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Accelerated Rule Out of Myocardial Infarction (AROMI)

A

Aarhus University Hospital Skejby

Status

Completed

Conditions

Myocardial Infarction

Treatments

Procedure: Accelerated, combined biomarker rule-out strategy for MI

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT02666326
AROMI-1

Details and patient eligibility

About

Every year > 50.000 people in Denmark are hospitalized with a suspected acute myocardial infarction (AMI). The majority has other explanations of their chest discomfort and most are discharged again without any initiation of treatment. Still, the suspicion dictates acute ambulance deployment, hospital admission to a highly specialized cardiac unit, cardiac surveillance and cardiac troponin blood sampling. The novel biomarker copeptin, a byproduct of vasopressin production, is released immediately from the pituitary gland as part of the hormonal response to AMI. Peak concentrations are reached within the first hour. Previous studies have suggested the combination of copeptin and cardiac troponin for fast and reliable rule out of AMI. However, the blood sampling should be performed as soon as possible after symptom onset, preferably already during the prehospital phase.

We aim, in an open randomized setting, to investigate the combined measurement of prehospital copeptin and in-hospital high sensitive cardiac Troponin T compared to the standard rule-out procedure of suspected myocardial infarction. We hypothesize that the combined measurement of prehospital copeptin and in-hospital high sensitive troponin T:

  1. Reduces admission time by 1.5 hours in patients where AMI is ruled out
  2. Reduces the time to disposition
  3. Is non-inferior compared to the standard rule-out procedure in relation to major adverse cardiovascular events.
  4. Is more cost efficient compared to standard diagnostic strategy

Full description

Patients with suspected Acute Myocardial Infarction (AMI) constitute one of the largest patient groups in emergency medicine. The majority of these patients, however, have other causes than AMI, for their chest discomfort and many are discharged again without any initiation of treatment.(1) At present, cardiac troponin is gold standard in diagnosing AMI. Diagnostic levels of troponin are not reached until hours after onset of symptoms and serial sampling is recommended at intervals of 3-6 hours to confirm or rule-out AMI. The novel biomarker copeptin, a by-product of vasopressin production, is released immediately from the pituitary gland as part of the hormonal response to AMI. However, copeptin elevation, is not specific of AMI. Peak concentrations of copeptin are reached within the first hour and the values normalizes within 4-10 hours.(3) Previous studies have suggested the combination of copeptin and high-sensitive cardiac troponin T (hs-cTnT) for early and reliable rule-out of AMI.(2,3,6) These studies are based on copeptin measurement in blood sample acquired at hospital admission. However, because of the rapid release of copeptin, the blood sampling should be performed as early as possible after symptom onset, preferably already in the ambulance, whereas the analysis can be performed after arrival at the hospital because copeptin is stable. The PREHAB trial conducted in the Central Denmark Region, documented that prehospital blood sampling is performed 70 minutes earlier than first in-hospital sample.(5) Post-trial analysis of blood samples from the PREHAP trial has demonstrated the potential for early and safe rule-out of AMI using the combination of prehospital copeptin and in-hospital troponin analysis. AMI could potentially be safely, ruled out in approximately 40-50% of patients, in whom the AMI diagnosis eventually was dismissed.

During the last 7 years, studies have evaluated the effect and validity of prehospital blood sample analysis. This is now standard procedure in The Central Denmark Region, Denmark.(5) Currently, prehospital blood sampling is carried out in two major randomized studies, aiming at identifying patients with myocardial infarction and heart failure (NCT01638806 and NCT02050282).

Unfortunately, there is at present no point-of-care analysis equipment for copeptin available. Manufacturer of copeptin analysis equipment, Thermo Fischer, has informed that the development of point-care-care equipment is in process, but will not be available in near future. Therefore, we will perform in-hospital analysis of the prehospital blood samples.

Overall aim of this protocol is to demonstrate the combination of troponin T and copeptin as a safe and effective biomarker for rule-out of AMI. In a randomized setting, we will compare the combination of prehospital copeptin and in hospital hs-cTnT, to the standard diagnostic procedure in patients with suspected AMI, evaluating rule-out potential and potential for reduction of the length of stay at the hospital. The diagnostic effects of measuring copeptin/ hs-cTnT in prehospital vs in-hospital blood samples will be evaluated. Moreover an other diagnostic rule-out strategy, using hs-cTNT at admission and 1 hour after admission, will be evaluated in retrospective analysis of blood samples acquired from patients in the conventional diagnostics arm of the study.

