2021 AHA/ACC Chest Pain Guideline Perspectives
Chest pain is one of the most common reasons that people seek medical care. This guideline was developed for the evaluation of acute or stable chest pain in outpatient and emergency department settings, emphasizing the diagnosis of chest pain with an ischemic etiology. The following are key guideline perspectives:
- Acute chest pain refers to symptoms of new onset or change from previous in pattern, intensity, or duration; stable chest pain refers to symptoms that are chronic and associated with consistent precipitants. Although the term ‘chest pain’ is used in clinical practice, patients often report pressure, tightness, squeezing, heaviness, or burning in locations in addition to the chest, including the shoulder, arm, neck, upper abdomen, or jaw. Chest pain should be described as cardiac, possibly cardiac, or noncardiac rather than as typical or atypical.
- Chest pain is the most common symptom among both men and women diagnosed with acute coronary syndrome (ACS). However, women more commonly have accompanying symptoms including nausea, palpitations, and shortness of breath.
- Efforts should be made to expedite the evaluation of patients with acute chest pain, including patient education to call 9-1-1 for emergency medical services transportation to the nearest emergency department.
- Electrocardiography (ECG) is important in the evaluation of both acute and stable chest pain to assess for evidence of ACS.
- Owing to high sensitivity and specificity for myocardial tissue, serial assessment of cardiac troponin (cTn) I or T is the preferred biomarker for the assessment of myocardial injury among patients with acute chest pain; high-sensitivity cTn is preferred because it allows rapid detection of myocardial injury and has increased diagnostic accuracy.
- Among patients with acute or with stable chest pain, the use of diagnostic testing should be based on a structured assessment of cardiac risk and targeted to patients most likely to benefit. Clinical decision pathways (CDPs) should be used routinely in the emergency department and in outpatient settings.
- Clinically stable patients evaluated for chest pain should be included in clinical decision making, weighing information about costs, risks of adverse events, radiation exposure, and alternative options.
- CDPs for patients with acute chest pain:
- Among patients with acute chest pain and low cardiovascular risk (30-day risk of death or major adverse cardiac events [MACE] Nonischemic cardiac causes of acute chest pain include acute aortic syndrome (evaluable with CTA), acute pulmonary embolus (PE; evaluable with PE-protocol CTA), myopericarditis (evaluable with CMR), and valve disease (evaluable with echocardiography).
- CDPs for patients with stable chest pain:
- Among patients with stable chest pain and no known CAD, patients at low probability of obstructive CAD and a favorable prognosis can be identified using a pretest probability model that incorporates age, sex, and presenting symptoms; among these patients, additional diagnostic testing can be deferred. Coronary artery calcium testing can be used as a first-line test to exclude calcific plaque.
- Among patients at intermediate-high risk with stable chest pain and no known CAD, CCTA is useful for the diagnosis of CAD and for risk stratification; and stress imaging (echocardiography, MPI, or CMR) is useful for the diagnosis of ischemia and for estimating the risk of MACE.
- Among patients with known obstructive CAD and stable chest pain despite guideline-directed medical therapy (GDMT), stress imaging (MPI, CMR, or echocardiography) is recommended for the diagnosis of ischemia and assessment of risk. Patients at high risk or those with moderate-severe ischemia should undergo ICA.
- Among patients with known nonobstructive CAD and stable chest pain despite GDMT, CCTA or stress testing is reasonable.
- Among patients with documented nonobstructive CAD, persistent stable symptoms, and imaging-documented myocardial ischemia, it is reasonable to assess for microvascular dysfunction and enhance risk stratification using invasive coronary function testing, stress positron emission tomography with assessment of myocardial blood flow reserve (MBFR), or stress CMR with assessment of MBFR.
- Layered testing (when one test is followed by more tests) leads to higher costs; cost-value considerations suggest that the clinician should select the test most likely to answer the clinical question.
Keywords: Acute Coronary Syndrome, Angina, Stable, Biomarkers, Cardiac Imaging Techniques, Chest Pain, Computed Tomography Angiography, Coronary Angiography, Coronary Artery Disease, Diagnostic Imaging, Diagnostic Techniques, Cardiovascular, Echocardiography, Stress, Electrocardiography, Embolism, Emergency Medical Services, Exercise Test, Hemodynamics, Ischemia, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Multidetector Computed Tomography, Myocardial Perfusion Imaging, Positron-Emission Tomography, Radiation Exposure, Risk Assessment, Troponin, Vascular Calcification, Women
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