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October
22, 2001
Contact: Jennifer Day, (313) 577-1429, jday@med.wayne.edu
Heart
Attack Patients With Normal Electrocardiograms Can Have Adverse Outcomes
In-hospital
death rates and serious adverse events higher than expected
CHICAGO
- Some heart attack patients have electrocardiograms (ECGs) that are normal or
non-specific when they first seek treatment at a hospital.
While these patients have a lower risk of death than patients with ECG
results indicating a heart attack, the combined rate of death and
life-threatening adverse events among patients with normal or non-specific
initial ECGs is unexpectedly high, according to an article in the October 24/31
issue of The Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA).
Robert
D. Welch, M.D., of Wayne State University School of Medicine, Detroit, and
colleagues analyzed data on hospitalized patients with acute myocardial
infarction (AMI, heart attack) who have normal or non-specific ECGs, and those
who have ECGs resulting in a diagnosis of heart attack, to determine the
predictive value of the initial ECG for in-hospital mortality.
The multi-hospital study included 391,208 patients enrolled in the
National Registry of Myocardial Infarction (NRMI) 2 and 3 databases between June
1994 and June 2000.
According
to background information cited in the article, previous studies have suggested
that normal and non-specific initial ECGs are associated with a favorable
prognosis for patients with AMI. But
the mortality rate of patients with proven AMI and a normal initial ECG has not
been well described, and may be quite high.
To date, there has been no large multi-hospital study of AMI patients
addressing the independent prognostic value of a normal or non-specific initial
ECG.
The
authors compared in-hospital mortality, and the composite outcome of in-hospital
death and life-threatening adverse events for three groups of hospitalized
patients with confirmed AMI. There
were 30,759 (7.9 percent) patients with normal ECG results on initial testing,
137,574 (35.1 percent) with non-specific ECGs, and 222,875 (57.0 percent) with
ECGs indicating the patient suffered a heart attack.
"The
overall in-hospital mortality rates for the final study population were 5.7
percent with normal, 8.7 percent with non-specific, and 11.5 percent with
diagnostic initial ECGs, and the composites of death and serious cardiac event
rates were 19.2 percent, 27.5 percent, and 34.9 percent, respectively," the
authors report.
The
authors adjusted for other predictor variables, including demographics, medical
history, diagnostic procedures, and therapy.
They found that a normal initial ECG remained a strong predictor of a
lower mortality rate.
"For
patients with AMI, a normal initial ECG was associated with a 41 percent lower
risk of in-hospital death," the authors write.
Patients with non-specific ECG results had a 30 percent lower risk of
in-hospital death, compared with the diagnostic ECG group.
"The
unexpected finding of this study was that patients with an initially normal ECG
had a substantial mortality rate, one that approximates the 30-day risk for
patients with ST-segment elevation [a diagnostic ECG finding] treated in recent
trials of reperfusion therapies [using drugs (thrombolysis), balloon angioplasty
or surgery]," the authors report.
The
authors cite statistics indicating that more than 5.3 million patients sought
emergency care for chest pain or related symptoms in 1998.
They suggest their findings have implications for the approximately 2
percent to 4 percent of patients with AMI who are inadvertently discharged from
the emergency department.
"The
initial ECG is the first and most effective tool used for risk-stratification of
patients with symptoms suggestive of AMI," the authors write. "It is therefore important to understand its prognostic
value and to be aware of the actual and absolute risks for those patients with
proven AMI."
"Our
results underscore the finding that the favorable prognosis of a normal ECG in
chest pain patients is not conferred to those with confirmed AMI, though
patients with AMI and a normal or non-specific initial ECG are at lower risk for
in-hospital death or serious complications than those with diagnostic ECGs,"
they write.
"Future
work will be needed to define optimal management strategies for patients with
AMI who present with initially normal or non-specific ECGs," the authors
conclude.
(JAMA.
2001; 286:1977-1984; available post-embargo at jama.com)
Editor's
Note: The National Registry of
Myocardial Infarction is supported by Genentech, Inc., South San Francisco,
Calif. Study co-author Robert J.
Zalenski, M.D., is a paid consultant to Genentech, Inc.
For
more information: contact the JAMA/Archives
Media Relations Department at 312/464-5374.
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