Fourth Universal Definition of Myocardial Infarction (2018)
This article has been corrected.
VIEW CORRECTIONAbbreviations and Acronyms
ACC | American College of Cardiology |
ACS | Acute coronary syndrome |
AHA | American Heart Association |
ARC-2 | Academic Research Consortium-2 |
AUC | Area under the curve |
CAD | Coronary artery disease |
CABG | Coronary artery bypass grafting |
CKD | Chronic kidney disease |
CK-MB | Creatine kinase MB isoform |
CMR | Cardiac magnetic resonance |
CTCA | Computed tomographic coronary angiography |
cTn | Cardiac troponin |
cTnI | Cardiac troponin I |
cTnT | Cardiac troponin T |
CT | Computed tomography |
CV | Coefficient of variation |
EF | Ejection fraction |
ECG | Electrocardiogram or electrocardiographic |
HF | Heart failure |
hs-cTn | High-sensitivity cardiac troponin |
IFCC | International Federation of Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine |
ISFC | International Society and Federation of Cardiology |
LAD | Left anterior descending artery |
LBBB | Left bundle branch block |
LoD | Limit of detection |
LGE | Late gadolinium enhancement |
LGE-CMR | Late gadolinium enhancement cardiac magnetic resonance |
LV | Left ventricular |
LVH | Left ventricular hypertrophy |
MI | Myocardial infarction |
MINOCA | Myocardial infarction with nonobstructive coronary arteries |
MONICA | MONItoring of trends and determinants in CArdiovascular disease |
MPS | Myocardial perfusion scintigraphy |
NHLBI | National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute |
NSTEMI | Non–ST-elevation myocardial infarction |
PET | Positron emission tomography |
PCI | Percutaneous coronary intervention |
POC | Point of care |
RBBB | Right bundle branch block |
SPECT | Single photon emission computed tomography |
STEMI | ST-elevation myocardial infarction |
ST-T | ST-segment–T wave |
TIMI | Thrombolysis in Myocardial Infarction |
TTS | Takotsubo syndrome |
UDMI | Universal Definition of Myocardial Infarction |
URL | Upper reference limit |
WHF | World Heart Federation |
WHO | World Health Organization |
Table of contents
Abbreviations and Acronyms e619
1. What Is New in the Universal Definition of Myocardial Infarction? e620
2. Universal Definitions of Myocardial Injury and Myocardial Infarction: Summary e621
3. Introduction e621
4. Pathological Characteristics of Myocardial Ischemia and Infarction e622
5. Biomarker Detection of Myocardial Injury and Infarction e623
6. Clinical Presentations of Myocardial Infarction e623
7. Clinical Classification of Myocardial Infarction e624
7.1. Myocardial Infarction Type 1 e624
7.2. Myocardial Infarction Type 2 e625
7.3. Myocardial Infarction Type 2 and Myocardial Injury e626
7.4. Myocardial Infarction Type 3 e626
8. Coronary Procedure–Related Myocardial Injury e628
9. Myocardial Infarction Associated With Percutaneous Coronary Intervention (Type 4a Myocardial Infarction) e629
10. Stent/Scaffold Thrombosis Associated With Percutaneous Coronary Intervention (Type 4b Myocardial Infarction) e629
11. Restenosis Associated With Percutaneous Coronary Intervention (Type 4c Myocardial Infarction) e630
12. Myocardial Infarction Associated With Coronary Artery Bypass Grafting (Type 5 Myocardial Infarction) e630
13. Other Definitions of Myocardial Infarction Related to Percutaneous Coronary Intervention or Coronary Artery Bypass Grafting e631
14. Recurrent Myocardial Infarction e631
15. Reinfarction e631
16. Myocardial Injury and Infarction Associated With Cardiac Procedures Other Than Revascularization e631
17. Myocardial Injury and Infarction Associated With Noncardiac Procedures e631
18. Myocardial Injury or Infarction Associated With Heart Failure e632
19. Takotsubo Syndrome e632
20. Myocardial Infarction With Nonobstructive Coronary Arteries e633
21. Myocardial Injury and/or Infarction Associated With Kidney Disease e633
22. Myocardial Injury and/or Infarction in Critically Ill Patients e634
23. Biochemical Approach for Diagnosing Myocardial Injury and Infarction e634
24. Analytical Issues of Cardiac Troponins e635
25. The 99th Percentile Upper Reference Limit e636
26. Operationalizing Criteria for Myocardial Injury and Infarction e636
27. Electrocardiographic Detection of Myocardial Infarction e637
28. Application of Supplemental Electrocardiogram Leads e638
29. Electrocardiographic Detection of Myocardial Injury e639
30. Prior or Silent/Unrecognized Myocardial Infarction e639
31. Conditions That Confound the Electrocardiographic Diagnosis of Myocardial Infarction e639
32. Conduction Disturbances and Pacemakers e640
33. Atrial Fibrillation e640
34. Imaging Techniques e640
34.1. Echocardiography e640
34.2. Radionuclide Imaging e641
34.3. Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Imaging e641
34.4. Computed Tomographic Coronary Angiography e641
35. Applying Imaging in Acute Myocardial Infarction e641
36. Applying Imaging in Late Presentation of Myocardial Infarction e642
37. Regulatory Perspective on Myocardial Infarction in Clinical Trials e643
38. Silent/Unrecognized Myocardial Infarction in Epidemiological Studies and Quality Programs e643
39. Individual and Public Implications of the Myocardial Infarction Definition e643
40. Global Perspectives of the Definition of Myocardial Infarction e644
41. Using the Universal Definition of Myocardial Infarction in the Healthcare System e644
Appendix e645
Acknowledgment e645
References e645
1. What is new in the Universal Definition of Myocardial Infarction?
2. Universal Definitions of Myocardial Injury and Myocardial Infarction: Summary
3. Introduction
In the late 19th century, postmortem examinations demonstrated a possible relationship between thrombotic occlusion of a coronary artery and myocardial infarction (MI).1 However, it was not until the beginning of the 20th century that the first clinical descriptions appeared describing a connection between the formation of a thrombus in a coronary artery and its associated clinical features.2,3 Despite these landmark observations, considerable time elapsed before general clinical acceptance of this entity was achieved, in part due to 1 autopsy study that showed no thrombi in the coronary arteries of 31% of deceased patients with an MI.4 The clinical entity was referred to as coronary thrombosis, although use of the term “MI” ultimately prevailed. Over the years, several different definitions of MI have been used, leading to controversy and confusion. Hence, a general and worldwide definition for MI was needed. This occurred for the first time in the 1950–1970s, when working groups from the World Health Organization (WHO) established a primarily electrocardiographic (ECG)–based definition of MI intended for epidemiological use.5 The original description, with minor modifications, is still used in epidemiological surveys (Figure 1).6–8
With the introduction of more sensitive cardiac biomarkers, the European Society of Cardiology (ESC) and the American College of Cardiology (ACC) collaborated to redefine MI using a biochemical and clinical approach, and reported that myocardial injury detected by abnormal biomarkers in the setting of acute myocardial ischemia should be labeled as MI.9 The principle was further refined by the Global MI Task Force, leading to the Universal Definition of Myocardial Infarction Consensus Document in 2007, introducing a novel MI classification system with 5 subcategories.10 This document, endorsed by the ESC, the ACC, the American Heart Association (AHA), and the World Heart Federation (WHF), was adopted by the WHO.11 The development of even more sensitive assays for markers of myocardial injury made further revision of the document necessary, particularly for patients who undergo coronary procedures or cardiac surgery. As a result, the Joint ESC/ACC/AHA/WHF Task Force produced the Third Universal Definition of Myocardial Infarction Consensus Document in 2012.12
Studies have shown that myocardial injury, defined by an elevated cardiac troponin (cTn) value, is frequently encountered clinically and is associated with an adverse prognosis.13,14 Although myocardial injury is a prerequisite for the diagnosis of MI, it is also an entity in itself. To establish a diagnosis of MI, criteria in addition to abnormal biomarkers are required. Nonischemic myocardial injury may arise secondary to many cardiac conditions such as myocarditis, or may be associated with noncardiac conditions such as renal failure.15 Therefore, for patients with increased cTn values, clinicians must distinguish whether patients have suffered a nonischemic myocardial injury or one of the MI subtypes. If there is no evidence to support the presence of myocardial ischemia, a diagnosis of myocardial injury should be made. This diagnosis can be changed if subsequent evaluation indicates criteria for MI. The current Fourth Universal Definition of Myocardial Infarction Consensus Document reflects these considerations through adhering to the clinical approach of the definition of MI.
4. Pathological characteristics of myocardial ISCHEMIA and infarction
MI is defined pathologically as myocardial cell death due to prolonged ischemia. Diminished cellular glycogen, and relaxed myofibrils and sarcolemmal disruption, are the first ultrastructural changes and are seen as early as 10–15 minutes after the onset of ischemia.16 Mitochondrial abnormalities are observed as early as 10 minutes after coronary occlusion by electron microscopy and are progressive.17 It can take hours before myocyte necrosis can be identified by postmortem examination in humans; this is in contrast to animal models, in which biochemical evidence of myocardial cell death due to apoptosis can be detected within 10 minutes of induced myocardial ischemia in association with myocyte death.15 Experimentally, necrosis progresses from the subendocardium to the subepicardium over several hours. The time course may be prolonged by increased collateral flow, reduced determinants of myocardial oxygen consumption, and intermittent occlusion/reperfusion, which can precondition the heart.18 Timely implementation of reperfusion therapy, when appropriate, reduces ischemic injury of the myocardium.19,20
5. Biomarker detection of myocardial injury and infarction
Cardiac troponin I (cTnI) and T (cTnT) are components of the contractile apparatus of myocardial cells and are expressed almost exclusively in the heart.21,22 Increases in cTnI values have not been reported to occur following injury to noncardiac tissues. The situation is more complex for cTnT. Biochemical data indicate that injured skeletal muscle expresses proteins that are detected by the cTnT assay, leading to some situations where elevations of cTnT could emanate from skeletal muscle.23–27 Recent data suggest that the frequency of such elevations in the absence of ischemic heart disease may be higher than originally thought.28,29 cTnI and cTnT are the preferred biomarkers for the evaluation of myocardial injury,12,21,22,30 and high-sensitivity (hs)–cTn assays are recommended for routine clinical use.22 Other biomarkers, for example, wwm (CK-MB), are less sensitive and less specific.31 Myocardial injury is defined as being present when blood levels of cTn are increased above the 99th percentile upper reference limit (URL).12,21,22,30 The injury may be acute, as evidenced by a newly detected dynamic rising and/or falling pattern of cTn values above the 99th percentile URL, or chronic, in the setting of persistently elevated cTn levels.
