Point-of-care heart-type fatty acid binding protein versus high-sensitivity troponin T testing in emergency patients at high risk for acute coronary syndrome
European Heart Journal - Acute CardioVascular Care

Abstract
High-sensitivity cardiac troponin testing is used to detect myocardial damage in patients with acute chest pain. Heart-type fatty acid binding protein (H-FABP) may be an alternative, available as point-of-care test.
Patients (
Maximal hs-TnT levels above the 99th percentile were observed in 152 patients (75%) with 127 (63%) fulfilling criteria for myocardial infarction. Upon admission, hs-TnT and H-FABP were associated with an area under the curve (95% CI) of 0.83 (0.77–0.89) and 0.79 (0.73–0.85), respectively, to predict myocardial infarction, which increased to 0.93 (0.90–0.97) and 0.88 (0.84–0.93), respectively, after 6h. The diagnostic accuracy for non-ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction was somewhat lower with an area under the curve (95% CI) of 0.80 (0.72–0.87), 0.90 (0.84–0.96), 0.73 (0.64–0.81) and 0.77 (0.67–0.86), respectively. When assessment was performed within 3h of chest pain onset, diagnostic accuracy of H-FABP versus hs-TnT was similar. Each standard deviation increase in admission H-FABP was associated with a 68% relative risk increase of all-cause mortality (
Point-of-care H-FABP testing has lower diagnostic accuracy compared with hs-TnT assessment in patients with high pre-test acute coronary syndrome probability, but might be of interest when assessment is possible early after chest pain onset.
Contributors

Joseph Dens
Author

Mathias Vrolix
Author

Pieter Vandervoort
Author

Sebastiaan Kellens
Author

Frederik H Verbrugge
Author

Maxime Vanmechelen
Author

Lars Grieten
Author

Johan Van Lierde
Author

