Article Text

Download PDFPDF
Hospital discharge data for assessing myocardial infarction events and trends, and effects of diagnosis validation according to MONICA and AHA criteria
  1. Alessandro Barchielli1,2,
  2. Daniela Balzi1,2,
  3. Paola Naldoni1,2,
  4. Anna Teresa Roberts3,
  5. Francesco Profili2,
  6. Francesco Dima4,
  7. Luigi Palmieri4
  1. 1Epidemiology Unit, Local Health Unit 10 – Firenze, Florence, Italy
  2. 2Epidemiology Unit, Regional Agency for Public Health of Tuscany, Florence, Italy
  3. 3Department of Critical Care Medicine and Surgery, Unit of Gerontology and Geriatric Medicine, University of Florence and Careggi Hospital, Florence, Italy
  4. 4National Center for Epidemiology, Surveillance and Health Promotion, Institute of Health, Rome, Italy
  1. Correspondence to Dr Alessandro Barchielli, Epidemiology Unit, Local Health Unit 10 – Firenze, Via di San Salvi 12 50135 Florence, Italy; alessandro.barchielli{at}asf.toscana.it

Abstract

Background Acute myocardial infarction (AMI; ICD9-CM 410*) is a leading cause of morbidity and mortality all over the world, and its community surveillance is essential to monitor variation in the occurrence of the disease. Between the late 1990s and the early 2000s more sensitive and specific biomarkers of myocardial necrosis (ie, troponins) were introduced and new diagnostic criteria, emphasising the role of biomarkers, have been developed for clinical and epidemiological purposes.

Methods Tosc-AMI is a population-based registry based on the record linkage between hospital and mortality databases; it provides trends of coronary events in Tuscany, Italy. Two random samples of patients admitted to hospital in 2003 were validated according to the American Heart Association (AHA; 2003) and the Multinational MONItoring of trends and determinants in CArdiovascular disease (MONICA) (1983) criteria. Sample 1 (380 cases) was represented by patients admitted to hospital for AMI and sample 2 (380 cases) for other coronary diagnosis.

Results Tosc-AMI attack rates increased from the period 1997 to 2005 (men: +17%; women: +30%) and then they decreased in the following 2 years (men: −8%; women: −13%). The rise of AMI hospital admissions was due to cases with ICD9-CM code 410.7 (largely representing non-ST elevation MI). According to the AHA criteria, 94.6% events of sample 1 and 29.8% events of sample 2 fulfilled the most extensive criteria for definite, probable or possible AMI. As expected, the more updated AHA definition identified as definite AMI an additional 33.3% when compared to the MONICA criteria (86.0% vs 52.7%).

Conclusions The study suggests an influence of the new diagnostic criteria on the rising AMI trend observed in the early 2000s, an increase of less severe cases and a decreasing trend of forms with a more extended myocardial damage.

  • AMI
  • MONICA
  • AHA
  • diagnostic criteria
  • attack rate
  • trend
  • heart disease
  • registers

Statistics from Altmetric.com

Request Permissions

If you wish to reuse any or all of this article please use the link below which will take you to the Copyright Clearance Center’s RightsLink service. You will be able to get a quick price and instant permission to reuse the content in many different ways.

Footnotes

  • Competing interests None declared.

  • Ethics approval At the time of the patients' enrolment in the validation samples, ethics committee approval and informed consent from patients were not required for observational studies in Italy.

  • Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.