Article

Heart-type fatty acid binding protein and the diagnosis of acute coronary syndrome in the ED

Unlabelled imageheart-type fatty acid binding protein an”>American Journal of Emergency Medicine (2012) 30, 1378-1384

Original Contribution

Heart-type fatty acid binding protein and the diagnosis of acute coronary syndrome in the ED?

Yonathan Freund MDa,?, Camille Chenevier-Gobeaux MDb,

Francois Leumani MDa, Yann-Erick Claessens MD, PhDc,d, Jean-Christophe Allo MDc, Benoit Doumenc MDe, Claudine Cosson MDf, Pascale Bonnet MDa,

Bruno Riou MD, PhDa, Patrick Ray MD, PhDa,g

aDepartment of Emergency Department, Hopital Pitie-Salpetriere, Assistance Publique-Hopitaux de Paris,

Univ UPMC Paris 6, 75005 Paris, France

bDepartment of Biochemistry, Hopital Cochin Broca – Hotel Dieu, Assistance Publique-Hopitaux de Paris, 27 rue du Faubourg Saint-Jacques, 75679 Paris cedex 14, France

cDepartment of Emergency Medicine, Hopital Cochin Hotel Dieu, Assistance Publique-Hopitaux de Paris, 27 rue du Faubourg Saint-Jacques, 75679 Paris cedex 14, France

dFaculte de Medecine, Universite Paris Descartes, 10 rue des Cordeliers 75006 Paris, France

eDepartment of Emergency Department, Hopital Bichat, Assistance Publique-Hopitaux de Paris, France,

Universite Paris 7, France

fDepartment of Biochemistry, Hopital Bicetre, Assistance Publique-Hopitaux de Paris, Paris 11, France

gINSERM U9565, Univ UPMC Paris 6, 75013, Paris, France

Received 23 August 2011; revised 1 October 2011; accepted 2 October 2011

Abstract

Background: In combination with cardiac troponin, heart-type fatty acid binding protein — a biomarker of Myocardial necrosis–offers the possibility of rapidly eliminating the diagnosis of acute myocardial infarction (AMI).

Objective: The main objective of this study was to assess the incremental value of h-FABP to cardiac troponin for a rapid elimination of AMI, according to the pretest probability (PTP) of AMI. Methods: In consecutive patients presenting to emergency departments (ED) with chest pain less than 6 hours suggestive of AMI, h-FABP levels were measured, blinded to the ED physicians, who were asked to quote the PTP of AMI. The discharge diagnosis was adjudicated by 2 independent experts, blind to the h-FABP level. Results: Three hundred seventeen patients (mean age of 57 years) were included in whom 149 had (47%) low, 117 (37%) moderate, and 51 (16%) high PTP. The final diagnosis was AMI in 45 patients (14%), including 16 STEMIs (5%). The negative predictive value for diagnostic elimination of AMI of an h-FABP less than 3 ug/L, combined with a negative cTnI was not higher than that of Cardiac troponin I alone (96% [95% confidence interval, 93%-98%] vs 95% [93%-98%]), regardless of the PTP). Even in the low-PTP group, we did not demonstrate a significant improvement in negative predictive value with the addition of h-FABP, compare with that of cTnI alone (100% [97%-100%] vs 99% [96%-100%]).

? Conflicts of interest: CCG, SG, BR, and PR received honoraria from B.R.A.H.M.S; PR received honoraria from bioMerieux, RocheDiagnostics, BMD.

* Corresponding author. Service d’accueil des urgences, Hopital Pitie-Salpetriere, 47-83 Boulevard de l’Hopital, 75651 Paris cedex 13 France.

E-mail address: [email protected] (Y. Freund).

0735-6757/$ – see front matter (C) 2012 doi:10.1016/j.ajem.2011.10.001

Conclusion: In triage of patients with chest pain, use of h-FABP does not provide useful additional information to cTnI for excluding the diagnosis of ST-elevation myocardial infarction and non-ST-elevation myocardial infarction diagnosis, whatever the PTP.