Although elevated cTn values reflect injury to myocardial cells, they do not indicate the underlying pathophysiological mechanisms, and can arise following preload-induced mechanical stretch or physiological stresses in otherwise normal hearts.32–34 Various causes have been suggested for the release of structural proteins from the myocardium, including normal turnover of myocardial cells, apoptosis, cellular release of cTn degradation products, increased cellular wall permeability, the formation and release of membranous blebs, and myocyte necrosis.27,35 Yet, it is not clinically possible to distinguish which increases of cTn levels are due to which mechanisms.36 However, regardless of the mechanism, acute myocardial injury, when associated with a rising and/or falling pattern of cTn values with at least 1 value above the 99th percentile URL and caused by myocardial ischemia, is designated as an acute MI.12,21,22,30 Histological evidence of myocardial injury with myocyte death can be detected in clinical conditions associated with nonischemic mechanisms of myocardial injury as well37,38 (Figure 2).
Myocardial ischemic or nonischemic conditions associated with increased cTn values are presented in Table 1. The complexity of clinical circumstances may sometimes make it difficult to discriminate specific individual mechanism(s) of myocardial injury. In this situation, the multifactorial contributions resulting in myocardial injury should be described in the patient record.
Myocardial injury related to acute myocardial ischemia |
Atherosclerotic plaque disruption with thrombosis |
Myocardial injury related to acute myocardial ischemia because of oxygen supply/demand imbalance |
Reduced myocardial perfusion, eg, |
• Coronary artery spasm, microvascular dysfunction |
• Coronary embolism |
• Coronary artery dissection |
• Sustained bradyarrhythmia |
• Hypotension or shock |
• Respiratory failure |
• Severe anemia |
Increased myocardial oxygen demand, eg, |
• Sustained tachyarrhythmia |
• Severe hypertension with or without left ventricular hypertrophy |
Other causes of myocardial injury |
Cardiac conditions, eg, |
• Heart failure |
• Myocarditis |
• Cardiomyopathy (any type) |
• Takotsubo syndrome |
• Coronary revascularization procedure |
• Cardiac procedure other than revascularization |
• Catheter ablation |
• Defibrillator shocks |
• Cardiac contusion |
Systemic conditions, eg, |
• Sepsis, infectious disease |
• Chronic kidney disease |
• Stroke, subarachnoid hemorrhage |
• Pulmonary embolism, pulmonary hypertension |
• Infiltrative diseases, eg, amyloidosis, sarcoidosis |
• Chemotherapeutic agents |
• Critically ill patients |
• Strenuous exercise |
For a more comprehensive listing, see references 39-41.
6. Clinical presentations of myocardial infarction
Onset of myocardial ischemia is the initial step in the development of MI and results from an imbalance between oxygen supply and demand. Myocardial ischemia in a clinical setting can most often be identified from the patient’s history and from the ECG. Possible ischemic symptoms include various combinations of chest, upper extremity, mandibular, or epigastric discomfort during exertion or at rest, or an ischemic equivalent such as dyspnea or fatigue. Often, the discomfort is diffuse; not localized, nor positional, nor affected by movement of the region. However, these symptoms are not specific for myocardial ischemia and can be observed in other conditions such as gastrointestinal, neurological, pulmonary, or musculoskeletal complaints. MI may occur with atypical symptoms such as palpitations or cardiac arrest, or even without symptoms.12 Very brief episodes of ischemia too short to cause necrosis can also cause cTn release and elevations. The involved myocytes can subsequently die due to apoptosis.42
If myocardial ischemia is present clinically or detected by ECG changes together with myocardial injury, manifested by a rising and/or falling pattern of cTn values, a diagnosis of acute MI is appropriate. If myocardial ischemia is not present clinically, then elevated cTn levels may be indicative of acute myocardial injury if the pattern of values is rising and/or falling, or related to more chronic ongoing injury if the pattern is unchanging.14 Similar considerations are relevant when evaluating events that are potentially related to procedures that may cause myocardial injury and/or MI. Additional evaluations may lead to a need for the initial diagnosis to be revised.
7. Clinical classification of myocardial infarction
For the sake of immediate treatment strategies such as reperfusion therapy, it is usual practice to designate MI in patients with chest discomfort or other ischemic symptoms, who develop new ST-segment elevations in 2 contiguous leads or new bundle branch blocks with ischemic repolarization patterns as an ST-elevation MI (STEMI) (see section 27). In contrast, patients without ST-segment elevation at presentation are usually designated non–ST-elevation MI (NSTEMI). The categories of patients with STEMI, NSTEMI, or unstable angina are customarily included in the concept of ACS. In addition to these categories, MI may be classified into various types based on pathological, clinical, and prognostic differences, along with different treatment strategies.
7.1. Myocardial Infarction Type 1
MI caused by atherothrombotic coronary artery disease (CAD) and usually precipitated by atherosclerotic plaque disruption (rupture or erosion) is designated as a type 1 MI. The relative burden of atherosclerosis and thrombosis in the culprit lesion varies greatly, and the dynamic thrombotic component may lead to distal coronary embolization resulting in myocyte necrosis.44,45 Plaque rupture may not only be complicated by intraluminal thrombosis but also by hemorrhage into the plaque through the disrupted surface (Figure 3).44,45
7.2. Myocardial Infarction Type 2
The pathophysiological mechanism leading to ischemic myocardial injury in the context of a mismatch between oxygen supply and demand has been classified as type 2 MI.10,12 By definition, acute atherothrombotic plaque disruption is not a feature of type 2 MI. In patients with stable known or presumed CAD, an acute stressor such as an acute gastrointestinal bleed with a precipitous drop in hemoglobin or a sustained tachyarrhythmia with clinical manifestations of myocardial ischemia, may result in myocardial injury and a type 2 MI. These effects are due to insufficient blood flow to the ischemic myocardium to meet the increased myocardial oxygen demand of the stressor. Ischemic thresholds may vary substantially in individual patients depending on the magnitude of the stressor, the presence of noncardiac comorbidities, and the extent of underlying CAD and cardiac structural abnormalities.
Studies have shown variable occurrences of type 2 MI depending on criteria used for diagnosis. Some reports rely on specific predetermined oxygen mismatch criteria,48,49 whereas others apply more liberal criteria. Most studies show a higher frequency of type 2 MI in women. The short- and long-term mortality rates for patients with type 2 MI are generally higher than for type 1 MI patients in most but not all studies due to an increased prevalence of comorbid conditions.49–57 Coronary atherosclerosis is a common finding in type 2 MI patients selected for coronary angiography. In general, these patients have a worse prognosis than those without CAD.54–57 Prospective evaluations of the importance of CAD with type 2 MI using consistent definitions and approaches are needed.
It has been shown that the frequency of ST-segment elevation in type 2 MI varies from 3% to 24%.53 In some cases, coronary embolism caused by thrombi, calcium or vegetation from the atria or ventricles, or acute aortic dissection may result in a type 2 MI. Spontaneous coronary artery dissection with or without intramural hematoma is another non-atherosclerotic condition that may occur, especially in young women. It is defined as spontaneous dissection of the coronary artery wall with accumulation of blood within the false lumen, which can compress the true lumen to varying degrees (Figure 4).58
All of the clinical information available should be considered in distinguishing type 1 MI from type 2 MI. The context and mechanisms of type 2 MI should be considered when establishing this diagnosis (Figure 5). The myocardial oxygen supply/demand imbalance attributable to acute myocardial ischemia may be multifactorial, related either to: reduced myocardial perfusion due to fixed coronary atherosclerosis without plaque rupture, coronary artery spasm, coronary microvascular dysfunction (which includes endothelial dysfunction, smooth muscle cell dysfunction, and the dysregulation of sympathetic innervation), coronary embolism, coronary artery dissection with or without intramural hematoma or other mechanisms that reduce oxygen supply such as severe bradyarrhythmia, respiratory failure with severe hypoxemia severe anemia, and hypotension/shock; or to increased myocardial oxygen demand due to sustained tachyarrhythmia or severe hypertension with or without left ventricular hypertrophy. In patients who undergo timely coronary angiography, description of a ruptured plaque with thrombus in the infarct-related artery may be helpful in making the distinction between type 2 MI vs. type 1 MI, but angiography is not always definitive, clinically indicated, or required to establish the diagnosis of type 2 MI.
It appears advisable in the acute setting to treat the underlying ischemic imbalance of oxygen supply and demand. This treatment may include volume adjustment, blood pressure management, administration of blood products, heart-rate control, and respiratory support.47,48 Depending on the clinical situation, coronary evaluations may be indicated to assess the likelihood of CAD. If it is present, the MI Guidelines may be applied in accordance with the ECG findings of STEMI or NSTEMI.46,47 However, if CAD is absent, the benefits of cardiovascular risk reduction strategies with type 2 MI remain uncertain.
7.3. Myocardial Infarction Type 2 and Myocardial Injury
Type 2 MI and myocardial injury are frequently encountered in clinical practice and both are related to a poor outcome.13,14,49,51,56 A conceptual model to facilitate the clinical distinction between acute ischemic myocardial injury with or without an acute atherothrombotic event (type 1 or type 2 MI) vs. conditions without acute ischemic myocardial injury is displayed in Figure 6. Acute MI requires a rising and/or falling pattern of cTn values. Acute myocardial injury may also manifest such a pattern but if the injury is related to structural heart disease, the cTn values may be stable and unchanging. Type 2 MI and nonischemic myocardial injury may coexist. It should be recognized that some disease entities may be on both sides of the diagram (eg, acute heart failure that may occur in the context of acute myocardial ischemia). Nevertheless, abnormal cTn values in the setting of acute and/or chronic heart failure are often better categorized as a myocardial injury condition. Few studies have compared the incidence and clinical features of type 2 MI versus myocardial injury without acute myocardial ischemia.
7.4. Myocardial Infarction Type 3
The detection of cardiac biomarkers in the blood is fundamental for establishing the diagnosis of MI.10,12 However, patients can manifest a typical presentation of myocardial ischemia/infarction, including presumed new ischemic ECG changes or ventricular fibrillation, and die before it is possible to obtain blood for cardiac biomarker determination; or the patient may succumb soon after the onset of symptoms before an elevation of biomarker values has occurred. Such patients are designated as having a type 3 MI, when suspicion for an acute myocardial ischemic event is high, even when cardiac biomarker evidence of MI is lacking.10,12 This category allows the separation of fatal MI events from the much larger group of sudden death episodes that may be cardiac (nonischemic) or noncardiac in origin. When a type 3 MI is diagnosed and a subsequent autopsy reveals recent evidence of an MI, with a fresh or recent thrombus in the infarct-related artery, the type 3 MI should be reclassified to a type 1 MI. Original investigations addressing the incidence of type 3 MI are sparse, but a study showed an annual incidence below 10/100 000 person-years and a frequency of 3% to 4% among all types of MI.60
8. Coronary procedure–related myocardial injury
Cardiac procedural myocardial injury related to coronary revascularization procedures, whether percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) or coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG), may be temporally related to the procedure itself, reflecting periprocedural issues, or may occur later reflecting complications of a device, such as early or late stent thrombosis or in-stent restenosis for PCI, or graft occlusion or stenosis with CABG. Late gadolinium enhancement (LGE) cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) allows assessment of procedural myocardial injury61–63 When quantifying procedural injury using LGE-CMR before and shortly after PCI or CABG, it was found that 32% of patients had evidence of procedural myocardial injury.63 Furthermore, it has been shown that patients with elevation of cTnI values after PCI or after CABG have evidence of procedural myocardial injury on CMR imaging.61,62 For that reason, increased cTn values detected following a coronary revascularization procedure may reflect procedural myocardial injury. Of importance, if the baseline value before the procedure is above the 99th percentile URL, it is essential that cTn levels are stable prior to the evaluation in order to reliably establish the presence of acute procedural myocardial injury. It is not possible to determine, when intervening in a patient with an acute MI event resulting in an increased cTn level, how much of any given increase is related to the MI and how much is due to the procedure.
