Daily Mail

Heart attack test gets result in 18 minutes

- By Ben Spencer Medical Correspond­ent

A BREAKTHROU­GH blood test could diagnose a heart attack within 18 minutes of a patient’s arrival in A&E.

The test – which takes between 12 and 18 minutes to provide a result – could speed up treatment for heart attacks and reassure those who are not seriously ill.

Some 188,000 patients have heart attacks in Britain each year. But six times as many – more than a million a year – arrive at NHS hospitals complainin­g of chest pains, the majority of which are not serious. British experts have now developed a test which could mean most of these patients are sent home immediatel­y.

Doctors currently have to wait at least three hours after the onset of symptoms before they can diagnose a heart attack.

And they often have to repeat tests over at least six hours before an attack can be ruled out and a patient discharged.

The heart attack blood test currently used by the NHS, called a troponin test, is not definitive for 47 per cent of patients, meaning many have to stay in hospital overnight for monitoring.

The new test, developed at King’s College London, is quicker, more sensitive and better at detecting damage.

It looks for a protein called cardiac myosin-binding protein C, and can be used within 30 to 60 minutes of a heart attack.

King’s College London cardiologi­st Dr Tom Kaier said: ‘We can essentiall­y measure it at the front door and tell patients whether they have had a heart attack or not.

‘Out of all patients presenting with chest pains only 14 to 17 per cent have had a heart attack.’ The current test can only be used three hours after the onset of chest pain, because troponin takes quite a long time to appear in circulatio­n in the bloodstrea­m.

Dr Kaier added: ‘ We don’t have to wait for three hours and we can make a decision earlier about whether that patient needs to stay.’

The experts – whose work is published in the journal Clinical Chemistry – trialled the new test on 2,000 patients, with the results due to be released later this year. They are already in discussion­s with technology firms to make it widely available and say it could be in use in the next six months to a year.

Professor Sir Nilesh Samani of the British Heart Foundation, which part-funded the research, said: ‘ The main challenge for doctors is identifyin­g who is having a heart attack, so people can be treated effectivel­y. This new approach could ensure thousands of patients get life-saving treatment more quickly while reducing the burden on the NHS.’

‘Reduces burden on the NHS’

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