|
SKYAID
New
Mission
Overview
Details
Medical
Watch
Heart attack
Stroke
World health
Emergency
Cost effective
Media
- Site Map
SKYCAR
Details
Overview
VTOL
Airline
Military
Transportation
Images
- Site
Map
Search
Translate
8
languages
| |
Editorials British
Medical Journal 2000;320:951-952 ( 8 April )
"Chest pain please
admit": is there an alternative?
A rapid cardiological assessment service may
prevent unnecessary admissions
Emergency medical admissions are important. They
continue to rise year after year; consume substantial NHS resources; disrupt
other NHS activities; and generate winter bed crises. 1
2 Patients with acute central chest pain account
for 20-30% of emergency medical admissions. 3
4 Most are admitted because of concern about
unstable coronary heart disease. Yet fewer than half will have a
final diagnosis of acute myocardial infarction or unstable angina.4
Patients without high risk coronary heart disease thus account for
over half those presenting with chest pain and over 10% of all
emergency medical admissions. Such patients could be safely managed
without admission, and most would prefer it. The current system is
therefore both ineffective and inefficient. Any scheme which safely
avoided these unnecessary admissions might save resources, reduce
stress for patients, and, crucially, reduce the worrying false
negatives those
missed cases of high risk coronary heart disease. 5
6
The key issue is thus the sensitivity of the risk
stratification techniques and hence the underlying diagnostic methods and "triage"
algorithms. 6 7 Most
frank acute myocardial infarctions can be rapidly diagnosed on the
basis of history, resting electrocardiogram, and rapid cardiac enzyme
assays, principally creatine kinase, myoglobin, and troponins. 8
9 Similarly, frank unstable angina can
usually be recognised clinically and the individual patient's risk
stratified reliably using the resting electrocardiogram and troponin
measurements. 8 9
The greatest problem arises from the other
patients with chest pain, often of recent onset. These patients do not describe
severe prolonged episodes of classic cardiac pain with associated symptoms
or a typical crescendo pattern of angina. They do, however, make up
the bulk of the overnight, "chest pain-enzyme negative" or
"chest pain-infarct excluded" admissions that are increasingly common.5-9
An ideal system would allow rapid assessment of
such patients and their categorisation into high risk patients requiring
admission; intermediate risk patients with angina but no need for
urgent admission; and low risk patients, unlikely to have clinically
important coronary disease. The first group would avoid the potential
problem of inadequate investigation during too brief an admission. The
third, low risk, group could be safely reassured and their admission
avoided.
Rapid assessment chest pain services offer two
crucial additional factors. Firstly, they provide standardised evidence based
management using an exercise electrocardiogram and an algorithm or
guideline.5 Secondly, patients are reviewed by a
hospital cardiologist with an expertise honed by seeing many such
patients, unlike most junior hospital doctors.
But are rapid assessment chest pain services
reliable and safe? In Edinburgh Davie et al recently described 317 patients
referred by general practitioners with new or increasing chest pain
and seen within 24 hours.5 Only 18%
with acute coronary syndromes needed admission; the rest were sent
home, including 30% with stable coronary heart disease. Crucially,
the half (49%) with non-cardiac chest pain were immediately
reassured. This appeared safe and effective: six month follow up in
90% of the patients showed no deaths and a low level of symptoms and
high level of satisfaction.5 This study
also showed that psychosomatic chest pain seems to be common. Newby
et al reported similar results after 1001 general practitioner
referrals.10 Almost 60% of their patients
had non-cardiac chest pain. Hospital admissions were halved, from an
expected 268 to 123 patients, an admission rate of only
12%.10 This experience of "same day
diagnosis" confirms smaller early series from Harefield,11
Hillingdon,12 and Southampton13
and recent longer term follow up from Glasgow.14
In the United States evidence has steadily accumulated on chest pain
units which involve only brief admission.15
These data are far from perfect. Most are from
cohort studies with variable inclusion criteria and losses to follow up. The
true effect size of a rapid assessment chest pain service may be
a reduction in admissions of anything from 20% to 80%. This level of
evidence has been enough to persuade several hard pressed health
authorities to support the introduction of a new service. Others may
argue, however, that such services could attract more patients and
increase referrals for angiography and revascularisation. NHS costs
would then rise rather than fall.