A large proportion of patients have abnormal values of cTn after PCI, ranging from ~20% to 40% in stable CAD to 40% to 50% in MI.64 The occurrence of procedural myocardial injury can be detected by the measurement of cTn before the procedure and repeated 3–6 hours later. Where the second value is rising, further sampling should be performed to document the peak cTn value. Increasing levels after the procedure can only be attributed with certainty to procedural myocardial injury when the preprocedural cTn values are normal (≤99th percentile URL), or if they are stable or falling. For patients that present with an ACS and undergo a prompt coronary revascularization procedure resulting in only a single preprocedural baseline value that is normal or mildly elevated, followed by subsequent postprocedural values that continue to increase, the postprocedural increase should be attributed to the index event. Recent data corroborate the importance of elevated preprocedure cTn values as a prognostic marker in patients that have values that rise after the procedure.65 To diagnose procedural myocardial injury in the clinical setting of only a single preprocedural cTn value, the cardiac Tn values would need to be stable or falling postprocedure, followed by a subsequent increase that exceeds the 99th percentile URL, and if the value has not returned to baseline, the increase should be >20% with an absolute value greater than the 99th percentile URL.
9. Myocardial infarction associated with percutaneous coronary intervention (type 4a myocardial infarction)
Stand-alone postprocedural increases of cTn values are sufficient to establish a diagnosis of procedural myocardial injury but not for the diagnosis of type 4a MI. Type 4a MI requires an elevation of cTn values >5 times the 99th percentile URL in patients with normal baseline values or, in patients with elevated preprocedure cTn in whom the cTn levels are stable (≤20% variation) or falling, the postprocedure cTn must rise >20% to an absolute value >5 times the 99th percentile URL. In addition, there should be evidence of new myocardial ischemia, either from ECG changes, imaging evidence, or from procedure-related complications associated with reduced coronary blood flow such as coronary dissection, occlusion of a major epicardial artery or a side branch occlusion/thrombus, disruption of collateral flow, slow flow or no-reflow, or distal embolization. The use of hs-cTn assays to diagnose type 4a MI (and type 5 MI) is an area of active research. Many hs-cTn assays are available, which have wide dynamic ranges. Different criteria may be required for different assays. However, it has recently been shown that the optimal hs-cTnT thresholds to predict cardiovascular events at 30 days and 1 year were very close to the 5-fold increase suggested by the Third Universal Definition of Myocardial infarction.12,66,67 These criteria are therefore retained because of a lack of new scientific evidence that identifies superior criteria for defining this MI subtype. Other criteria that meet the definition of type 4a MI, regardless of hs-cTn or cTn values, are the development of new pathological Q waves or autopsy evidence of recent procedure-related thrombus in the culprit artery.
10. Stent/scaffold thrombosis associated with percutaneous coronary intervention (type 4b myocardial infarction)
A subcategory of PCI-related MI is stent/scaffold thrombosis, type 4b MI, as documented by angiography or autopsy using the same criteria utilized for type 1 MI. It is important to indicate the time of the occurrence of the stent/scaffold thrombosis in relation to the timing of the PCI procedure. The following temporal categories are suggested: acute, 0 to 24 hours; subacute, >24 hours to 30 days; late, >30 days to 1 year; and very late >1 year after stent/scaffold implantation.68
11. Restenosis associated with percutaneous coronary intervention (type 4c myocardial infarction)
Occasionally MI occurs and—at angiography, in-stent restenosis, or restenosis following balloon angioplasty in the infarct territory—is the only angiographic explanation since no other culprit lesion or thrombus can be identified. This PCI-related MI type is designated as type 4c MI, defined as focal or diffuse restenosis, or a complex lesion associated with a rise and/or fall of cTn values above the 99th percentile URL applying, the same criteria utilized for type 1 MI.
12. Myocardial infarction associated with coronary artery bypass grafting (type 5 myocardial infarction)
Numerous factors can lead to procedural myocardial injury during a CABG procedure. Many of them are related to the details of the cardiac preservation, the extent of the direct traumatic injury to the myocardium, as well as any potential ischemic injury. For that reason, increases in cTn values should be expected after all CABG procedures,69,70 which need to be taken into account when comparing the extent of procedural myocardial injury after cardiac surgery with that associated with less invasive approaches. Depending on whether it is off-pump or on-pump surgery, procedural myocardial injury is observed among 32% to 44% of CABG patients when quantified by LGE-CMR.61,63 The area under the curve (AUC) and routine cTn sampling has demonstrated an excellent linear relationship with the mass of the new injury as defined by LGE-CMR. AUC for CK-MB is also good, although clearly inferior to cTnI.69 However, these relationships vary depending on the nature of the procedure, the nature of the cardioplegia, and the specific assay used to measure cTn. Very high cTn values are most often associated with coronary artery–related events.61,63,69 Thus, although cardiac biomarkers and especially cTn appear robust for the detection of procedural myocardial injury and also, in the presence of new myocardial ischemia, for the detection of type 5 MI, a specific cut-off value for all procedures and all cTn assays is difficult to define. However, in order to ensure consistency with the analogous standards of the preceding definition of type 5 MI12 and because of the lack of new scientific evidence that identifies superior criteria for defining this MI subtype, it is suggested that a cTn value >10 times the 99th percentile URL is applied as the cut-off point during the first 48 hours following CABG, occurring from a normal baseline cTn value (≤99th percentile URL), for diagnosing type 5 MI. It is important that the postprocedural elevation of cTn values is accompanied by ECG, angiographic, or imaging evidence of new myocardial ischemia/new loss of myocardial viability.71 The higher cut-off of MI after CABG than after PCI (10 times versus 5 times the 99th percentile URL) has been arbitrarily selected due to the occurrence of more unavoidable myocardial injury during surgery than during PCI.
It should be recognized that ST-segment deviation and T wave changes are common after CABG due to epicardial injury, and are not reliable indicators of myocardial ischemia in this setting. However, ST-segment elevation with reciprocal ST-segment depression or other specific ECG patterns may be a more reliable finding of a potential ischemic event.
Marked isolated elevation of cTn values within the 48 hour postoperative period, even in the absence of ECG/angiographic or other imaging evidence of MI, indicates prognostically significant cardiac procedural myocardial injury.72 The presence of significant procedural myocardial injury in patients with operative problems (eg, difficulty coming off bypass, technically difficult anastomoses in a heavily calcified aorta, of perioperative evidence of myocardial ischemia, etc) should prompt clinical review of the procedure and/or consideration of additional diagnostic testing for possible type 5 MI.
13. Other definitions of myocardial infarction related to percutaneous coronary intervention or coronary artery bypass grafting
There is no universal consensus on the cTn or hs-cTn cut-off points that clearly distinguish cardiac procedural myocardial injury from MI. The distinction is made on the basis of an injury created by a flow-limiting complication during the procedure that results in sufficient myocardial ischemia to generate a procedure-related MI. The size of the insult will determine the magnitude of the cTn release. Various groups have used multiples of the 99th percentile URL and set thresholds to diagnose periprocedural MIs for clinical trials.68,73 Unless a standard assay is used for all analyses, given the heterogeneity of cTn assays, this approach could lead to very different values depending on the assay used locally. The Academic Research Consortium-2 (ARC-2) suggests a postprocedural cTn value ≥35 times the 99th percentile URL for both PCI and CABG in patients that have a normal baseline cTn value or in patients with elevated preprocedure cTn values in whom the cTn levels are stable or falling. ARC-2 proposes that 1 ancillary criterion be required in addition to the ≥35 cTn rise to fulfill the definition of periprocedural MI. The ancillary criteria are ≥1 of the following: new significant Q waves (or equivalent), flow-limiting angiographic complications in a major epicardial vessel or >1.5 mm diameter branch, or a substantial new loss of viable myocardium on echocardiography related to the procedure.68 Furthermore, ARC-2 has defined stand-alone criteria for significant procedural myocardial injury if the rise in cTn is ≥70 times the 99th percentile URL (where the baseline is lower than the URL, elevated and stable, or falling).68
14. Recurrent myocardial infarction
Incident MI is defined as the individual’s first MI. When features of MI occur in the first 28 days after an incident event, the second event is not counted as a new MI for epidemiological purposes. If characteristics of MI occur after 28 days following an incident MI, it is considered to be a recurrent MI.11
15. Reinfarction
The term reinfarction is used clinically for an acute MI that occurs within 28 days of an incident or recurrent MI.11 The ECG diagnosis of suspected reinfarction following the initial MI may be confounded by the initial evolutionary ECG changes. Reinfarction should be considered when ST-elevation ≥1 mm recurs or new pathognomonic Q waves appear in at least 2 contiguous leads, particularly when associated with ischemic symptoms. However, reelevation of the ST-segment can also be seen in threatened myocardial rupture or in cases of pericarditis, and should lead to additional diagnostic evaluation.
In patients where reinfarction is suspected from clinical signs or symptoms following the initial MI, an immediate measurement of cTn is recommended. A second sample should be obtained 3 to 6 hours later or earlier with more sensitive cTn assays. If the cTn concentration is elevated, but stable or decreasing at the time of suspected reinfarction, the diagnosis of reinfarction requires a >20% increase of the cTn value in the second sample.74 If the initial cTn concentration is normal, the criteria for new acute MI apply.12
16. Myocardial injury and infarction associated with cardiac procedures other than revascularization
Cardiac procedures such as transcatheter valve interventions may cause myocardial injury, both by direct trauma to the myocardium and by creating regional ischemia secondary to coronary obstruction or embolization. Ablation of arrhythmias involves controlled procedural myocardial injury by application of warming or cooling of the tissue. The extent of procedural myocardial injury can be assessed by serial cTn measurements. Increases of cTn values in this context should be considered as a procedural myocardial injury and not labeled as an MI unless the biomarker criteria and 1 of the ancillary criteria for acute myocardial ischemia listed for type 5 MI are present.75,76
17. Myocardial injury and infarction associated with NONCARDIAC procedures
Perioperative MI is one of the most important complications in major noncardiac surgery and it is associated with a poor prognosis.77,78 Most patients who have a perioperative MI will not experience ischemic symptoms due to anesthesia sedation, or pain relieving medications. Nevertheless, asymptomatic perioperative MI is as strongly associated with 30 day mortality as symptomatic MI.77,78 Knowledge about hs-cTn values at baseline can help to identify patients having chronic cTn elevation before surgery, as well as those at increased risk during and after the procedure.79,80 Measurement of hs-cTn in postoperative samples reveals that as many as 35% of patients have levels above the 99th percentile URL, and 17% have an elevation and a rising pattern of values indicative of evolving myocar-dial injury.81 Those with a rising pattern of elevated hs-cTn values are at particular risk; the greater the rise, the greater the risk.82,83
The pathophysiological mechanism of perioperative MI is subject to debate. It is recognized that the perioperative period is characterized by increased cardiac metabolic demand that may lead to MI in patients with otherwise stable CAD.84,85 Thus, an angiographic investigation has identified demand myocardial ischemia as the predominant etiology of perioperative MI,84,85 which together with a rise and/or fall of cTn values indicates type 2 MI. However, other angiographic studies have detected coronary plaque rupture in 50% to 60% of patients with perioperative MI,86,87 which qualifies as type 1 MI. On the other hand, perioperative myocardial injury without ancillary ischemic evidence indicative of MI is a common complication after noncardiac surgery that is associated with substantial short- and long-term mortality on a level with perioperative MI.83
Postoperative cTn surveillance is recommended for high-risk individuals. In order to properly interpret the etiology of elevated postoperative values, a baseline preoperative value is necessary to determine whether the increase is acute or more chronic. However, a diagnosis of MI still requires, in addition to an increase of cTn values, evidence of myocardial ischemia that may be evident from the peri- and postoperative period (eg, ST-segment changes on telemetry/ECG, repeated episodes of hypoxia, hypotension, tachycardia, or imaging evidence of MI). In the absence of evidence for acute myocardial ischemia, a diagnosis of acute myocardial injury is more appropriate. Ongoing research suggests the possibility that interventions may be helpful in this clinical situation.
