Systematic hand-held echocardiography in patients hospitalized with acute coronary syndrome

Jolien Geers, Amy Balfour, Patrycja Molek, Peter Barron, Simona Botezatu, Shruti S Joshi, Audrey White, Mikolaj Buchwald, Russell Everett, Joanne McCarley, David Cusack, Alan G Japp, Patrick H Gibson, Chris C E Lang, Colin Stirrat, Neil R Grubb, Rong Bing, Nick L Cruden, Martin A Denvir, Hatem Soliman AboumarieBernard Cosyns, David E Newby, Marc R Dweck

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract / Description of output

Aims: Transthoracic echocardiography is recommended in all patients with acute coronary syndrome but is time-consuming and lacks an evidence base. We aimed to assess the feasibility, diagnostic accuracy and time-efficiency of hand-held echocardiography in patients with acute coronary syndrome and describe the impact of echocardiography on clinical management in this setting.

Methods and results: Patients with acute coronary syndrome underwent both hand-held and transthoracic echocardiography with agreement between key imaging parameters assessed using kappa statistics. The immediate clinical impact of hand-held echocardiography in this population was systematically evaluated.Overall, 262 patients (65±12 years, 71% male) participated. Agreement between hand-held and transthoracic echocardiography was good-to-excellent (kappa 0.60-1.00) with hand-held echocardiography having an overall negative predictive value of 95%. Hand-held echocardiography was performed rapidly (7.7±1.6 min) and completed a median of 5 [interquartile range 3-20] hours earlier than transthoracic echocardiography. Systematic hand-held echocardiography in all patients with acute coronary syndrome identified an important cardiac abnormality in 50% and the clinical management plan was changed by echocardiography in 42%. In 85% of cases, hand-held echocardiography was sufficient for patient decision-making and transthoracic echocardiography was no longer deemed necessary.

Conclusions: In patients with acute coronary syndrome, hand-held echocardiography provides comparable results to transthoracic echocardiography, can be more rapidly applied and gives sufficient imaging information for decision-making in the vast majority of patients. Systematic echocardiography has clinical impact in half of patients, supporting the clinical utility of echocardiography in this population, and providing an evidence-base for current guidelines.

Keywords: acute coronary syndrome; clinical impact; diagnostic accuracy; hand-held echocardiography.
Original languageEnglish
JournalEuropean Heart Journal - Cardiovascular Imaging
Early online date11 Jun 2024
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 11 Jun 2024

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