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New ESC ACS guideline combines STEMI and NSTE-ACS


 

AT ESC CONGRESS 2023

New European Society of Cardiology guidelines on the management of acute coronary syndromes (ACS) have for the first time combined ST-elevation MI (STEMI), non–ST-elevation MI (NSTEMI), and unstable angina into the same set of recommendations.

The new guideline was released at the annual congress of the European Society of Cardiology, and was published online in the European Heart Journal.

“We found that it was realized by the cardiology community that patients with STEMI, NSTEMI, or unstable angina represent a spectrum,” the chair of the guideline task force, Robert Byrne, MD, chair of cardiovascular research at the RCSI University of Medicine and Health Sciences, Dublin, explained to this news organization. “After the initial triage and management decisions, then most of the rest of the care follows a common pathway so it would make sense to consider everything in one guideline.”

Dr. Byrne noted that for all patients with a suspected ACS, the guideline recommendation is to administer an ECG within 10 minutes of presentation. The time is critical particularly for those with an occluded epicardial vessel. If there are features on the ECG that suggest an acutely occluded epicardial vessel, then the patient needs immediate angiography or primary angioplasty.

“The 10-minute guidance has been maintained from previous guidelines, but the nuance in the new guideline is that typically when we think of an occluded epicardial vessel we think of ST-elevation on the ECG,” Byrne said. “While this captures most occluded epicardial vessels, it doesn’t capture all of them. So, we have provided some guidance on alternative ECG patterns which might be indicative of an acute occlusion of the epicardial vessel and should be dealt with in the same way as an ST-elevation MI. This is a new concept.”

This situation could arise when a patient has an occluded circumflex artery and the regular ECG may not show ST elevation but the patient has ongoing pain, he noted. “There are additional ECG leads that can be looked at that might identify patients who need an immediate invasive strategy.

“This is one more reason why all ACS patients should be considered as part of one spectrum, and while the ECG gives us important information, it is not the only thing to consider. Dividing the conditions up as to whether a patient has ST elevation or not does not always make pathophysiological sense,” he added.

Dr. Byrne noted that the new guidelines have tried to reach a wider stakeholder group that includes emergency doctors, internal medicine physicians, general practitioners, and surgeons, as well as cardiologists. The document includes animations in an effort to increase the reach of the guidelines to noncardiology stakeholders, and for the first time, the task force included a patient representative.

“As part of this strategy, we have put more structure in to emphasize the importance that at first contact, we already want to be thinking of antithrombotic therapy and whether the patient needs urgent transfer to the nearest cath lab. We also want to be thinking straight away about preventing the next heart attack by implementing strong secondary prevention measures,” he commented.

Dr. Byrne highlighted a few changes to individual recommendations in the new guidelines.

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