18. Myocardial injury or infarction associated with heart failure
Depending on the assay used, detectable to clearly elevated cTn values being indicative of myocardial injury may be seen in patients with heart failure (HF), both with reduced ejection fraction (EF) and with preserved EF.88 Using hs-cTn assays, measurable hs-cTn concentrations may be present in nearly all patients with HF, with a significant percentage exceeding the 99th percentile URL, particularly in those patients with more severe HF syndromes, such as in acutely decompensated HF.87
Beyond type 1 MI, multiple mechanisms have been proposed to explain measurable to pathologically elevated cTn concentrations in patients with HF.88,89 For example, type 2 MI may result from increased transmural pressure, small-vessel coronary obstruction, endothelial dysfunction, anemia, or hypotension. Besides type 1 MI or type 2 MI, cardiomyocyte apoptosis and autophagy due to wall stretch have been experimentally demonstrated. Direct cellular toxicity related to inflammation, circulating neurohormones, and infiltrative processes may present with HF and abnormal cTn measurements indicating myocardial injury. Finally, exocytosis of the early releasable cytosolic troponin pool into the blood stream from stressed cardiomyocytes has also been suggested as a cause of elevated cTn values.89
In the context of an acutely decompensated HF presentation, cTn should always be promptly measured and the ECG recorded, with the goal of identifying or excluding myocardial ischemia as the precipitant. In this setting, elevated cTn values should be interpreted with a high level of suspicion for type 1 MI if a significant rise and/or fall of the marker is seen, especially if it is accompanied by chest discomfort or other symptoms suggestive of myocardial ischemia, and/or if new ischemic ECG changes or loss of myocardial function on noninvasive testing are found. Shortness of breath, the cardinal symptom of acutely decompensated HF, may be an ischemic equivalent, but in the absence of corroborating evidence for a coronary mechanism, caution is advised in its interpretation. Coronary artery anatomy may be known and this knowledge may be used to interpret abnormal cTn results. However, further information—such as renal function, myocardial perfusion studies, coronary angiography, or CMR—is often required to better understand the cause of deviant cTn values.
19. Takotsubo syndrome
Takotsubo syndrome (TTS) can mimic MI and is found in 1% to 2% of patients presenting with suspected STEMI.90 The onset of TTS is often triggered by intense emotional or physical stresses, such as bereavement. Over 90% of patients are postmenopausal women. Cardiovascular complications occur in 50% of patients presenting with TTS, and the inpatient mortality is similar to STEMI (4% to 5%) due to cardiogenic shock, ventricular rupture, or malignant arrhythmias.90 TTS usually presents similar to ACS. ST-segment elevation is frequent (44%), but the extent of the ST-segment elevation is usually widespread across the lateral and precordial leads, beyond that of a single coronary artery distribution. ST-segment depression occurs in <10% of patients and after 12 to 24 hours, deep, symmetric T wave inversion and QTc prolongation are typically observed.91,92
There are usually transient elevations in cTn levels (>95% of cases), but the peak cTn values observed are modest, and contrast with the large territory of ECG changes or left ventricular (LV) dysfunction. The rise and fall in cTn levels support an acute myocardial injury, secondary to the high catecholamine surges that are known to trigger cTn release from cardiomyocytes. Coronary vasospasm, high myocardial strain hypercontractility, or high ventricular afterload may also contribute to myocardial ischemia. The diagnosis of TTS should be suspected when the clinical manifestations and ECG abnormalities are out of proportion to the degree of elevation of cTn values, and when the distribution of the LV wall motion abnormalities does not correlate with a single coronary artery distribution. However, coronary angiography and ventriculography are often needed to secure the diagnosis.
In most cases, the coronary arteries are angiographically normal, and where CAD is present (15% cases) it is not sufficient to explain the observed pattern of regional wall motion abnormalities. Left ventriculography during catheterization and/or echocardiography may show a variety of LV regional wall motion abnormalities including apical (82% of patients), mid-ventricular (14.6%), basal (2.2%), or focal (1.5%) akinesis or hypokinesis in a circumferential pattern involving >1 coronary artery territory. Evidence of myocardial edema is often seen on CMR imaging during the acute phase but LGE is usually absent. The recovery time for LV function varies from hours to several weeks.93 Cardiac function may not return to normal, with persisting abnormalities of diastolic function, myocardial reserve during exercise, or rhythm disturbances at long-term follow-up in 10% to 15% of patients. In the absence of recovery of regional wall motion abnormalities, LGE-CMR is recommended to exclude MI with spontaneous recanalization.
The distinction between MI and TTS can be challenging, particularly when concurrent CAD is present (15% in the International Takotsubo Registry).91 Two additional features that are helpful in distinguishing TTS from acute MI are QTc prolongation >500 ms during the acute phase and the recovery of LV function over 2 to 4 weeks. There are rare cases described where MI and TTS coexist (eg, MI-induced TTS or TTS with secondary plaque rupture) but this occurs where the acute regional wall motion abnormalities are more extensive than the culprit coronary artery territory, and fulfil the pattern and definition of TTS.94
20. Myocardial infarction with NONOBSTRUCTIVE coronary arteries
It is increasingly recognized that there is a group of MI patients with no angiographic obstructive CAD (≥50% diameter stenosis in a major epicardial vessel), and the term myocardial infarction with nonobstructive coronary arteries (MINOCA) has been coined for this entity.95,96 The diagnosis of MINOCA, like the diagnosis of MI, indicates that there is an ischemic mechanism responsible for the myocyte injury (ie, nonischemic causes such as myocarditis have been excluded). Furthermore, the diagnosis of MINOCA necessitates that obstructive CAD has not been inadvertently overlooked (eg, spontaneous coronary artery dissection). The prevalence of MINOCA is estimated to be 6% to 8% among patients diagnosed with MI and more common in women than men, as well as in patients presenting with NSTEMI compared with those presenting with STEMI.96–98 Atherosclerotic plaque disruption and coronary thrombosis may be a cause of MINOCA (ie, type 1 MI). However, coronary spasm and spontaneous coronary dissection may be involved as well (ie, type 2 MI). along with other possible causes. Additional coronary imaging and functional testing methods may be useful to elucidate the mechanisms of ischemia in MINOCA.46
21. Myocardial injury and/or infarction associated with kidney disease
Many patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD) have elevation of cTn values.99,100 With hs-cTn assays, the majority of patients with end-stage renal disease will have elevation of hs-cTn values above the 99th percentile URL.99,101 This is particularly the case for hs-cTnT, which is more often elevated compared with hs-cTnI.99,102 It has been shown using hs-cTn assays that renal dysfunction is commonly associated with cardiovascular abnormalities.102–104 In autopsy studies, elevation of cTn values was invariably associated with evidence of myocardial injury.15 Recently, a minor effect on renal clearance of cTn has been shown when levels are low, but not in response to acute episodes of myocardial injury.105 The mechanisms include increased ventricular pressure, small-vessel coronary obstruction, anemia, hypotension, and possibly direct toxic effects on the myocardium associated with the uremic state.89 Cardiomyocyte apoptosis and autophagy due to acute wall stretch have been demonstrated experimentally.18 Thus, baseline elevation of cTn values is common, and because they reflect myocardial injury, such elevation is highly prognostic over time.99
Diagnosing MI in patients with CKD and elevated cTn levels may be difficult if symptoms or ECG changes indicating myocardial ischemia are absent. However, studies suggest that serial changes in cTn levels are equally effective in diagnosing MI in patients with CKD and in those with normal renal function.106 If the level of elevated cTn values is unchanging, and the timing of the event makes a rising and/or falling pattern unlikely, the elevated level, even if substantial, is likely a reflection of chronic myocardial injury. This does not imply that these patients are free of CAD, since renal dysfunction and CAD are correlated. However, if a rising and/or falling pattern is present then the etiology of the abnormal cTn values could be acute volume over-load, congestive HF, or MI. If a rising and falling pattern is seen, and it is accompanied by ischemic symptoms, new ischemic ECG changes, or loss of viable myocardium on imaging, a diagnosis of acute MI is likely. There are no data to suggest that different criteria for the cTn decision levels are needed for these patients. At times, additional imaging studies may be necessary to determine the appropriate diagnosis. It should be noted that if CKD patients present late after the onset of chest pain, it may be difficult to observe a rise and/or fall of cTn values in the short term, particularly when the baseline value is elevated. Such a situation should not obviate the diagnosis of MI when the clinical evidence is strong.
22. Myocardial injury and/or infarction in critically ill patients
Elevations of cTn values are common in patients in the intensive care unit and are associated with adverse prognosis regardless of the underlying disease state.107,108 Some elevation of cTn values may reflect type 2 MI due to underlying CAD and increased myocardial oxygen demand,109 whereas in other patients, type 1 MI may occur because of plaque disruption leading to thrombosis in a coronary artery. However, other patients may have elevated cTn values and marked decreases in EF due to sepsis caused by endotoxin, with myocardial function recovering completely with normal EF once the sepsis is treated. It is frequently challenging for the clinician caring for a critically ill patient with a severe single organ or multiorgan pathological condition to decide on a plan of action when the patient has elevated cTn values. If and when the patient recovers from the critical illness, clinical judgment should be employed to decide whether, and to what extent, further evaluation for CAD or structural heart disease is indicated.110
23. Biochemical approach for diagnosing myocardial injury and infarction
cTnI and cTnT are the preferred biomarkers recommended to both rule-in and rule-out myocardial injury, and thus to define MI and each specific subtype of MI.12,22,23,31 Detection of a rise and/or fall of cTn values is essential, and a key early component along with other elements of the clinical evaluation to establish the diagnosis of acute MI. Criteria for determining a pathological rise between 2 serial cTn values are assay-dependent and continue to evolve. An idealized view of troponin kinetics in patients with acute MI is shown in Figure 7.
