Compared to classic STEMI criteria (ETA 8.0 min), ECG-to-activation time was significantly longer for STEMI-equivalents (32.0 min, p=0.0026) and subtle occlusions (89.0 min, p=0.045).
Observational (n=177)
Blinded assessors
Yes
Does ECG presentation affect ECG-to-activation time in emergency department patients with acute coronary occlusion?
ECG-to-activation time is significantly delayed in acute coronary occlusions presenting without classic STEMI criteria, suggesting it can serve as a quality metric to improve emergency physician ECG interpretation.
BACKGROUND: There is no quality metric for emergency physicians' diagnostic time for acute coronary occlusion. OBJECTIVE: We sought to quantify diagnostic time associated with automated interpretation, classic ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) criteria, STEMI-equivalents, and subtle occlusions, using electrocardiogram (ECG)-to-activation of catheterization laboratory time. METHODS: This multicenter retrospective study reviewed all code STEMI patients from the emergency department (ED) with confirmed culprit lesions from January 2016 to December 2018. We measured door-to-ECG (DTE) time and ECG-to-activation (ETA) time. We examined the first ED ECGs to determine whether automated interpretation labeled "STEMI," and they met classic STEMI criteria, STEMI-equivalents, or rules for subtle occlusion. ECG analysis was performed by two emergency physicians blinded to clinical scenario, automated interpretation, and angiographic outcome. RESULTS: There were 177 code STEMIs with culprit lesions, with a median DTE time of 9.0 min and a median ETA time of 16.0 min. Automated interpretation labeled 55.4% of first ECGs "STEMI" (ETA 6.5 min) and 44.6% not "STEMI" (ETA 66 min, p < 0.0001). Of first ECGs, 63.8% met classic STEMI criteria (ETA 8.0 min), 8.5% had STEMI-equivalents (ETA 32.0 min, p = 0.0026), 16.4% had subtle occlusions (ETA 89.0 min, p = 0.045), and 11.3% had no diagnostic sign of occlusion (ETA 68.0 min, p = 0.20). CONCLUSIONS: STEMI criteria missed more than one-third of occlusions on first ECG, but most had STEMI-equivalents or rules for subtle occlusion. ETA time can serve as a quality metric for emergency physicians to promote new ECG insights and assess quality improvement initiatives.
McLaren et al. (Tue,) conducted a observational in Acute coronary occlusion (n=177). Non-classic STEMI ECG presentations (STEMI-equivalents and subtle occlusions) vs. Classic STEMI criteria was evaluated on ECG-to-activation (ETA) time. Compared to classic STEMI criteria (ETA 8.0 min), ECG-to-activation time was significantly longer for STEMI-equivalents (32.0 min, p=0.0026) and subtle occlusions (89.0 min, p=0.045).
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