(C) 2012

Introduction

Early detection of acute coronary syndromes (ACSs) remains suboptimal and a major concern in the field of emergency medicine. Patients with chest pain represent approximately 15 million consultations per year in the US emergency departments (EDs) [1,2]. Although quite specific [3], electrocardiographic ST elevation has only a 50% to 60% sensitivity for the diagnosis of myocardial necrosis [4]. In emergency patients with chest pain, cardiac troponins (cTns) do not reliably exclude Non-ST-elevation myocardial infarction without repeated negative measure- ments over 4 to 6 hours [1]. Therefore, there is a need for a fast and reliable test to facilitate triage, diagnosis, and adequate treatment strategies. This is particularly important in patients presenting with an NSTEMI or atypical symptoms and/or noncontributive ECG.

The heart-type fatty acid binding protein (h-FABP) is a biomarker of myocardial necrosis and injury that offers several theoretical advantages over cTn. Heart-type fatty acid binding protein is a 15-kd soluble protein, which is a powerful regulator of the mitochondrial ?-oxidative system. It represents 10% of the whole cardiomyocytes cytosolic proteins [5]; is undetectable in normal conditions; but is released from the myocardium under various types of injury, including myocardial ischemia [6]. Owing to its small size, h-FABP is released quickly into the circulation when membrane integrity is compromised in response to myocardial injury. Levels of h-FABP are detectable as early as 2 to 3 hours and typically return to baseline levels within 12 to 24 hours after the initial insult [7]. Consistent with these findings, several studies have shown that h-FABP is a sensitive marker for the diagnosis of NSTEMI [8] and might be more sensitive than conventional CTn assays when measured soon after the early onset of symptoms even in the prehospital setting [9]. However, previous studies have not demonstrated any diagnostic value of this biomarker in other settings [10]. Use of h-FABP has been also restricted to clinical research because of the lack of a fast and easy-to-use test. However, a novel 1-step qualitative assay for the detection of h-FABP has recently been developed, the CardioDetect assay (Rennesens GmbH, Berlin, Germany; distributed by BMD, Buc, France), which allows diagnosis of acute myocardial infarction (AMI) within 30 minutes of chest pain [11].

Our main objective in this study was to assess whether this assay provides additional diagnostic value to that of the conventional cTn in ruling out ST-elevation myocardial infarction and NSTEMI in patients presenting to the ED with chest pain, according to their pretest probability (PTP).

Patients and methods

Study population and design

During the period from August 2005 to January 2007 in 3 hospitals affiliated to University of Paris, we prospectively enrolled consecutive out-hospital patients (N18 years) present- ing to the ED with symptoms suggestive of AMI such as chest pain indicative of ACS and angina pectoris with onset or peak within the previous 6 hours. Patients with terminal kidney failure requiring dialysis were excluded. The study was performed according to the principles of the Declaration of Helsinki and approved by the local ethics committee (Comite de Protection des Personnes Ile-de-France VI, CHU Pitie- Salpetriere Hospital, Paris, France). Because routine medical care was unchanged, waived inform consent was authorized. We followed the recommendations concerning the reporting of diagnostic studies, the Standards for Reporting of Diagnostic Accuracy initiative [12] and evaluation of a biomarker [13].

Routine clinical assessment

As part of the routine assessment in our institutions, all patients underwent an initial clinical evaluation that included clinical history, physical examination, 12-lead ECG, pulse oximetry, routine blood tests, and chest x-ray. After these routine tests were done and before cardiac biomarker results were available (thus, before cardiac troponin I [cTnI] levels), emergency physicians were asked to assign an “empirical” clinical probability of AMI to each case (a low, medium, or high probability) [14].