It should be appreciated that because biomarker release is substantially dependent on blood flow,111,112 there is significant variability in the time to peak value (velocity), the time when a normal value may become greater than the 99th percentile URL, or when a changing pattern of values can be observed. The ability to define a changing pattern will also depend on timing. For example, around peak values, it may be difficult to observe a changing pattern of values. Similarly, the downslope of the time–concentration curve is much slower than the upslope. These issues need to be taken into account when defining whether or not a changing pattern is present. In addition, it is important to make sure that a given change is greater than can be anticipated by variability alone. This is defined for conventional cTn assays as a change greater than or equal to 3 times the standard deviation around the measurement of the individual assay at relevant values.12,22 For hs-cTn assays, biological variation also needs to be considered. In most studies, conjoint analytical and biological variation is in the range of 50% to 60%.
For that reason, this percentage has been suggested for use when initial baseline values are less than or equal to the 99th percentile URL.23,31,113 However, for individuals with an initial value greater than the 99th percentile URL, a lesser degree of change during serial measurements is necessary to achieve improved clinical sensitivity (as compared with individuals with initial values less than or equal to the 99th percentile URL). Thus, an expert consensus group has recommended serial changes >20% be used in this situation.22 Absolute changes are assay dependent but appear superior to relative percent changes with hs-cTn assays,114 and in some studies this is especially the case when the initial value is increased.115 The use of a fixed absolute value change criteria translates into a smaller percentage or relative change as absolute values rise, and therefore provides greater sensitivity. The use of a changing pattern is important in allowing clinicians to differentiate an acute from a chronic cTn increase above the 99th percentile URL.113–115 Using criteria less than conjoint analytical and biological variation will reduce the clinical specificity of hs-cTn assays.113,116 An imprecision of ≤10% coefficient of variation (CV) at the 99th percentile URL is also mandatory for hs-cTn assays.31 The use of non–hs-cTn assays that do not have imprecision (≤10% CV at the 99th percentile URL) makes the determination of a significant serial change more difficult but does not cause false-positive results. Assays with CVs between 10% and 20% are acceptable for clinical use. However, assays with CVs >20% at the 99th percentile URL should not be used.117
If a cTn assay is not available, the best alternative is CK-MB measured by a mass assay. As with cTn, an increased CK-MB value is defined as a measurement above the 99th percentile URL, which is designated as the decision level for the diagnosis of MI. Sex-specific CK-MB values should be employed.118
24. Analytical issues of cardiac troponins
The analytical sensitivity (limit of detection [LoD]) of cTnI and cTnT assays varies 10-fold.31,119 Because assays are not standardized, values from 1 assay cannot be directly compared with those from another assay. Furthermore, values may be different between assay generations120 and changes can even occur when the same assay reagents are measured on different instruments.121 Thus, clinicians must learn about their local assay and should look for reliable information, for example, available on the International Federation of Clinical Chemistry and Laboratory Medicine (IFCC) website (http://www.ifcc.org/executive-board-and-council/eb-task-forces/task-force-on-clinical-applications-of-cardiac-bio-markers-tf-cb/), when they have questions concerning analytical issues. The current guidelines accommodate all assays, whether hs-cTn, contemporary (conventional) cTn, or point of care (POC) cTn. While hs-cTn assays are able to measure relatively low values and document small increases above the 99th percentile URL, many contemporary and POC cTn assays may not detect small increasing values within the reference interval or slightly above the 99th percentile URL, leading to substantial differences in the frequency of events based solely on the cTn assay used. These differences are amplified when multiples of the 99th percentile URL are used. At present, IFCC guidelines support the concept that hs-cTn assays are differentiated from contemporary or POC cTn assays by their ability to measure cTn values above the assay’s LoD in >50% of healthy individuals.31,118,119,122 This provides a rough estimate of assay sensitivity. It is recommended that values for cTn assays be reported as whole numbers in nanograms per litre to avoid interpretation problems associated with multiple zeros and decimal points that can often result in confusion.31 Clinicians should avoid mixing the units from contemporary assays with those from hs-cTn assays. All assays, including cTn assays, have some analytical problems resulting in false-positive and false-negative results, but these are uncommon (<0.5%).22 These problems are less common with hs-cTn assays.23
Conjoint biological and analytical variation of hs-cTn assays is in the range of 50% to 60%.123 When values are elevated, analytical variation is less and a value of 20% can be used to determine that values are stable in the proper clinical context. For example, changes may be difficult to observe over short periods of time in those who present early after the onset of symptoms of acute MI, those who present late and are on the downslope of the time–concentration curve, and those who have values near peak where they may be transitioning from a rising to a falling pattern.113,123
25. The 99th percentile upper reference limit
The 99th percentile URL is designated as the decision level for the presence of myocardial injury and must be determined for each specific assay with quality control materials used at the URL to validate appropriate assay imprecision. The cTn assay 99th percentile URL values used in clinical practice and research can be found both in manufacturers’ package inserts, in peer-reviewed publications, and on the IFCC website.118–120 Clinicians should be aware that for all cTn assays, including hs-cTn assays, there is still no expert opinion or consensus about specific criteria for how the 99th percentile URL should be defined.124 We endorse IFCC guidelines on the technical issues related to hs-cTn assays, including how studies should be configured to determine 99th percentile URLs.119 The guidelines include the clinical or surrogate biomarker screening that may be needed to better define the 99th percentile URL and the statistical methods that can be applied, but do not include a requirement for cardiac imaging.119 Screening of apparently healthy subjects with imaging has been shown to lower the observed 99th percentile URL value, but is not a practical standard for the in vitro diagnostic industry to use.124,125 Thus, there is the possibility of false-negative values using the manufacturer’s reported 99th percentile URL values. hs-cTn assays demonstrate shifts to higher values for the 99th percentile URL in association with comorbidities and age over >60 years.101,125–127 However, at present, age-dependent cut-off points are not recommended for clinical use. Clinicians should rely instead on changing values during serial measurements of cTn for the diagnosis of acute myocardial injury, including MI. Significantly lower values are observed among women compared with men, and therefore sex-specific 99th percentile URLs are recommended for hs-cTn assays.31,118–120 For some hs-cTn assays, sex-specific cut-off values have been reported to improve diagnostic and prognostic information in patients with possible acute MI.128,129 However, there is controversy as to whether this approach provides valuable additional information for all hs-cTn assays.130
26. Operationalizing criteria for myocardial injury and infarction
Blood samples for the measurement of cTn should be drawn on first assessment (designated as 0 hour) and repeated 3 to 6 hours later, or earlier with hs-cTn assays. The sampling interval will impact the clinical cut-off at baseline and what is determined to be a pathological rise and/or fall of the biomarker. Sampling beyond 6 hours may be required if further ischemic episodes occur, or in high-risk patients. To establish the diagnosis of an acute MI, a rise and/or fall in cTn values with at least 1 value above the 99th percentile URL is required, coupled with a high clinical and/or ECG likelihood of myocardial ischemia. hs-cTn assays shorten the time to diagnosis in many patients to within 3 hours of onset of symptoms, but there are still some patients who may rule-in late (at 6 hours).131 Furthermore, some patients with acute myocardial injury presenting late after the onset of acute MI (>12–18 hours) and who are on the downslope of the time–concentration curve may require longer periods of time for a changing pattern to be detected.131 In addition, it should be noted that with the implementation of cTn and hs-cTn assays, the frequency of unstable angina will decrease and the diagnosis of NSTEMI will increase.132,133 The magnitude of these changes using hs-cTn assays have been reported in the range of 18% to 30%.134 Assuming proper timing of symptoms, acute ischemia should result in a change in hs-cTn; however, there may be patients in whom it is difficult to ascertain the timing of symptom onset. Thus, despite typical chest discomfort, these patients may have hs-cTn values that are not elevated. Other patients with symptoms suggestive of unstable angina may have increased hs-cTn values as a result of structural heart disease with or without acute myocardial ischemia. This latter group may be particularly difficult to distinguish from patients presenting with late NSTEMI with a slow decline in troponin values that can be observed in late presenters.131 Finally, some patients may manifest a changing pattern of troponin values with a magnitude that does not exceed the delta suggested for diagnosis or who fail to manifest a value greater than the 99th percentile URL. This is a group of patients that deserves close scrutiny because they may be at high risk. The triage of these patients can only be accomplished based on clinical evaluation.
Strategies employing either very low levels of hs-cTn on presentation or the lack of any change and persistently normal hs-cTn values over a 1–2 hour period after presentation have been advocated to exclude acute myocardial injury, and MI as well. A single sample rule-out strategy using a very low value (in many cases the LoD of the assay) has high sensitivity for myocardial injury and therefore high negative predictive value to exclude MI.135 This strategy should not be used in those who present early (ie, <2 hours after the onset of chest discomfort. Some studies indicate that the single sample approach provides optimal sensitivity and negative predictive accuracy in patients otherwise at low risk and those with a normal ECG.136–138 However, one concern about very short rule-out periods is that the precision of the assays may not permit small differences to be distinguished.139–142 These criteria have not, and should not, be applied to patients with hs-cTn elevations.
The clinical specificity and positive predictive value of such 1–2 hour sampling approaches for ruling in MI are limited by the substantial proportion of individuals who meet the proposed biomarker criteria with diagnoses other than MI.136,141 Thus, the use of a rapid rule-in/-out MI protocol does not absolve the clinician from considering other causes of acute myocardial injury.142 In addition, considering a broader population of patients—inclusive of those who present atypically, those with end-stage renal disease, and the critically ill—the cut-off points to be used will likely need to be altered.139 Such patients have been excluded from the majority of emergency department evaluation studies.108,136,142
The demonstration of a rising and/or falling pattern is needed to distinguish acute injury from chronic conditions associated with structural heart disease that can have chronic increases of cTn values. For example, patients with renal failure99,143,144 or LV hypertrophy145 can have significant chronic increases in cTn values. These increases can be marked but do not change acutely during serial sampling. However, a falling pattern may take longer to be observed in patients with a high pretest risk of MI who present late after symptom onset.146 These patients who have cTn values on the downslope of the time–concentration curve have a slow decline in values (Figure 7). Thus, detecting a changing pattern over short periods of time may be difficult.117 Depending on the extent of myocardial injury, cTn values may remain above the 99th percentile URL for a longer period of time.22,23 An increased cTn value above the 99th percentile URL, with or without a dynamic change of values, or in the absence of clini-cal evidence of ischemia, should prompt a search for other diagnoses associated with myocardial injury, as shown in Table 1.
