• Int. J. Cardiol. · May 2007

    Pregnancy associated plasma protein-A and risk stratification of patients presenting with chest pain in the emergency department.

    • Ahmad A Elesber, Amir Lerman, Ali E Denktas, Zachary T Resch, T Jared Bunch, Robert S Schwartz, and Cheryl A Conover.
    • Division of Cardiovascular Diseases, Department of Internal Medicine, Mayo Clinic and Mayo Foundation, Rochester, MN 55905, USA.
    • Int. J. Cardiol. 2007 May 2; 117 (3): 365-9.

    BackgroundThe aim of this study was to evaluate the clinical utility of serum pregnancy associated plasma protein-A (PAPP-A) levels in assisting triage of an intermediate to high-risk patient presenting with chest pain in the Emergency Department and no definite evidence of an acute coronary syndrome.MethodsSerum levels of PAPP-A were measured in 59 patients presenting with chest pain to the Emergency Department. The patients were independently grouped according to the presence of acute coronary syndromes or the absence thereof.ResultsIn a multivariate model that corrected for age, sex, type of chest pain, number of risk factors, history of coronary artery disease, troponin levels, and non-specific ECG changes, PAPP-A levels were still predictive of a final diagnosis of acute coronary syndrome in patients presenting with chest pain to the Emergency Department (Odds Ratio, 2.093; 95th confidence intervals, 1.037-4.224; p=0.039).ConclusionsElevated serum PAPP-A levels were predictive of a diagnosis of acute coronary syndrome in intermediate- to high-risk patients presenting to the Emergency Department with chest pain and no definite evidence of an acute coronary syndrome. Thus, serum PAPP-A may be valuable as an adjunct, minimally invasive marker to improve risk stratification in chest pain patients.

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