INTRODUCTION Sex- and age-specific high-sensitivity Troponin T (hs-cTnT) cutpoints for the diagnosis and prognosis in acute coronary syndromes are not well established. We evaluated the use of such dichotomous thresholds… Click to show full abstract
INTRODUCTION Sex- and age-specific high-sensitivity Troponin T (hs-cTnT) cutpoints for the diagnosis and prognosis in acute coronary syndromes are not well established. We evaluated the use of such dichotomous thresholds for calculation of the GRACE score. METHODS We analyzed a retrospective cohort study of 1146 patients with non-ST-elevation acute coronary syndrome (NSTE-ACS). Sex-dependent hs-cTnT cutpoints comprised 15.5 ng/L for men and 9.0 ng/L for women, while the sex-/age-specific cutpoints comprised 17 ng/L for 50-64-year-old men and ≥65-year-old women, 31 ng/L for ≥65-year-old men and 14 ng/L for the remainder of patients. RESULTS For the diagnosis of NSTEMI using sex-specific hs-cTnT cutpoints, in women, the positive likelihood ratio (LR+) was 2.04 (1.68-2.47) while in men, the negative likelihood ratio (LR-) was 0.05 (0.04-0.07). Using sex-/age-specific hs-cTnT cutpoints, in ≥65-year-old women the LR- was 0.09 (0.06-0.15), in 50 to 64-year-old men the LR- was 0.08 (0.04-0.13) while in ≥65-year-old men the LR- was 0.32 (0.28-0.37). Sex-specific hs-cTnT cutpoints achieved an NRI of -0.020 (95% CI, -0.101-0.118) for women and 0.030 (95% CI, -0.013-0.079) for men, and the sex-/age-specific hs-cTnT cutpoints achieved an NRI of 0.061 (95% CI, -0.019-0.132) for women and 0.021 (95% CI, -0.062-0.108) for men, while net benefit and clinical utility were highest for women using the sex-/age-specific hs-cTnT cutpoints. CONCLUSIONS Sex-dependent hs-cTNT cutpoints imply increasing diagnostic sensitivity for women at the cost of specificity. Considering age for hs-cTNT cutoffs slightly improves risk reclassification, although the overall gain in terms of the clinical management appears negligible.
               
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