27. Electrocardiographic detection of myocardial infarction
The ECG is an integral part of the diagnostic workup of patients with suspected MI, and should be acquired and interpreted promptly (ie, target within 10 minutes) after first medical contact.47,147 Prehospital ECGs reduce the time to diagnosis and treatment, and can facilitate the triage of STEMI patients to hospitals with PCI capability if within the recommended time interval (120 minutes from STEMI diagnosis).46,148 Acute myocardial ischemia is often associated with dynamic changes in ECG waveform and serial ECG acquisition can provide critical information, particularly if the ECG at initial presentation is nondiagnostic. Recording several standard ECGs with fixed electrode positions at 15–30 minute intervals for the initial 1–2 hours, or the use of continuous computer-assisted 12-lead ECG recording (if available) to detect dynamic ECG changes, is reasonable for patients with persistent or recurrent symptoms or an initial nondiagnostic ECG.149 Serial or continuous ECG recordings may be helpful in determining reperfusion or reocclusion status. Reperfusion is usually associated with a large and prompt reduction in ST-segment elevation.
More profound ST-segment shifts or T wave inversions involving multiple leads/territories are associated with a greater degree of myocardial ischemia, and a worse prognosis. For example, ST-segment depression ≥1 mm in 6 leads, which may be associated with ST-segment elevation in leads aVR or lead V1 and hemodynamic compromise, is suggestive evidence of multivessel disease or left main disease. Pathologic Q waves increase the prognostic risk. Other ECG signs associated with acute myocardial ischemia include cardiac arrhythmias, intraventricular bundle branch blocks, atrioventricular conduction delays, and loss of precordial R wave amplitude, a less specific finding. The ECG by itself is often insufficient to diagnose acute myocardial ischemia or infarction, since ST deviation may be observed in other conditions, such as acute pericarditis, LV hypertrophy (LVH), left bundle branch block (LBBB), Brugada syndrome, TTS, and early repolarization patterns.150 A prior ECG is often helpful in distinguishing a new from a chronic finding but should not delay the decision for treatment.
Prolonged new convex ST-segment elevation, particularly when associated with reciprocal ST-segment depression, usually reflects acute coronary occlusion and results in myocardial injury with necrosis. Reciprocal changes can help to differentiate STEMI from pericarditis or early repolarization changes. As in cardiomyopathy, Q waves may also occur due to myocardial fibrosis in the absence of CAD. Some of the earlier manifestations of myocardial ischemia are typical T wave and ST-segment changes. Increased hyperacute T wave amplitude, with prominent symmetrical T waves in at least 2 contiguous leads, is an early sign that may precede the elevation of the ST-segment. In general, the development of new Q waves indicates myocardial necrosis, which starts minutes/hours after the myocardial insult. Transient Q waves may be observed during an episode of acute ischemia or (rarely) during acute MI with successful reperfusion. Table 2 lists ST-segment–T wave (ST-T) criteria suggestive of acute myocardial ischemia that may or may not lead to MI. The J-point (junction between QRS termination and ST-segment onset) is used to determine the magnitude of the ST-segment shift with the onset of the QRS serving as the reference point. In patients with a stable baseline, the TP segment (isoelectric interval) is a more accurate method to assess the magnitude of ST-segment shift, and in distinguishing pericarditis (PTa depression) from acute myocardial ischemia. Tachycardia and baseline shift are common in the acute setting and can make this determination difficult. Therefore, QRS onset is recommended as the reference point for J-point determination (Figure 8).
New, or presumed new, J-point elevation ≥1 mm (1 mm = 0.1 mV) is required in all leads other than V2 and V3 as an ischemic response. In healthy men under age 40, J-point elevation can be as much as 2.5 mm in leads V2 or V3, but it decreases with increasing age. Sex differences require different cut-off points for women, since J-point elevation in healthy women in leads V2 and V3 is less than in men.5 The criteria in Table 2 require that the ST shift be present in ≥2 contiguous leads. For example, ≥2 mm of ST-elevation in lead V2 and ≥1 mm in lead V1 would meet the criteria of 2 abnormal contiguous leads in a man ≥40 years old. However, ≥1 mm and <2 mm of ST-elevation, seen only in leads V2–V3 in men (or <1.5 mm in women), may represent a normal finding.
It should be noted that lesser degrees of ST displacement or T wave inversion than those described in Table 2 can also represent an acute myocardial ischemic response. In patients with known or high likelihood of CAD, the clinical presentation is critical to enhance the specificity of these findings.
Absence of ST-elevation in the precordial leads, tall, prominent, symmetrical T waves in the precordial leads, upsloping ST-segment depression >1 mm at the J-point in the precordial leads, and in most cases ST-segment elevation (>1 mm) in lead aVR or the symmetrical, often deep (>2 mm), T wave inversions in the anterior precordial leads are associated with significant left anterior descending artery (LAD) occlusion.151–153 ST-elevation in lead aVR >1 mm may accompany anterior or inferior STEMI, and is associated with increased 30-day mortality in patients with acute MI.154 Pulmonary embolism, intracranial processes, electrolyte abnormalities, hypothermia, or perimyocarditis may also result in ST-T abnormalities and should be considered in the differential diagnosis.
The ECG diagnosis of atrial infarction should be suspected in the context of ventricular infarction (particularly when the right ventricle is involved) if small, transient elevations and reciprocal depressions of the PR (PTa) segment are noted associated with changes in configuration of the P wave.
ST-elevation |
New ST-elevation at the J-point in 2 contiguous leads with the cut-point: ≥1 mm in all leads other than leads V2–V3 where the following cut-points apply: ≥2 mm in men ≥40 years; ≥2.5 mm in men <40 years, or ≥1.5 mm in women regardless of age.* |
ST-depression and T wave changes |
New horizontal or downsloping ST-depression ≥0.5 mm in 2 contiguous leads and/or T inversion >1 mm in 2 contiguous leads with prominent R wave or R/S ratio >1. |
*When the magnitudes of J-point elevation in leads V2 and V3 are registered from a prior electrocardiogram, new J-point elevation ≥1 mm (as compared with the earlier electrocardiogram) should be considered an ischemic response. For bundle branch block, see section below.
28. Application of supplemental electrocardiogram leads
Supplemental leads, as well as serial ECG recordings, should be deployed with a very low threshold in patients who present with ischemic chest pain and a nondiagnostic initial ECG.155,156 ECG evidence of myocardial ischemia in the distribution of a left circumflex artery is often overlooked. Isolated ST-segment depression ≥0.5 mm in leads V1–V3 may indicate left circumflex occlusion and can best be captured using posterior leads at the fifth intercostal space (V7 at the left posterior axillary line, V8 at the left midscapular line, and V9 at the left paraspinal border). Recording of these leads is strongly recommended in patients with high clinical suspicion of acute circumflex occlusion (eg, initial ECG nondiagnostic or ST-segment depression in leads V1–V3).156 A cut-off point of 0.5 mm ST elevation is recommended in leads V7–V9; specificity is increased at a cut-off point ≥1 mm ST-elevation and this cut-off point should be used in men <40 years old. ST-segment depression in leads V1–V3 may be suggestive of inferobasal myocardial ischemia (previously termed posterior infarction), especially when the terminal T wave is positive (ST-elevation equivalent); however, this is nonspecific.
In patients with inferior and suspected right ventricular infarction, leads aVR or V1 may exhibit ST-segment elevation ≥1 mm. The early recording of right precordial leads V3R and V4R should be performed, since ST-elevation ≥0.5 mm (≥1 mm in men <30 years old) provides supportive criteria for the diagnosis.157 Changes in right precordial leads may be transient, and an absence of ECG changes in leads V3R and V4R does not exclude right ventricular infarction. Myocardial imaging can be helpful in this clinical setting.
29. Electrocardiographic detection of myocardial injury
It is not possible to initially distinguish ECG manifestations of acute or chronic myocardial injury from acute myocardial ischemia. Rapidly developing dynamic ECG changes that temporally match the clinical presentation may be helpful in diagnosing a symptomatic patient with elevated cTn values as having acute myocardial ischemia resulting in MI. However, ECG abnormalities are also common in patients who have myocardial injury (eg, myocarditis or TTS).158–160
30. Prior or silent/unrecognized myocardial infarction
Q wave criteria associated with MI and an increased relative risk of death are illustrated in Table 3, and are contained in Q wave coding algorithms such as the Minnesota Code and the WHO MONItoring of trends and determinants in CArdiovascular disease (MONICA) code11,161,162
The specificity of the ECG diagnosis for MI is greatest when Q waves occur in several leads or lead groupings, or are >0.04 s. When the Q waves are associated with ST deviations or T wave changes in the same leads, the likelihood of MI is increased; for example, minor Q waves ≥0.02 s and <0.03 s that are ≥1 mm deep are suggestive of prior MI if accompanied by inverted T waves in the same lead group. Noninvasive imaging techniques also provide important supportive evidence of prior MI. In the absence of nonischemic causes, regional myocardial thinning, scar or reduced wall motion shown by echocardiography, myocardial perfusion scintigraphy (MPS) with single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) or positron emission tomography (PET), or magnetic resonance imaging provide strong evidence for prior MI, particularly when ECG criteria are equivocal.
Any Q wave in leads V2–V3 >0.02 s or QS complex in leads V2–V3. |
Q wave ≥0.03 s and ≥1 mm deep or QS complex in leads I, II, aVL, aVF or V4–V6 in any 2 leads of a contiguous lead grouping (I, aVL; V1–V6; II, III, aVF).* |
R wave >0.04 s in V1–V2 and R/S >1 with a concordant positive T wave in absence of conduction defect. |
*The same criteria are used for supplemental leads V7–V9. s indicates seconds.
Asymptomatic patients who develop new Q wave criteria for MI detected during routine ECG follow-up, or reveal evidence of MI by cardiac imaging that cannot be directly attributed to an interim coronary revascularization procedure or an ACS admission, should be termed “silent or unrecognized MI.” In studies where serial ECG analysis was applied, silent or unrecognized Q wave MI accounted for 9% to 37% of all non-fatal MI events and was associated with a signifi-cantly increased mortality risk.163,164 Improper lead placement, QRS abnormalities, or technical errors (eg, lead reversal) may result in the appearance of new Q waves or QS complexes, as compared with a prior tracing. Thus, the diagnosis of a new silent Q wave MI should be confirmed by a repeat ECG recording with correct lead placement, focused questioning about potential interim ischemic symptoms, or by an imaging study. Imaging techniques are useful if there is abnormal myocardial motion, thickening, or thinning in the region of interest, but the absence of these does not exclude MI.165
31. Conditions that confound the electrocardiographic diagnosis of myocardial infarction
A QS complex in lead V1 is normal. A Q wave <0.03 s and <0.25 of the R wave amplitude in lead III is normal if the frontal QRS axis is between −30o and 0o. A Q wave may also be normal in aVL if the frontal QRS axis is between 60o and 90o. Septal Q waves are small, nonpathological Q waves <0.03 s and <0.25 of the R-wave amplitude in leads I, aVL, aVF, and V4–V6. Pre-excitation, cardiomyopathy, TTS, cardiac amyloidosis, LBBB, left anterior hemiblock, LVH, right ventricular hypertrophy, myocarditis, acute cor pulmonale, or hyperkalemia may be associated with Q waves or QS complexes in the absence of MI. Clinicians should be aware of confounders to the ECG diagnosis of myocardial ischemia, since ST-T wave abnormalities are commonly observed with different pathological cardiac conditions, such as preexcitation, pericarditis, and cardiomyopathy.