Cardiac troponin I was measured at presentation and repeated after 3 to 9 hours, for as long as was clinically indicated. Then, according to the diagnosis of NSTEMI or STEMI, the patients were admitted directly to the coronary care unit (CCU) for further evaluation and treatment or directly to the catheterization laboratory for primary percutaneous coronary intervention. However, the timing and treatment of patients were left to the discretion of the attending physicians according to the suspected diagnosis. Emergency physicians in charge were blinded to the results of h-FABP, and chemical pathologists were blinded to the emergency diagnosis suspected by the physicians.

Adjudicated final diagnosis

To determine the causal diagnosis for each patient, 2 independent experts (emergency physicians) blinded to

the results of h-FABP reviewed all available medical records (including patient history, physical findings, results of laboratory and Radiologic testing, ECG, echocardiogra- phy, cardiac exercise test, coronary angiography, and summary chart at discharge) pertaining to the patient from the time of ED presentation to 30-day follow-up. If there was diagnostic disagreement, cases were reviewed and adjudicated in conjunction with a third expert (also an emergency physician).

Myocardial necrosis (ie, STEMI and NSTEMI) was defined according to the joint European Society of Cardiology/American College of Cardiolology/American Heart Association/World Heart Federation Task Force redefinition of myocardial infarction (MI) guidelines [15]. Diagnosis of myocardial necrosis was made when there was evidence of cTnI increase (above the 99th percentile of the upper reference limit) in association with at least one of the following: ECG ST-T changes or new Q wave, images of new lost viable myocardium, symptoms of ischemia, or a normal cTnI on admission. Unstable angina was diagnosed

(1) in patients with normal cTnI levels and typical angina at rest, (2) a sudden increase in episodes of a previously stable angina, (3) according to results of cardiac exercise testing or cardiac catheterization stated in the summary chart, and (4) in ambiguous cases in which follow-up information revealed a relapse of myocardial necrosis or a sudden unexpected cardiac death within 30 days.

Biochemical analysis

Cardiac troponin I measurements

In 2 EDs (Hopital Cochin and La Pitie Salpetriere Hospital), plasma cTnI concentrations were routinely measured on an X-pand HM analyzer, using the cTnI immunoassay (Siemens Healthcare Diagnostics, Inc, New- ark, NJ). This 1-step enzyme immunoassay based on the “sandwich” principle requires 50 uL of sample and uses 2 mouse monoclonal antibodies. After incubation, the bound fraction is separated using antibody-coated chromium dioxide microparticles and quantified by enzymocolorime- try. The measuring range extends from 0.04 to 40.00 ug/L. The 99th percentile for this method is 0.07 ug/L, with coefficients of variations (CVs) between 15% and 22%; the limit of quantitation (functional sensitivity, ie, the lowest analyte concentration that can be reproducibly measured with a between-run CV of <=10%) is 0.14 ug/L.

In the Hopital Bicetre, plasma cTnI concentrations were routinely measured on an Access analyser (Beckman Coulter, Inc, Brea, CA). The measuring range of this 1-step chemiluminescent immunoassay extended from 0.01 to 100.00 ug/L. The 99th percentile for this method is

0.04 ug/L, and the CV 10% according to the manufacturer is

0.06 ug/L.

h-FABP measurement

Patients were tested with the CardioDetect assay (Rennesens GmbH, Berlin, Germany; distributed by BMD, Buc, France). This is a 1-step semiquantitative h-FABP test, which is a rapid chromatographic immunoassay designed for determination of soluble h-FABP in whole blood or plasma samples. The test, as previously described [16,17], was performed in our laboratory applying 100 uL of a plasma sample of each patient on to the test strip. After 15 minutes, the test was read by 2 independent readers. If the sample contained h-FABP with a concentration below the detection limit (b3 ug/L), only the control band at the control zone was read (negative test). The test was recorded as positive if there was presence of a band at the test zone, in addition to the control band.

