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Prognosis of undiagnosed chest pain: linked electronic health record cohort study

Jordan, Kelvin P; Timmis, Adam; Croft, Peter; van der Windt, Danielle A; Denaxas, Spiros; González-Izquierdo, Arturo; Hayward, Richard A; Perel, Pablo; Hemingway, Harry

Prognosis of undiagnosed chest pain: linked electronic health record cohort study Thumbnail


Authors

Adam Timmis

Peter Croft

Spiros Denaxas

Arturo González-Izquierdo

Richard A Hayward

Pablo Perel

Harry Hemingway



Abstract

Objective To ascertain long term cardiovascular outcomes in patients whose chest pain remained undiagnosed six months after first presentation.Design Cohort study.Setting UK electronic health record database (CALIBER) linking primary care, secondary care, coronary registry, and death registry information.Participants 172?180 adults aged =18 from 223 general practices presenting with a first episode of recorded chest pain, classified from medical records as diagnosed (non-coronary condition or angina) or undiagnosed (cause unattributed) at first consultation between 2002 and 2009 and with no previous record of cardiovascular disease.Main outcome measures Fatal or non-fatal cardiovascular events over 5.5 years' follow-up. Adjustments were made for age, sex, deprivation, body mass index, smoking status, year of index presentation, and previous records of diabetes or hypertension or previous prescriptions for lipid lowering drugs.Results At the index presentation, 72.4% of patients (124?688) did not have a cause attributed for their chest pain; 118?687 (95.2%) of these did not receive any type of cardiovascular diagnosis over the next six months. Only a minority of patients in all three groups (non-coronary 2.0% (769 of 39?232); unattributed 11.7% (14?582 of 124?688); angina 31.5% (2606 of 8260)) had a recorded cardiac diagnostic investigation in the first six months after presentation. The long term incidence of cardiovascular events was higher in those whose chest pain remained unattributed after six months (5126 of 109?628; 4.7%) compared with patients with an initial diagnosis of non-coronary pain (1073 of 36?097; 3.0%) (adjusted hazard ratios for 0.5-1 year after presentation: 1.95, 95% confidence interval 1.66 to 2.31; for 1-3 years: 1.35, 1.23 to 1.48); for 3-5.5 years: 1.21, 1.08 to 1.37). Owing to the larger number of patients in the unattributed group, there were more excess myocardial infarctions in the long term in this group (214 more than expected based on the rate in the non-coronary group) than in the angina group (132 more than expected). Patients who had cardiac diagnostic investigations in the first six months had a higher long term risk of cardiovascular events, regardless of the initial chest pain label. Incidence of unattributed chest pain and angina decreased between 2002 (124 per 10?000 person years and 13 per 10?000 person years, respectively) and 2009 (107 per 10?000 person years and 5 per 10?000 person years, respectively), but the incidence of chest pain attributed to a non-coronary cause remained stable (37-40 per 10?000 person years). Risk of cardiovascular events did not change over time.Conclusions Most patients with first onset chest pain do not have a diagnosis recorded at presentation or in the subsequent six months, including those who undergo cardiac investigations. These patients have an increased risk of cardiovascular events for at least five years. Efforts to better assess and reduce the cardiovascular risk of such patients are warranted.

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Feb 21, 2017
Online Publication Date Apr 3, 2017
Publication Date Apr 3, 2017
Journal BMJ
Print ISSN 0959-8138
Publisher BMJ Publishing Group
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 357
Article Number j1194
DOI https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.j1194
Keywords adolescent, adult, aged, angina pectoris, cardiovascular diseases, chest pain, cohort studies, electronic health records, female, follow-up studies, humans, incidence, Kaplan-Meier estimate, male, medical record linkage, middle aged, myocardial infarction
Publisher URL http://dx.doi.org/10.1136\/bmj.j1194
PMID 28373173