Primary purposes of the AROMI trial:

  1. To evaluate if early discharge, based in the combined biomarker analysis is associated to duration of hospital stay. Will be evaluated in interim analysis after rule out of AMI(discharged within 12 hours) in 900 patients (300 patients in each site)
  2. To evaluate if early discharge, based in the combined biomarker analysis is associated to major adverse cardiac events (MACE) during index admission, after discharge, within 30, 90, and 365 days of randomization (separately or in combination). No interim evaluation of MACE.

Secondary purposes of the AROMI trial:

  1. To evaluate if early discharge, based in the combined biomarker analysis is associated to time to decision of discharge or continued hospitalization. Will be evaluated in interim analysis after rule out of AMI(discharged within 12 hours) in 900 patients (300 patients in each site)
  2. To evaluate if early discharge, based in the combined biomarker analysis is cost-effective regarding satisfaction and safety from a patients perspective.
  3. To evaluate if early discharge, based in the combined biomarker analysis is cost-effective from a public perspective, regarding staff resources, costs of hospital stay, adherence to the labour market, and use of other healthcare services, Cost benefit analysis(CBA).
  4. To evaluate if early discharge, based on the hs-cTnT analysis at arrival and 1 hour after arrival at hospital is associated to duration of hospital stay.
  5. To evaluate if early discharge, based on the hs-cTnT analysis at arrival and 1 hour after arrival at hospital is associated to MACE(major adverse cardiac event) during index admission, after discharge, within 30, 90, and 365 days of randomization (separately or in combination).
  6. To evaluate the diagnostic properties (including sensitivity, specificity, negative predictive value, and positive predictive value) of the accelerated rule out algorithm using copeptin and high sensitivity troponin. Will be evaluated in interim analysis after rule out of AMI(discharged within 12 hours) in 900 patients (300 patients in each site). Will be evaluated in the total cohort (since both prehospital and inhospital copeptin and high sensitivity troponin is available in all patients) and randomization will not be revealed during this evaluation.
  7. To evaluate the prognostic value of the accelerated rule out algorithm using copeptin and high sensitivity troponin. Will be evaluated in interim analysis after rule out of AMI(discharged within 12 hours) in 900 patients (300 patients in each site). Will be evaluated in the total cohort (since both prehospital and inhospital copeptin and high sensitivity troponin is available in all patients) and randomization will not be revealed during this evaluation.

Enrollment

4,516 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Patients which, after telemedical triage, are admitted to a cardiac department in suspicions of myocardial infarction
  • A peripheral venous catheter has been inserted prehospitally and blood has drawn from it, before flushing it.

Exclusion criteria

  • Age below 18 years
  • Patients in which an informed concent can not be obtained (psychiatric disease, dementia, under influence of drugs etc.),
  • Suspected STEMI and referral to Primary percutaneous coronary intervention (PPCI), referral to a highly specialized cardiac department for another cardiac reason (e.g ventricular tachycardia, ventricular fibrillation, 3° Atrio-ventricular block.)
  • Known central Diabetes insipidus
  • Other diagnosis as obvious reason for symptoms at time of admittance (e.g. a new diagnosis of supraventricular tachycardia, pulmonary embolism, aortic dissection) AND no suspicions of ACS

Trial design

Primary purpose

Diagnostic

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

4,516 participants in 2 patient groups

Conventional diagnostic strategy
No Intervention group
Description:
Standard Diagnostics for suspected myocardial infarction, including standard biochemical analysis: min. two measurements of high sensitive troponin T with an interval of minimum 3 hours. A normal value of high sensitive cardiac troponin-T in both blood samples rules out AMI and the patients can be discharged immediately if no other conditions are suspected.
Accelerated diagnostic strategy
Experimental group
Description:
'Accelerated, combined biomarker rule-out strategy for MI'. Copeptin measurement in a prehospital blood sample combined with high sensitive cardiac troponin T measurement in the first blood sample upon hospital admission, A normal value of both copeptin and cardiac troponin rules out AMI and the patients can be discharged immediately if no other conditions are suspected.
Treatment:
Procedure: Accelerated, combined biomarker rule-out strategy for MI

Trial contacts and locations

3

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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