When there was disagreement, a third independent expert was called for a final decision. All tests were also scanned using a CardioDetect quant instrument (Rennesens GmbH, Berlin, Germany) for quantitative interpretation of the results, and these quantitative results were used for receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis. It should be noted from the outset that we observed discrepancies between Qualitative and quantitative results. Thirty-nine patients with positive h-FABP test were shown as having less than 3 ng/L by the CardioDetect quant.

Calculation of the estimated glomerular filtration rate

Estimated glomerular filtration rate values (in milliliters per minute per 1.73 m2) were calculated using the revised [18] Modification of Diet in Renal Disease formula [19]: eGFR = 175?[serum creatinine (mg/dL) – 1.154]?[age (years) – 0.203]. The values thus calculated were then multiplied by 0.742 for women. Estimated glomerular filtration rate values less than 60 mL/min per

1.73 m2 were indicative of kidney dysfunction.

Statistical analysis

Continuous variables are presented as mean +- SD or median (with interquartile range) for non-Gaussian-distributed vari- ables; categorical variables, as numbers and percentages. Normality was assessed using the Kolmogorov-Smirnov test. Continuous variables were compared with the Mann-Whitney U test or the Student t test, as indicated, and categorical variables, using the Pearson ?2 test. Correlations among continuous variables were assessed with the use of the Spearman rank-correlation coefficient. Logistic regression was used to combine cTn and h-FABP in the diagnosis of AMI and to adjust for other baseline variables. Receiver- operating characteristic curves were constructed to compare the ability of cTn and h-FABP to diagnose AMI. Comparison of areas under the ROC curves (AUC) was performed as

recommended [13]. All hypothesis testing were 2 tailed, and P b .05 was considered significant. Statistical analysis was performed using StatView for Windows (version 5.0; SAS Institute, Cary, NC) and MedCalc for ROC analysis (Medcalc software, Mariarkerke, Belgium). Graphs were built with GraphPad Prism 5 (Graphpad software, Inc, La Jolla, CA).

Results

Patient characteristics

Over 18 months, 317 consecutive patients were enrolled. Baseline characteristics of patients according to their empirical probability of ACS are shown in Table 1. Mean age was 57 +- 17 years, and 205 (65%) were male. As

Table 1 Baseline characteristics of the population according to PTP

All patients PTP of ACS Low

Moderate

High

P ?

expected in this unselected emergency population, there was a significant proportion of elderly patients (30%, ie, 96 patients were 65 years and older) and patients with a prior history of myocardial ischemia (26%, n = 83). Chest pain was considered typical of ACS in 43% (n = 136) of patients. The adjudicated final diagnosis was AMI in 14% of patients (n = 45), unstable angina in 3% (n = 11), and other diagnoses 82% (n = 261). Of the patients with AMI, 27% (n = 12) were diagnosed having STEMI and 73% (n = 33) as having NSTEMI. According to the PTP group, AMI (ie, NSTEMI and STEMI) was diagnosed in 3% of low, 16% moderate, and 39% high PTP. At 30 days, there were 3 deaths (2 in the MI group and 1 in the other cause group) and 4 relapses of ACS in the AMI group. Eighteen percent (n = 6) of patients with NSTEMI had a negative initial CTnI. In this patient subgroup, 2 patients were found to have a positive h-FABP test. Thus, 4 patients (12%) with final

N 317

149

117

51

Percentage of all patients 100

47

37

16

Age (y) 57 +- 17

53

+- 18

61 +- 16

60 +- 18

.001

Men 205 (65)

88

(59)

85 (73)

32 (63)

.067

Systolic BP (mm Hg) 141 +- 28

135

+- 24

147 +- 30

147 +- 30

.001

Diastolic BP (mm Hg) 80 +- 16

78

+- 15

83 +-8

83 +- 15

.047

Cardiac rate 85 +- 45

86

+- 23

82 +- 22

78 +- 18

.126

SpO2 (%) 97 +- 3

97

+- 4

97 +- 2

97 +- 2

.639

Familial history of CAD 100 (32)

26

(17)

54 (46)

20 (39)

b.0001

Personal history of CAD 83 (26)

