ECG) acquisition for ST‐elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) is associated with earlier percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) and better patient outcomes. However, the exact relationship between timely ECG and timely PCI is unclear. Methods We quantified the influence of door‐to‐ECG (D2E) time on ECG‐to‐PCI balloon (E2B) intervention in this three‐year retrospective cohort study, including patients from 10 geographically diverse emergency departments (EDs) co‐located with a PCI center. The study included 576 STEMI patients excluding those with a screening ECG before ED arrival or non‐diagnostic initial ED ECG. We used a linear mixed‐effects model to evaluate D2E's influence on E2B with piecewise linear terms for D2E times associated with time intervals designated as ED intake (0–10 min), triage (11–30 min), and main ED (>30 min). We adjusted for demographic and visit characteristics, past medical history, and included ED location as a random effect. Results The median E2B interval was longer (76 vs 68 min, p 10 min than in those with timely D2E. The proportion of patients identified at the intake, triage, and main ED intervals was 65.8%, 24.9%, and 9.7%, respectively. The D2E and E2B association was statistically significant in the triage phase, where a 1‐minute change in D2E was associated with a 1.24‐minute change in E2B (95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.44–2.05, p = 0.003). Conclusion Reducing D2E is associated with a shorter E2B. Targeting D2E reduction in patients currently diagnosed during triage (11–30 min) may be the greatest opportunity to improve D2B and could enable 24.9% more ED STEMI patients to achieve timely D2E.

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