Background: Myocardial ischemia induces intracellular accumulation of non-glycosylated apolipoprotein J that results in a reduction of circulating glycosylated ApoJ (ApoJ-Glyc). The latter has been suggested to be a marker of transient myocardial ischemia.
Objective: This proof-of-concept clinical study aimed to assess whether changes in circulating ApoJ-Glyc could detect myocardial ischemia in patients attending the emergency department (ED) with chest pain suggestive of acute coronary syndrome (ACS).
Methods: In suspected ACS patients, EDICA (Early Detection of Myocardial Ischemia in Suspected Acute Coronary Syndromes by ApoJ-Glyc a Novel Pathologically based Ischemia Biomarker), a multicentre, international, cohort study assessed changes in 2 glycosylated variants of ApoJ-Glyc, (ApoJ-GlycA2 and ApoJ-GlycA6), in serum samples obtained at ED admission (0 h), and 1 h and 3 h thereafter, blinded to the clinical diagnosis (i.e. STEMI, NSTEMI, unstable angina, non-ischemic).
Results: 404 patients were recruited; 291 were given a clinical diagnosis of "non-ischemic" chest pain and 113 were considered to have had an ischemic event. ApoJ-GlycA6 was lower on admission in ischemic compared with "non-ischemic" patients (66 [46-90] vs. 73 [56-95] μg/ml; P = 0.04). 74% of unstable angina patients (all with undetectable hs-Tn), had ischemic changes in ApoJ-Glyc at 0 h and 89% at 1 h. Initially low ApoJ-Glyc levels in 62 patients requiring coronary revascularization increased significantly after successful percutaneous intervention.
Conclusions: Circulating ApoJ-Glyc concentrations decrease early in ED patients with myocardial ischemia compared with "non-ischemic" patients, even in the absence of troponin elevations. ApoJ-Glyc may be a useful marker of myocardial ischemia in the ED setting.
Keywords: Acute coronary syndrome; Acute myocardial ischemia; Angina; Glycosylated ApoJ; Ischemia.
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