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Journal Article

Citation

Elgendy SA, Shoeib O, Elgharbawy D, Abo El-Noor MM, Kabbash A. Toxicol. Res. (Camb.) 2024; 13(4): tfae122.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2024, RSC Publishing)

DOI

10.1093/toxres/tfae122

PMID

39105043

PMCID

PMC11297542

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Cardiotoxicity is a major toxic effect induced by several types of drugs. An electrocardiogram is done routinely in cardiovascular drug exposures. Cardiac troponin I (cTnI) is the usual biomarker for diagnosing myocardial injury. B-type natriuretic peptide (BNP) is a well-established predictor of disease state in suspected heart failure.

AIM: The study aimed to assess BNP's role as an early predictor of mortality compared with cTnI and ECG changes in acutely poisoned patients with cardiotoxicities.

METHODOLOGY: This study enrolled 70 patients with acute cardiotoxicity by drugs and toxins known to cause cardiac injury admitted to Tanta University Poison Control Center (TUPCC). Collected data included socio-demographic data, toxicological history, vital signs, ECG changes, Poison Severity Score (PSS), BNP, and cTnI serum levels.

RESULT: Patients were classified as survivors and non-survivors. Significantly more delay time was recorded in non-survivors. Moreover, vital signs were significantly abnormal in non-survivors. There was no statistical significance regarding the initial ECG abnormalities between survivors and non-survivors. BNP and cTnI levels were significantly higher among non-survivors. For mortality prediction, BNP had good predictive power (AUC = 0.841) with 100% sensitivity and 79.7% specificity while cTnI had an acceptable predictive power (AUC = 0.786), with 83.3% sensitivity and 78.1% specificity with insignificant difference between both biomarkers.

CONCLUSION: BNP and cTnI levels can predict mortality in acute cardiotoxicity compared to ECG which has no statistically significant prediction. BNP has a higher discriminatory power than cTnI for the prediction of mortality.


Language: en

Keywords

mortality; acute poisoning; B-type natriuretic peptide; cardiotoxicity; ECG; predictor; troponin I

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