Journal of Clinical Medicine (Dec 2022)

Cardiac Troponins for the Clinical Management of Patients with Claudication and without Cardiac Symptoms

  • Dimitrios Mouselimis,
  • Saskia Hagstotz,
  • Michael Lichtenberg,
  • Konstantinos P. Donas,
  • Ulrike Heinrich,
  • Konstantinos Avranas,
  • Zisis Dimitriadis,
  • Erwin Blessing,
  • Ralf Langhoff,
  • Norbert Frey,
  • Hugo A. Katus,
  • Grigorios Korosoglou

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm11247287
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 24
p. 7287

Abstract

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Many patients with peripheral arterial disease (PAD) exhibit undiagnosed obstructive coronary artery disease. We aim to identify the patients with lifestyle limiting claudication due to PAD and without cardiac symptoms, requiring coronary revascularization based on high-sensitive troponin T (hsTnT) values. We assessed hsTnT in consecutive patients referred for elective endovascular treatment due to claudication [Rutherford categories (RC) 2 & 3] between January 2018 and December 2021. Diagnostic work-up by non-invasive imaging and, if required, cardiac catheterization was performed according to clinical data, ECG findings and baseline hsTnT. The occurrence of cardiac death, myocardial infarction or urgent revascularization during follow-up was the primary endpoint. Of 346 patients, 14 (4.0%) exhibited elevated hsTnT ≥ 14 ng/L, including 7 (2.0%) with acute myocardial injury by serial hsTnT sampling. Coronary revascularization by percutaneous coronary intervention was necessary in 6 of 332 (1.5%) patients with normal versus nine of 14 (64.3%) patients with elevated hsTnT (p p = 0.03 by log-rank test). In conclusion, elevated troponins in cardiac asymptomatic patients with claudication modify subsequent cardiac management and may increase the need for closer surveillance and more aggressive conservative management in polyvascular disease.

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