32. Conduction disturbances and pacemakers
The diagnosis of MI is more difficult in the presence of conduction disturbances, related in part to ST-T wave changes caused by the conduction disturbance and the fact that the conduction disturbance itself may be heart-rate dependent.166,167 Comparison to a preadmission ECG may be helpful in determining if the conduction defect or ST-T wave changes are new, as long as it does not delay time to treatment. Ischemic symptoms, and presumed new LBBB or right bundle branch block (RBBB) that is not rate-related, are associated with an adverse prognosis. In patients with LBBB, ST-segment elevation ≥1 mm concordant with the QRS complex in any lead may be an indicator of acute myocardial ischemia. Similar findings can be useful in detecting ECG evidence for acute myocardial ischemia in patients with right ventricular paced rhythms.167 Recording an ECG trace with the pacemaker temporarily switched off may also be useful in patients who are not pacemaker dependent, but careful interpretation of repolarization is needed due to the possible presence of stimulation-induced changes (electrical memory). The ECG diagnosis of acute myocardial ischemia in patients with biventricular pacing is more difficult. In patients with RBBB, new or presumed new ST-segment elevation ≥1 mm, or ST-segment or T wave abnormalities (excluding leads V1–V4) (Table 2), may indicate acute myocardial ischemia. New, or presumed new, RBBB without associated ST-segment or T wave changes is associated with thrombolysis in myocardial infarction (TIMI) 0–2 flow in as many as 66% of patients (compared with >90% in those with ST-segment or T wave changes).168
33. Atrial fibrillation
In patients with atrial fibrillation and rapid ventricular rate or paroxysmal supraventricular tachycardia, ST-segment depression or T wave inversion may occur in the absence of CAD.169,170 The causes are not completely understood. Cardiac memory, an electrical remodeling phenomenon characterized by marked diffuse T wave inversions following periods of abnormal ventricular activation, which may also be caused by transient rate-related conduction disturbances or pacing, may explain these findings. In some patients, the tachycardia may result in an insufficient increase in coronary flow to match myocardial oxygen demand, resulting in cellular hypoxia and abnormal repolarization.171,172 For these reasons, a patient with new-onset atrial fibrillation, elevated baseline cTn concentration, and new ST-segment depression should not automatically be classified as type 2 MI without additional information. In this clinical setting, signs of overt ischemic symptoms, the timing of symptoms relative to atrial fibrillation onset, a changing pattern of cTn, and imaging and/or angiographic findings may be helpful in establishing the diagnosis. However, in the absence of evidence for myocardial ischemia, the etiology of the elevated cTn values should be attributed to myocardial injury.
34. Imaging techniques
Noninvasive imaging plays many roles in patients with known or suspected MI, but this section concerns only its role in the diagnosis and characterization of myocardial injury and MI. The underlying rationale is that regional myocardial hypoperfusion and ischemia lead to a cascade of events including myocardial dysfunction, cell death, and healing by fibrosis. Important imaging parameters are therefore myocardial perfusion, myocyte viability, myocardial thickness, thickening and motion, and the effects of myocyte loss on the kinetics of paramagnetic or radio-opaque contrast agents indicating myocardial fibrosis or scar.
Commonly used imaging techniques in acute and prior MI are echocardiography, MPS using SPECT or PET, CMR, and possibly computed tomography (CT).173 There is considerable overlap in their capabilities and each of the techniques can assess myocardial viability, perfusion, and function to a greater or lesser extent. Only the radionuclide techniques provide a direct assessment of myocyte viability because of the inherent properties of the tracers used. Other techniques provide indirect assessments of myocardial viability, such as the contractile response to dobutamine by echocardiography, or increased extracellular space secondary to myocyte loss by CMR or CT.
34.1. Echocardiography
The strength of echocardiography is the combined assessment of cardiac structure and function, in particular myocardial thickness, thickening/thinning, and motion. Regional wall motion abnormalities induced by ischemia can be detected by echocardiography almost immediately after onset when >20% transmural myocardial thickness is affected.174–176 These abnormalities, when new and without alternative etiology, support the diagnosis of MI when cTn values show a rising and/or falling pattern. Echocardiography also allows detection of non-coronary cardiac pathologies known to cause chest pain (eg, acute pericarditis, severe aortic stenosis, and hypertrophic cardiomyopathy among others). The technique is useful in diagnosing mechanical complications in patients with MI and hemodynamic compromise (shock), or other potentially fatal entities such as acute aortic dissection or massive pulmonary embolism where the clinical presentation might be similar to that seen with acute MI.
Intravenous echocardiographic contrast agents can improve visualization of the endocardial border, and can be used to assess myocardial perfusion and microvascular obstruction. Tissue Doppler and strain imaging permit the quantification of global and regional function.177,178 Intravascular echocardiographic contrast agents that are targeted at specific molecular processes have been developed, but these techniques have not yet been applied in the setting of MI.179
34.2. Radionuclide Imaging
Several radionuclide tracers allow viable myocytes to be imaged directly, including the SPECT tracers 201TI chloride, 99mTc sestamibi, and tetrofosmin, and the PET tracers 18F 2-fluorodeoxyglucose and 82Rb.173 A strength of the radionuclide techniques is that they are the only commonly available methods for assessing viability directly, although the relatively low resolution of the images limits them for detecting the smallest areas of MI. Phantom studies suggest that myocyte loss as little as 4% of the myocardium can be detected, corresponding to 5 to 10 g of muscle.180 ECG-gated imaging provides a reliable assessment of myocardial motion, thickening, and global function. Evolving radionuclide techniques relevant to the assessment of MI include imaging of sympathetic innervation using 123I-labeled meta-iodobenzylguanidine,181 imaging of matrix metalloproteinase activation in ventricular remodeling,182,183 and the assessment of myocardial metabolism.184
34.3. Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Imaging
The high tissue contrast and resolution of CMR provides an accurate assessment of myocardial structure and function. Although less commonly used in the acute setting, it has similar capabilities to echocardiography in suspected MI. Paramagnetic contrast agents can be used to assess myocardial perfusion and the increase in extracellular space that is associated with the fibrosis of prior MI (detected by LGE-CMR). These techniques have been used in the setting of acute MI185,186 and localized delay in contrast enhancement is able to detect even small areas of subendocardial MI, thought to be as little as 1 g.187 CMR also has the ability to identify the presence and extent of myocardial edema/inflammation, allowing the distinction of acute versus chronic myocardial injury. The patterns of LGE when reflecting ischemic and nonischemic myocardial injury are shown in Figure 9.
The gadolinium-based contrasts wash out slowly from myocardium with increased extracellular space such as fibrosis, thus enhancing areas of scarring (white arrows). The different patterns of scarring are divided into ischemic and nonischemic. Typically, an ischemic scar/fibrosis (upper panel) extends from the subendocardium to the epicardium (subendocardial, nontransmural scar versus transmural scar). Conversely, a nonischemic fibrosis/scar can be encountered at the epicardium, in the midwall, or at the insertion points of the right ventricle (lower panel).
34.4. Computed Tomographic Coronary Angiography
Infarcted myocardium is initially visible as a focal area of decreased LV myocardial enhancement, but later imaging shows hyperenhancement as with LGE-CMR.188 This finding is clinically relevant because contrast-enhanced CT may be performed for suspected pulmonary embolism and aortic dissection, conditions with clinical features that overlap with those of acute MI, but the technique is not used routinely. Similarly, CT assessment of myocardial perfusion is technically feasible but not widely applied.189 CT coronary angiography (CTCA) may be used to diagnose CAD in patients with an ACS in the emergency department or chest pain unit, particularly in low- to intermediate-risk patients with normal cTn at presentation.189–193 The only randomized trial in these patients that included both hs-cTn and CTCA found that imaging did not reduce the length of stay in hospital, but it did decrease subsequent outpatient testing and costs.189 A diagnosis of MI cannot be established based on a CTCA scan alone.
35. Applying imaging in acute myocardial infarction
Imaging techniques can be useful in the diagnosis of acute MI because of the ability to detect wall motion abnormalities or loss of viable myocardium in the presence of elevated cardiac biomarker values. Demonstration of new loss of myocardial viability in the absence of nonischemic causes supports the diagnosis of MI. Normal function practically excludes significant MI, but a small MI cannot be ruled out.194 Thus, imaging techniques are useful for early triage and discharge of patients with suspected MI. However, if biomarkers have been measured at appropriate times and are normal, this excludes acute MI and takes precedence over the imaging criteria.
Abnormal regional myocardial motion and thickening may be caused by acute MI, or by ≥1 of several other conditions including prior infarction, acute ischemia, stunning, or hibernation. Nonischemic conditions such as cardiomyopathy, and inflammatory or infiltrative diseases, can also lead to regional loss of viable myocardium or functional abnormality. Therefore, the positive predictive value of imaging for acute MI is not high unless these conditions can be excluded, and unless a new abnormality is detected or can be presumed to have arisen in the setting of other features of acute MI.
In the setting of acute MI, CMR can also be used to assess the presence and extent of myocardium at risk (myocardial edema), myocardial salvage, microvascular obstruction, intramyocardial hemorrhage, and infarct size, all markers of myocardial injury that have prognostic value.190 In patients with possible acute MI but unobstructed coronary arteries, CMR can help to diagnose alternative conditions such as myocarditis, TTS, embolic infarction, or MI with spontaneous recanalization.189
36. Applying imaging in late presentation of myocardial infarction
In the case of late presentation after suspected MI, the presence of a regional abnormality of myocardial motion, thickening, thinning, or scar in the absence of a nonischemic cause provides supportive evidence of past MI. The resolution and specificity of CMR for the detection of myocardial scarring has made this a valuable technique. In particular, the ability to distinguish between subendocardial and other patterns of scars helps to differentiate between ischemic heart disease and other myocardial pathologies. Imaging techniques are also useful for risk stratification after a definitive diagnosis of MI.
37. Regulatory perspective on myocardial infarction in clinical trials
In drug and device development programs, MI may be an entry criterion or be used as an efficacy end point, commonly as a component of the primary end point, as well as a safety end point of interest in drug development programs.195,196 A universal definition of MI is of great benefit for clinical studies, since it will allow a standardized approach for meaningful interpretation and comparison across different trials, or the pooling of results for the detection of safety signals. For the harmonization of the MI definition it is important to standardize the reporting of MI events by clinical events committees. This would allow a more optimal comparison of MI rates among drug and device trials.
One cannot presume that values from 1 cTn assay are equivalent to those of another. These differences are amplified when multiples of the values are used. This could affect results, especially in trials that compare strategies such as PCI and CABG. The use of a single assay and/or a central core laboratory within a trial could help to decrease this variability, and might be particularly relevant in decreasing variability in trials of a drug or intervention in which cTn concentration is a principal safety end point. However, the uniform use of a single assay is generally not feasible in trials with follow-up postdischarge, since recurrent ischemic events may occur in different hospitals using different cTn assays. In clinical trials, a standardized approach to establish the 99th percentile URL for a particular assay should be established. One approach in large multicenter trials is to use the manufacturer’s recommended 99th percentile URL for a particular assay to reduce site-to-site variability in the selection of the MI decision cut-off point.