Unbiased data from a randomised controlled trial
are therefore essential. The issues that need to be addressed include optimal
design, the precise components of the intervention, the ethics of
health service randomisation, the key endpoints, and the best outcome
measures for both professionals and patients.
Simon Capewell
, professor of clinical epidemiology.
Department of Public Health, University of Liverpool,
Liverpool L69 3GB
John McMurray
, professor of cardiology.
Glasgow Western Infirmary, University of Glasgow G12 8QQ
| 1.
| Capewell S. The continuing
rise in emergency admissions: explanations and responses must be
properly evaluated. BMJ 1996; 312: 991-992
|
| 2.
| Blatchford O, Capewell S.
Emergency medical admissions: taking stock and planning for winter. BMJ
1997; 315: 1322-1323
|
| 3.
| Kendrick S, Frame S, Povey C.
Beds occupied by emergency patients: long term trends in patterns of
short term fluctuations in Scotland. Health Bull (Edinb) 1997;
55: 167-175
|
| 4.
| Blatchford O, Capewell S.
Emergency medical admissions in Glasgow: general practices vary despite
adjustments for age, sex and deprivation. Br J Gen Pract 1999;
49: 551-554
|
| 5.
| Davie A P, Caesar D, Caruana
L, Clegg G, Spiller J, Capewell S, et al. Outcome from a rapid
assessment chest pain clinic: closing Pandora's box? . Q J Med
1998; 1: 339-343
. |
| 6.
| Weingarten SR, Ermann B,
Riedinger MS, Shah PK, Ellrodt AG. Selecting the best triage rule for
patients hospitalized with chest pain. Am J Med 1989; 87: 494-500
|
| 7.
| Green L, Smith M. Evaluation
of two acute cardiac ischemia decision-support tools in a rural family
practice. J Family Pract 1988; 26: 627-632
|
| 8.
| Ryan TJ, Anderson JL, Antman
EM, Brooks NH, Calcff RM, Hills LD, et al. ACC/AHA guidelines for the
management of patients with acute myocardial infarction: a report of the
American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association Task Force on
Practice Guidelines (Committee on Management of Acute Myocardial
Infarction). J Am Coll Cardiol 1999; 34: 890-891
|
| 9.
| Jesse RL. Impact of the
measurement of troponin on the triage, prognosis and treatment of
patients with chest pain. Clin Chim Acta 1999; 284: 213-221
|
| 10.
| Newby DE, Fox KAA, Flint LL,
Boon NA. A "same day" direct-access chest pain clinic:
improved management and reduced hospitalization. Q J Med 1998;
91: 333-337
. |
| 11.
| Norell M, Lythall D, Coghlan
G, Cheng A, Kushwaha S, Swan J, et al. Limited value of the resting
electrocardiogram in assessing patients with recent onset chest pain:
lessons from a chest pain clinic. Br Heart J 1992; 67: 53-56
|
| 12.
| Roberts RH, McEvoy C, Stock
K, Lo SS, Egdell R, Rochelle A, et al. The incidence and presentation of
ischaemic heart disease: a population survey. Br Heart J 1995;
73(suppl 3): 49
. |
| 13.
| Ghandi MM, Lampe FC, Wood DA.
Incidence, clinical characteristics and short term prognosis of angina
pectoris. Br Heart J 1995; 73: 193-198
|
| 14.
| Davie AP, Caruana K, McLeod
E, Morrison C, McMurray J. Long term follow up of patients referred to a
chest pain rapid assessment service. Eur Heart J 1998; 19(suppl):
292A
. |
| 15.
| Farkouh ME, Smars PA, Reeder
GS, Zinsmeister AR, Evans RW, Meloy TD. A clinical trial of a chest-pain
observation unit for patients with unstable angina. Chest Pain
Evaluation in the Emergency Room (CHEER). N Engl J Med 1998; 339:
1882-1888
|
|