Can an ECG performed during emergency department triage and interpreted as normal by computer analysis safely wait for clinician review until the time of patient assessment? A pilot study

J Electrocardiol. 2021 Sep-Oct:68:145-149. doi: 10.1016/j.jelectrocard.2021.08.006. Epub 2021 Aug 19.

Abstract

Introduction: Electrocardiograms (ECGs) are frequently performed during patient triage in Emergency Departments (EDs). Emergency Physicians (EPs) are interrupted during other tasks to review ECGs. Critics believe this practice could lead to distraction with consequent medical error and decision fatigue. ECGs can be interpreted by computer software at the time of capture; some evidence exists to suggest that an ECG performed during ED triage with an immediate computer interpretation (ICI) of 'normal' will seldom contain information necessitating a change to triage management.

Material and methods: All ED triage ECGs performed in the Royal Derby Hospital between 13th July 2017 and 12th July 2018 in patients without chest pain and with an ICI of 'normal' were identified through a database search. Forty were randomly selected and reviewed by two EPs (blinded to patient details, ICI and outcome) who were asked to identify those that required a change to triage management.

Results: The study processes were feasible. At least one of the two EP reviewers felt that a change to triage management was required in 48% of cases (e.g. "review patient", "obtain blood gas", "review old ECGs"); they agreed on the need for change of management in 13% of cases. An ICI of normal had a NPV of 53% (95% CI 37-67%) for the need for a change to triage management based upon ECG findings. Inter-observer agreement was poor (kappa = 0.17).

Conclusions: Based on these results, ED triage ECGs should still be presented to EPs for immediate review regardless of the ICI. Inter-observer agreement between EPs was poor. Further research is required to link triage ECG interpretation, need for intervention and patient outcome.

Keywords: Cardiology; ECG; Electrocardiogram; Emergency medicine; Triage.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Computers
  • Electrocardiography*
  • Emergency Service, Hospital
  • Humans
  • Pilot Projects
  • Triage*