Increased cardiac troponin with chest pain is important for the diagnosis, triage, and treatment of patients in the emergency department. However, the use of troponin for the diagnosis and triage of patients without chest pain is poorly established. The aim of this study was to determine 30-day and 1-year mortality and morbidity of troponin T increases in patients without chest pain. This retrospective study compared 92 hospitalized patients without (study group) and 91 patients with chest pain (control group), followed up for 1 year. Study group patients had troponin T >0.04 microg/L, normal creatine kinase or creatine kinase-MB fraction <5%, and no electrocardiographic ischemia. Excluded were high-risk patients with end-stage kidney disease, those with left ventricular ejection fraction <40%, and the critically ill. Outcome variables included 30-day and 1-year death, myocardial infarction, unstable angina, and coronary revascularization rates. Thirty-day (13.0% vs 4.4%; p = 0.032) and 1-year (33% vs 4.6%; p <0.001) mortality rates were significantly higher in the study group, whereas myocardial infarction, unstable angina, and revascularization were infrequent. In conclusion, patients with increased troponin T and no chest pain had a high mortality rate and required careful follow-up.