-
Observational Study
High-sensitivity cardiac troponin T in young, healthy adults undergoing non-cardiac surgery.
- A Duma, C Wagner, M Titz, M Maleczek, M Hüpfl, V B Weihs, E Samaha, H Herkner, T Szekeres, M Mittlboeck, M G Scott, A S Jaffe, and P Nagele.
- Department of Anesthesiology and Intensive Care, Medical University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria.
- Br J Anaesth. 2018 Feb 1; 120 (2): 291-298.
BackgroundIt is unclear if isolated postoperative cardiac-troponin elevation, often referred to as myocardial injury, represents a pathological event, as control studies in otherwise healthy adults are lacking.MethodsIn this single-centre prospective observational cohort study, serial high-sensitivity cardiac troponin T (hscTnT) plasma concentrations were obtained from young, healthy adults undergoing elective orthopaedic surgery at three time points: before operation, 2-6 h, and 18-30 h after surgery. End points were hscTnT increases after surgery: ≥20% (exceeding analytical variability), ≥50% (exceeding short-term biological variability), and ≥85% (exceeding long-term biological variability). The secondary end point was myocardial injury, defined as new postoperative hscTnT elevation >99th % upper reference limit (URL) (women >10 ng litre-1; men >15 ng litre-1).ResultsAmongst the study population (n=95), no hscTnT increase ≥20% was detected in 68 patients (73%). A hscTnT increase between 20% and 49% was observed in 17 patients (18%), 50-84% in seven patients (7%), and ≥85% in three patients (3%). Twenty patients (21%) had an absolute ΔhscTnT between 0 and 2 ng litre-1, 12 patients (13%) between 2 and 4 ng litre-1, three patients between 4 and 6 ng litre-1, and one patient (1%) between 6 and 8 ng litre-1. Myocardial injury (new hscTnT elevation >99th%) was diagnosed in one patient (1%). The median hscTnT concentrations did not increase after operation, and were 4 (3.9-5, inter-quartile range) ng litre-1 at baseline, 4 (3.9-5) ng litre-1 at 2-6 h after surgery, and 4 (3.9-5) ng litre-1 on postoperative day 1.ConclusionsOne in four young adult patients without known cardiovascular disease developed a postoperative hscTnT increase, but without exceeding the 99th% URL and without evidence of myocardial ischaemia. These results may have important ramifications for the concept of postoperative myocardial injury, as they suggest that, in some patients, postoperative cardiac-troponin increases may be the result of a normal physiological process in the surgical setting.Clinical Trial RegistrationNCT 02394288.Copyright © 2017 British Journal of Anaesthesia. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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