Journal of Medical Biochemistry (Jan 2009)

The use of biochip cardiac array technology for early diagnosis of acute coronary syndromes

  • Sypniewska Grazyna,
  • Sawicki Marcin,
  • Krintus Magdalena,
  • Kozinski Marek,
  • Kubica Jacek

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 28, no. 4
pp. 293 – 299

Abstract

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Serum troponin is the best biomarker for the diagnosis of acute coronary syndrome, but it takes considerable time before a definitive diagnosis is available. The purpose of this study was to evaluate whether a multimarker approach, using the biochip cardiac array, would facilitate the early diagnosis. Serum biomarkers were determined on admission (≤6 hrs) and after 6 hours in 42 patients suspected for ACS. Cardiac troponin I was measured by a sensitive assay (STATcTnI) and cardiac markers (H-FABP, myoglobin, cTnI, CK-MB mass, carbonic anhydrase III) were assayed with the use of Biochip Array Technology. STATcTnI concentrations, within the first 6 hours, were elevated >99th percentile for the reference population in 83.3% of subjects, but none reached the cutoff for AMI. On admission H-FABP was the only marker with 90.5% sensitivity in all ACS cases and 100% sensitivity in STEMI/NSTEMI patients. The sensitivity of myoglobin at presentation was 71.4% in ACS, however, combined sensitivity of myoglobin and H-FABP reached 95.2%. Lowering the cut-off for cTnI allowed early diagnosis (≤6 hrs) in only 26.2% of ACS patients and 95.2% after the next 6 hours. In unstable angina the cardiac panel was not sufficiently accurate for early risk stratification. In conclusion, testing for both markers, H-FABP and sensitive cardiac troponin, available with the cardiac array may facilitate the early detection of myocardial injury in clinical practice.

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