12

(8)

46 (39)

25 (49)

b.0001

Dyslipidemia 113 (36)

28

(19)

58 (50)

27 (53)

b.0001

Smoking 128 (40)

50

(34)

52 (44)

26 (51)

.05

Diabetes 44 (14)

9

(6)

23 (20)

12 (24)

.0006

Hypertension 116 (37)

35

(23)

55 (47)

26 (51)

b.0001

history of heart failure 21 (7)

4

(3)

10 (9)

7 (14)

.014

Typical Thoracic pain 136 (43)

56

(38)

55 (47)

25 (49)

.176

Coronarography 83 (26)

20

(13)

37 (32)

26 (51)

b.0001

Treatment received during the first 24 h after admission

Aspirin 119 (38)

27

(18)

59 (50)

33 (65)

b.0001

Clopidogrel 54 (17)

7

(5)

26 (22)

21 (41)

b.0001

LMWH 68 (21)

14

(9)

33 (28)

21 (41)

b.0001

Anti-GPIIb/IIIa 3 (1)

1

(1)

0 (0)

2 (4)

.048

Hospital admission 194 (61)

67

(45)

81 (69)

44 (86)

b.0001

Admission in CCU 138 (44)

38

(26)

60 (51)

40 (78)

b.0001

Patients with positive cTnI at admission 40 (13)

7

(5)

19 (16)

14 (27)

b.0001

eGFR (mL/min per 1.73m2) 77 (62-94)

81

(67-101)

74 (62-92)

75 (57-87)

.017

Final diagnosis of AMI 45 (14)

5

(3)

25 (21)

15 (29)

b.0001

STEMI 16 (5)

2

(1)

9 (8)

5 (10)

.015

NSTEMI 29 (9)

3

(2)

16 (14)

10 (20)

Final diagnosis of UA 11 (3)

0

(0)

4 (3)

7 (14)

b.0001

Other diagnosis a 261 (82)

144

(97)

88 (75)

29 (57)

b.0001

BP indicates blood pressure; CAD, coronary Acute disease; LMWH, low-molecular-weight heparin; ICU, intensive car unit; UA, unstable angina. Results are in mean +- SD, median (25th-75th percentile), or number (percentage).

a Including stable angina (n = 63), pulmonary embolism (n = 16), myopericarditis (n = 43), heart failure (n = 5), and others.

* Between AMI vs others (unstable angina and other diagnosis).

100

80

60

Sensitivity

40

20

0

0 20 40 60 80 100

100-Specificity

cTnI

cTnI + h-FABP h-FABP

(95% CI, 0.91-0.97) vs 0.94 (0.91-0.96) for cTnI alone

(P = .54). The optimal cutoff point for h-FABP given by the ROC analysis was 3.3 ug/L (sensitivity 33.3% [20%-49%], specificity 96.7% [94%-99%]). The sensitivities and specificities of different cardiac markers, alone or in association, are reported in Table 2A. Cardiac troponin I, alone or in combination with h-FABP, had a comparable negative predictive value (NPV), respectively, of 95% (93%-98%) vs 96% (93%-98%) in all patients and 99%

(96%-100%) vs 100% (97%-100%) in low-PTP patients. The same results were noted when considering only chest pain of less than 3 hours and chest pain of more than 3 hours, as seen in Table 2B.

It should be noted that in all subgroups, specificity and positive predictive value were significantly worsened

Fig. 1 Receiver operating characteristic curves for the diagnosis

of AMI (STEMI and NSTEMI). For this analysis, h-FABP results less than 3 ug/L (negative tests) were considered as 3 ug/L; cTnI and h-FABP values were log transformed before association.

diagnosis of NSTEMI remained with both negative cTnI and h-FABP at admission.

