Efficacy Evaluation of the HEART Pathway in Emergency Department Patients With Acute Chest Pain (HEART Pathway)
Acute Coronary Syndrome, Chest Pain
About this trial
This is an interventional treatment trial for Acute Coronary Syndrome focused on measuring Acute Coronary Syndrome, Chest pain, Risk Stratification, HEART Pathway, Emergency Department
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- Age greater than or equal to 21 years
- Chest discomfort or other symptoms consistent with possible ACS
- The treating physician feels the patient could be discharged home if cardiac disease was excluded
Exclusion Criteria:
- New ST-segment elevation in contiguous leads on any electrocardiogram (>/= 1 mV)
- Unstable vitals signs: symptomatic hypotension at the time of enrollment (systolic < 90 mm Hg), tachycardia (HR>120), bradycardia (HR<40), and hypoxemia (<90% pulse-oximetry on room air or normal home oxygen flow rate)
- Terminal diagnosis with life expectancy less than 1 year
- A non-cardiac medical, surgical, or psychiatric illness determined by the provider to require admission, increase risk of objective cardiac testing, or prevent immediate discharge following negative testing.
- Prior enrollment
- Incapacity or unwillingness to provide consent and comply with study procedures
- Non-English speaking
Sub-study I & II
Inclusion Criteria:
- ED attending physicians
Exclusion Criteria:
- ED attending physicians who decline to participate
Sites / Locations
- Wake Forest Wake Forest University Baptist Medical Center - Emergency Department
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Experimental
No Intervention
HEART Pathway
Usual Care
The HEART Pathway will be used for real time clinical decision making. Physicians will receive care recommendations according to the HEART Pathway, based on HEART score and serial cardiac biomarkers. This will help physicians identify low-risk patients for early discharge with no objective cardiac testing.
Conventional Care cardiac testing. Patients will undergo cardiac testing as determined by their treating physicians.