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Open Cardiovasc Med J. 2008; 2: 36–40.
Published online 2008 June 5. doi: 10.2174/1874192400802010036.
PMCID: PMC2570572
The Ability of Heart Failure Specialists to Accurately Predict NT-proBNP Levels Based on Clinical Assessment and a Previous NT-proBNP Measurement
Tara L Sedlak,1 Mann Chandavimol,2 Anna Calleja,3 Catherine Clark,4 Margaret Edmonds,5 Aihua Pu,6 Karin H Humphries,7 and Andrew Ignaszewski*8
1University of British Columbia
2University of British Columbia
3University of British Columbia
4St. Paul’s Hospital, Vancouver
5St. Paul’s Hospital, Vancouver
6Centre for Health Evaluation & Outcome Sciences
7University of British Columbia, Centre for Health Evaluation & Outcome Sciences
8University of British Columbia
*Address correspondence to this author at the Health Heart Program, 1081 Burrard Street, Vancouver, BC, Canada, V6Z 1Y6; Tel: 604-806-8605; Fax: 604-806-8338; E-mail: aignaszewski/at/providencehealth.bc.ca
Received May 2, 2008; Revised May 20, 2008; Accepted May 24, 2008.
Abstract
Background:
The value of routine aminoterminal pro type B natriuretic peptide (NT-proBNP) measurements in outpatient clinics remains unknown.
Objectives:
We sought to determine the accuracy with which heart failure (HF) specialists can predict NT-proBNP levels in HF outpatients based on clinical assessment.
Methods:
We prospectively studied 160 consecutive HF patients followed in an outpatient multidisciplinary HF clinic. During a regular office visit, HF specialists were asked to estimate a patient’s current NT-proBNP level based upon their clinical assessment and all available information from their chart, including a previous NT-proBNP level (if available). NT-proBNP estimations were grouped into prognostic categories (<125, 125-1000, 1000-4998, or ≥4999 pg/mL) and comparisons made between actual and estimate values.
Results:
Overall, HF specialists estimated 67.5% of NT-proBNP levels correctly. After adjusting for clinical characteristics, knowledge of a prior NT-proBNP measurement was the only significant predictor of estimation accuracy (p=0.01). Compared to patients with a prior NT-proBNP level <125 pg/mL, physicians were 95% less likely to get a correct estimation in patients with the highest prior NT-proBNP level (≥4999 pg/mL).
Conclusion:
HF specialists are reasonably accurate at estimating current NT-proBNP levels based upon clinical assessment and a previous NT-proBNP level, if those levels were < 4999 pg/mL. Likely, initial but not routine NT-proBNP measurements are useful in outpatient HF clinics.