UC Davis Health

Among First To Use Highly Sensitive Test To Quickly Identify Heart Attacks

SACRAMENTO, Calif. – Emergency medicine physicians at UC Davis Health are using the latest-generation cardiac troponin (cTn) test to more quickly identify heart attack patients who come to the medical center with chest pain.

The deployment of the test at UC Davis is the result of nearly two years of planning and the efforts of a multidisciplinary workgroup led by Nam Tran, associate clinical professor of pathology and laboratory medicine, as well as emergency medicine, cardiovascular medicine specialists and hospitalists.


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UC Davis is the first hospital in Northern California, one of only two institutions in the state and among a handful of hospitals in the nation to deploy the hs-cTnT test.

Rapid results of cardiac troponin testing

The new test is part of a national effort to give physicians better tools to more quickly identify those patients with suspected acute coronary syndrome who need to be admitted to the hospital for further testing from those with non-coronary cardiac diseases that need other assessments to obtain a diagnosis.

The majority of patients who come to an emergency department with chest pain need to be tested longer to know if they have a heart attack or not. With traditional cTn testing, a person with chest pain is tested at arrival in the ER and then again three hours later to see if there has been a rise or fall of troponin levels, which would suggest a heart attack. Sometimes this could extend to six hours if the three-hour result was inconclusive.

“The new hs-cTn test detects troponin with greater sensitivity and precision than conventional cTn biomarkers,” Tran said. “It enables physicians to quickly rule in/rule out myocardial infarction in emergency room patients after measuring troponin one hour later. The test can see rises or falls more clearly than older tests.”

At UC Davis, these “accelerated diagnostic protocols” using hs-cTnT was championed by Emergency Medicine physician, Bryn Mumma in collaboration with Tran, leveraging a longstanding partnership between the departments to bring new transformative tests to improve quality of care.

Clinical context important to interpreting fast-test results

Cardiologists agree that being able to rapidly and accurately diagnose heart attack patients is critical to treating patients appropriately as soon as possible and reducing further heart muscle injury.

But while measuring cardiac troponin T with the hs-cTnT assay provides strong prognostic information in patients, the increased sensitivity comes at a cost of decreased specificity.
“Troponin levels can be disrupted with other cardiac diseases such as myocarditis, sepsis, pre-existing heart failure, other forms of cardiomyopathy, kidney dysfunction or shock,” Tran said. “So interpreting the results is heavily dependent on the clinical context.”

There are an estimated 720,000 new heart attacks and 335,000 recurrent attacks each year in the U.S. On average, men have their first heart attack at age 65 while for women the average is 72 years of age.


Members of the UC Davis Health High Sensitivity Cardiac Troponin Implementation Workgroup include Ezra Amsterdam, Jason Rogers, Benjamin Stripe and Javier Lopez in cardiovascular medicine; Mumma and Robert Naverud in emergency medicine; Internal Medicine resident Stacey Howell; Hospitalist Mithu Molla; Sergio Rodriguez in Clinical Chemistry; Robert Hamilton of Information Technology (LIS/Breaker); and Sabrina Okimura in Laboratory Quality/Operations.

UC Davis Health. (2018, July). UC Davis Among First To Use Highly Sensitive Test To Quickly Identify Heart Attacks [Press release].

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