The highest AUC for the diagnosis of myocardial necrosis was for initial cTnI (AUC, 0.94 [95% confidence interval

{CI}, 0.91-0.96] vs 0.65 [95% CI, 0.55-0.77] for h-FABP)

(P = .001) as seen in Fig. 1. The AUC was not significantly improved when h-FABP was associated with cTnI: 0.94

Table 2 diagnostic performances for the diagnosis of AMI (STEMI and NSTEMI)

when cTnI was combined with h-FABP, as compared with cTnI alone.

Discussion

In our multicenter study, we were unable to demonstrate any incremental value of h-FABP to cTnI for the diagnosis of myocardial necrosis.

Several studies have evaluated h-FABP in patients with chest pain. However, varioUS settings (cardiology units, ED, or prehospital) have reached conflicting conclusions.

A. Se

Spe

PPV

NPV

In all patients (n = 317)

Positive cTnI ? 71 (55-83)

97 (94-98)

78 (62-89)

95 (92-97)

Positive h-FABP$ 62 (47-76)

86 (82-90) +

43 (31-56) +

93 (89-96)

Positive cTnI ? and/or h-FABP$ 80 (65-90)

85 (80-87) +

46 (35-58) ?

96 (93-98)

In low-PTP group (n = 148)

Positive cTnI ? 75 (22-99)

98 (94-100)

57 (20-88)

99 (96-100)

Positive h-FABP$ 75 (22-99)

92 (87-96)

27 (9-55)

99 (95-100)

Positive cTnI ? and/or h-FABP$ 100 (40-100)

92 (86-96) ?

29 (11-56)

100 (97-100)

B. Se

Spe

PPV

NPV

Chest pain onset b3 h (n = 193)

Positive cTnI ? 71 (50-87)

Positive h-FABP$ 63 (41-80)

Positive cTnI ? and/or h-FABP$ 75 (53-89)

96 (91-98)

86 (80-91)

85 (78-90) ?

72 (50-87)

40 (25-57)

41 (27-57)

96 (91-98)

94 (89-96)

96 (91-98)

Chest pain onset >=3 h (n = 75):

Positive cTnI ? 60 (27-86)

100 (93-100)

100 (52-100)

94 (85-98)

Positive h-FABP$ 40 (14-73)

85 (73-92) ?

29 (10-58) ?

90 (79-96)

Positive cTnI ? and/or h-FABP$ 70 (35-92)

85 (73-92) ?

41 (19-67) ?

95 (85-99)

Se indicates sensitivity; Spe, specificity; PPV, positive predictive value. Values are expressed as a percentage.

* P b .05 vs positive cTnI in all patients.

+ P b .001 vs positive cTnI in all patients.

? P b .05 vs positive cTnI in low PTP group.

P b .05 vs positive cTnI in chest pain onset less than 3 hours.

? P b .001 vs positive cTnI in chest pain onset less than 3 hours.

? P b .05 vs positive cTnI in chest pain onset 3 hours or greater.

In a preliminary study with a high prevalence of STEMI, Ecollan et al [9] reported a higher sensitivity (87% vs 22% for cTn alone) of h-FABP for the diagnosis of AMI in 108 consecutive patients who presented less than 3 hours after the onset of symptoms and in whom the first medical care was delivered by a mobile intensive care unit. Similarly, Liao et al [20] included 74 patients who presented within

2.2 hours after the onset of chest pain, among whom 54 (73%) had confirmed AMI. At presentation, h-FABP gave the highest sensitivity of 83.3%. In addition, myocardial necrosis could be identified significantly earlier by h-FABP than cTnI (17 vs 6 patients; P b .05). Unfortunately, in these studies, the test was not performed blinded to the physicians in charge, leading to possible bias in the interpretation of results. Haltern et al [8] prospectively enrolled 97 emergency patients with acute ischemic-type chest pain and demon- strated a greater sensitivity of h-FABP in the first 4 hours of symptoms (86% vs 42% for Cardiac troponin T [cTnT]; P b

.05). Although combining h-FABP and cTnT improved the sensitivity in the diagnosis of AMI (97% vs 71%; P b .05), they also demonstrated a greater misclassification rate (25% vs 9%; P b .05).