Multiples for hs-cTn versus conventional cTn could have markedly different prognostic implications. The assay types should be reported when possible. Multiples of the 99th percentile URL should be indicated and reported, both for those with cardiac procedural myocardial injury and those diagnosed with types 4a and 5 MI. Cumulative frequency distribution of peak cTn measurements for MI end point assessments by treatment group should also be provided. This will facilitate the comparison of trials and meta-analyses.
38. Silent/unrecognized myocardial infarction in epidemiological studies and quality PROGRAMS
ECG monitoring for unrecognized or silent Q wave MI is usually acquired annually in epidemiological studies and clinical trials that assess cardiovascular end points. These events are associated with adverse outcomes.197 There is no firm consensus on how frequently to monitor for ECG evidence of silent Q wave MI or whether surveillance for silent MI events should be routinely implemented. Serial monitoring of patients who have had a symptomatic Q wave MI event revealed Q wave regression in a substantial number of patients.198 An annual ECG is reasonable in clinical trials to monitor for silent Q wave MI events if the study population is expected to have an accelerated rate of atherosclerotic events. The review should consider the baseline tracing, interim event ECG tracings, and protocol-mandated annual tracings, along with the review of imaging studies if available.
39. Individual and public implications of the myocardial infarction definition
Revision of the definition of MI has a number of implications for individuals, health professionals, and society at large. A tentative or final diagnosis is the basis for advice about further diagnostic testing, lifestyle changes, treatment, and prognosis for the patient. The aggregate of patients with a particular diagnosis is the basis for healthcare planning, and policy and resource allocation.
One of the goals of good clinical practice is to reach a definitive and specific diagnosis, which is supported by current scientific knowledge. The approach to the definition of myocardial injury and MI outlined in this document meets this goal. In general, the conceptual meaning of the term myocardial infarction has not changed, although new sensitive methods have been developed to diagnose this entity. Thus, the diagnosis of an acute MI is a clinical diagnosis based on patient symptoms, ECG changes, and highly sensitive biochemical markers, as well as information gleaned from various imaging techniques.
It should be appreciated that the universal definition of MI may be associated with consequences for patients and their families with respect to psychological status, life and health insurance, and professional career, as well as driving and pilot licenses. The diagnosis is also associated with societal implications with regards to diagnosis-related coding, hospital reimbursement, public health statistics, sick leave, and disability attestation. In order to meet these challenges, physicians must be adequately informed of the diagnostic criteria. Hence, educational materials will need to be created and treatment guidelines must be appropriately adapted.
40. Global perspectives of the definition of myocardial infarction
Cardiovascular disease is a global health problem and prevalence is increasing in the developing world. Understanding the burden and effects of CAD in populations is of critical importance. Changing clinical definitions, criteria, and biomarkers add challenges to our understanding and ability to improve the health of the public. For clinicians, the definition of MI has important and immediate therapeutic implications. For epidemiologists, the data are often retrospective, so consistent case definitions are critical for comparisons and trend analysis. The standards described in this report are suitable for epidemiology studies and for international classification of diseases.199 However, to analyze trends over time, it is important to have consistent definitions and to quantify adjustments when biomarkers or other diagnostic methods change,200 considering that the advent of cTn has dramatically increased the number of diagnosable MIs for epidemiologists.11,201
In countries with limited economic resources, cardiac biomarkers and imaging techniques may not be available except in a few centers and even the option of ECG recordings may be lacking. The WHO recommends the use of the ESC/ACC/AHA/WHF Universal Definition of MI in countries without resource constraints, but recommends more flexible standards in resource-constrained locations. Thus, when the only information available is the clinical history and ECG, and when data on cardiac biomarkers are not available or incomplete, the diagnosis of MI can be confirmed by the development of pathological Q waves.11
41. Using the Universal Definition of Myocardial Infarction in the healthcare system
Arriving at a diagnosis of MI using the criteria set forth in this document requires the integration of clinical findings, patterns on the ECG, laboratory data, observations from imaging procedures, and on occasion pathological findings, all viewed in the context of the time horizon over which the suspected event unfolds. Contemporary healthcare systems are increasingly using electronic medical records where medical information is entered, curated, and available for retrieval at a later date. This evolution offers the advantages of a modern electronic database that is useful for a variety of purposes, including scientific discovery and quality improvement in clinical care, but carries with it the challenges of sifting through variable locations and formats where key data elements for confirming a diagnosis of MI are located. Also, use of the electronic medical record as an epidemiological and research tool of the future is likely to require efforts to verify the accuracy of an acute MI diagnosis, rather than accepting the coded diagnoses used for administrative and billing purposes. Such an effort to create a computable phenotype of MI (further categorized as types 1–5 MI) will require input from informaticians and experts in implementation science to translate the recommendations from this Universal Definition of MI into the routine practice of healthcare delivery and documentation.
Given the evolution of biomarker assays used to support the diagnosis of MI, it is important that a consistent approach be used in the construction of the computable phenotype of MI so as to reliably make comparisons across institutions and track epidemiological trends. Ideally, the information provided should include the assay used to make the diagnosis of MI, the 99th percentile of the URL, and the full sequence of values obtained to discern a rise and fall in biomarker levels.196
Acknowledgment
We are indebted to Karen A. Hicks for valuable advice.
Document Reviewers
David Hasdai (CPG Review Coordinator) (Israel), Victor Aboyans (France), Stephan Achenbach (Germany), Stefan Agewall (Norway), Thomas Alexander (India), Alvaro Avezum (Brazil), Emanuele Barbato (Italy), Jean-Pierre Bassand (France), Eric Bates (USA), John A. Bittl (USA), Güenter Breithardt (Germany), Héctor Bueno (Spain), Raffaele Bugiardini (Italy), Mauricio G. Cohen (USA), George Dangas (USA), James A. de Lemos (USA), Victoria Delgado (Netherlands), Gerasimos Filippatos (Greece), Edward Fry (USA), Christopher B. Granger (USA), Sigrun Halvorsen (Norway), Mark A. Hlatky (USA), Borja Ibanez (Spain), Stefan James (Sweden), Adnan Kastrati (Germany), Christophe Leclercq (France), Kenneth W. Mahaffey (USA), Laxmi Mehta (USA), Christian Müller (Switzerland), Carlo Patrono (Italy), Massimo Francesco Piepoli (Italy), Daniel Piñeiro (Argentina), Marco Roffi (Switzerland), Andrea Rubboli (Italy), Marc Ruel (Canada), Samin Sharma (USA), Iain A. Simpson (UK), Michael Tendera (Poland), Marco Valgimigli (Switzerland), Allard C. van der Wal (Netherlands), Stephan Windecker (Switzerland).
Appendix
Approved by the ESC Committee for Practice Guidelines (CPG) on behalf of the ESC Board 2016–2018.
ESC National Cardiac Societies actively involved in the review process of the Fourth Universal Definition of Myocardial Infarction:
Algeria: Algerian Society of Cardiology, Mohamed Chettibi; Armenia: Armenian Cardiologists Association, Hamlet Hayrapetyan; Austria: Austrian Society of Cardiology, Franz Xaver Roithinger; Azerbaijan: Azerbaijan Society of Cardiology, Farid Aliyev; Belarus: Belorussian Scientific Society of Cardiologists, Volha Sujayeva; Belgium: Belgian Society of Cardiology, Marc J. Claeys; Bosnia and Herzegovina: Association of Cardiologists of Bosnia and Herzegovina, Elnur Smajić; Czech Republic: Czech Society of Cardiology, Petr Kala; Denmark: Danish Society of Cardiology, Kasper Karmak Iversen; Egypt: Egyptian Society of Cardiology, Ehab El Hefny; Estonia: Estonian Society of Cardiology, Toomas Marandi; Finland: Finnish Cardiac Society, Pekka Porela; The Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia: Macedonian FYR Society of Cardiology, Slobodan Antov; France: French Society of Cardiology, Martine Gilard; Germany: German Cardiac Society, Stefan Blankenberg; Greece: Hellenic Society of Cardiology, Periklis Davlouros; Iceland: Icelandic Society of Cardiology, Thorarinn Gudnason; Israel: Israel Heart Society, Ronny Alcalai; Italy: Italian Federation of Cardiology, Furio Colivicchi; Kosovo: Kosovo Society of Cardiology, Shpend Elezi; Kyrgyzstan: Kyrgyz Society of Cardiology, Gulmira Baitova, Latvia: Latvian Society of Cardiology, Ilja Zakke; Lithuania: Lithuanian Society of Cardiology, Olivija Gustiene; Luxembourg: Luxembourg Society of Cardiology, Jean Beissel; Malta: Maltese Cardiac Society, Philip Dingli; Moldova: Moldavian Society of Cardiology, Aurel Grosu; The Netherlands: Netherlands Society of Cardiology, Peter Damman; Norway: Norwegian Society of Cardiology, Vibeke Juliebø; Poland: Polish Cardiac Society, Jacek Legutko; Portugal: Portuguese Society of Cardiology, Joäo Morais; Romania: Romanian Society of Cardiology, Gabriel Tatu-Chitoiu; Russian Federation: Russian Society of Cardiology, Alexey Yakovlev; San Marino: San Marino Society of Cardiology, Marco Zavatta; Serbia: Cardiology Society of Serbia, Milan Nedeljkovic; Slovenia: Slovenian Society of Cardiology, Peter Radsel; Spain: Spanish Society of Cardiology, Alessandro Sionis; Sweden: Swedish Society of Cardiology, Tomas Jemberg; Switzerland: Swiss Society of Cardiology, Christian Müller; Tunisia: Tunisian Society of Cardiology and Cardio-Vascular Surgery, Leila Abid; Turkey: Turkish Society of Cardiology, Adnan Abaci; Ukraine: Ukrainian Association of Cardiology, Alexandr Parkhomenko; United Kingdom: British Cardiovascular Society, Simon Corbett.
Approved by the ACC Clinical Policy Approval Committee.
Approved by the AHA Science Advisory and Coordinating Committee.
Approved by the WHF Board.
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© 2018 The European Society of Cardiology, American College of Cardiology Foundation, American Heart Association, Inc., and the World Heart Federation.
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Published online: 24 August 2018
Published in print: 13 November 2018
Keywords
- AHA Scientific Statements
- myocardial infarction
- Type 1 MI
- Type 2 MI
- Type 3 MI
- Type 4a MI
- Type 4b MI
- Type 4c MI
- Type 5 MI
- cardiac troponin
- high sensitivity cardiac troponin
- myocardial injury
- prior myocardial infarction
- silent myocardial infarction
- recurrent myocardial infarction
- reinfarction
- cardiac procedural myocardial injury
- Takotsubo syndrome
- myocardial infarction with nonobstructive coronary arteries (MINOCA)
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