McCann et al [21] enrolled 415 patients presenting to 2 CCUs within 24 hours of onset of acute ischemic-type chest pain, in whom 48% had a final diagnosis of AMI. In patients presenting less than 4 hours after the onset of symptoms, the sensitivity of h-FABP for MI was significantly higher than the cTnT measured at (73% vs 55%; P = .043). However, their results may not necessarily be applicable to lower risk populations, such as all patients with chest pain presenting at an ED. Recently, Charpentier et al [10] published the largest single-center study on h-FABP and ischemia-modified albumin for the detection of early AMI. They included 677 emergency patients who presented within 12 hours of the last episode of chest pain. Their results suggested that neither ischemia-modified albumin nor h-FABP was accurate biomarker for early diagnosis of ACS. Heart- FABP was predictive of the diagnosis of ACS (odds ratio, 4.65; 95% CI, 2.39-9.04) with a specificity at 97% and sensitivity at 14%. However, h-FABP did not add significant additional information to a predictive model that included the usual diagnostic tools for the management of non-ST-elevation ACS (P = .40). However, their end point criterion was the diagnosis of ACS, not AMI. The conflicting results between all these studies and that reported here can be explain by the setting, the prevalence of the diseases (AMI or ACS), and the delay between the onset of chest pain and the method of measurement for h-FABP. Thus, our study used a method close to that recommended by the Standards for Reporting of Diagnostic Accuracy statement for reporting studies on diagnostic accuracy [12], and the evaluation of h-FABP in relation to PTP. It should be noted that none of the previous studies evaluated the diagnostic performance and additional value of h-FABP according to a PTP quoted by the emergency physician. Unfortunately, our study did not show any significant gain

even when restricted to low-PTP patients. In the era of other new biomarkers used in detection of AMI, such as high- sensitivity cTn or copeptin, for example, which have shown excellent results [22-24], h-FABP seems to be of little value as a biomarker in the ED.

Limitations

We are aware that our study presents some limitations. First, we classified our population according to an empirical clinical PTP without any standardization or accurate validation. However, this empirical classification has previously been used by other authors [14].

Second, we did not evaluate the kinetics of the biomarker because there was only 1 assay. This choice was made deliberately because we wished to test the possibility of early elimination of the diagnosis, thus avoiding serial measure- ments. Third, 2 different techniques were used to measure cTnI, making a comparison with other biomarkers less reliable. Thus, the ROC curve for the cTnI is a combined ROC curve of 2 different assays, making it imprecise. However, the 2 different ROC curves (for each assay) have a similar AUC and similar CI. Fourth, our study was underpowered to detect any significant change in sensitivity or NPV in our relatively small-sized subgroups. Lastly, the semiqualitative method that we used to detect positive h- FABP made the interpretation of the results somewhat artificial. The naked eye would detect bands at levels less than 3 ug/L and is more sensitive than the manufacturer’s scan reader. Thus, extrapolating semiqualitative results into quantitative values is open to criticism.

Conclusion

In a multicenter study, h-FABP had no additional value over cTnI for the diagnosis of myocardial necrosis (STEMI and NSTEMI) in ED patients with chest pain of less than

6 hours duration. Based on previous studies, conflicting results still exist concerning the diagnostic accuracy of h-FABP. Until further positive interventional studies, the role of h-FABP remains uncertain.

Acknowledgments

The authors thank BMD France for providing us free reagents and kits for h-FABP assay. The test and kits for h-FABP assay were provided free of charges by BMD France. This study was supported solely from departmental sources.

The authors thank the staff of the 3 EDs for their dedication and for diligently ensuring the highest possible level of inclusion.

The authors also thank Dr D.J. Baker (Department of Anaesthesiology, CHU Necker-Enfants Malades, Assistance Publique des Hopitaux de Paris, Paris, France) for reviewing the manuscript.

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