A: The GRACE risk score: a reference standard for the management of acute coronary syndrome
Submitting Institution
University of EdinburghUnit of Assessment
Clinical MedicineSummary Impact Type
HealthResearch Subject Area(s)
Medical and Health Sciences: Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology, Public Health and Health Services
Summary of the impact
Impact: Health and welfare; the GRACE risk score (derived using
data from 102,000 patients with acute coronary syndrome (ACS) in 30
countries) identifies high-risk ACS patients more effectively than do
alternative methods.
Significance: GRACE is now a reference standard and has resulted
in international guideline changes. It is estimated to save 30-80 lives
for every 10,000 patients presenting with non-ST elevation ACS.
Beneficiaries: Patients with ACS; the NHS and healthcare delivery
organisations.
Attribution: All work was led by Fox (UoE) with co-chair Gore
(University of Massachusetts) and was developed from Edinburgh-based
studies.
Reach: Worldwide: guidelines adopted in more than 55 countries;
>10,000 downloads of app.
Underpinning research
Prior to 2000, it was well recognised that acute coronary syndrome (ACS)
constituted a leading cause of death, but the management and outcome of
patients with ACS was poorly defined. Trial populations do not reflect the
full spectrum of patients with ACS and hence do not reflect the diversity
of clinical practice. Professor Keith Fox (Professor of Cardiology, UoE,
1989-present; Chair) and co-chair, Joel Gore (University of Massachusetts)
designed a 10-year programme of research and established the largest
multi-national study of acute coronary artery disease [3.1]. This built on
underpinning research in Edinburgh [3.2, 3.3 and the British Heart
Foundation Randomised Intervention Trials in Angina (RITA) and earlier
registry programmes]. GRACE (Global Registry of Acute Coronary Events)
involved more than 102,000 patients in 30 countries [3.1]. This has become
an international reference standard for the management and outcome of ACS
and the data are used as the basis for designing large-scale clinical
trials. The GRACE programme was launched in 1999; since then, the group
has published 132 manuscripts and presented 119 abstracts at major
congresses.
This study, and others, identified the "risk-treatment paradox"
applicable irrespective of geographic region and healthcare system. The
paradox demonstrates that, in contrast to the evidence, lower-risk rather
than higher-risk patients receive more intensive medical treatment and
interventional treatment. The GRACE risk score was designed to address
this problem by providing clinicians with a powerful yet user-friendly
means of identifying higher-risk patients at the time of their first
presentation. Previously used clinical parameters are inadequate to define
risk; neither is using single biomarkers adequate. To develop the GRACE
score, Fox and colleagues derived the independent predictors of outcome in
21,688 patients presenting with ACS and validated the predictions
prospectively in a further 22,122 patients, with the aim of predicting
both in-hospital and 6-month risk of death, and death or myocardial
infarction [3.4]. Moreover, external validation was completed in an
independent dataset [3.4]. Nine factors independently predicted both death
and the combination of death or myocardial infarction and conveyed more
than 90% of the risk. The simplified model was robust with good fit and
prospectively validated, with C statistics of 0.81 for predicting death
and 0.74 for predicting death or myocardial infarction. The score has been
extensively tested by the GRACE team [e.g., 3.5, 3.6] and in many diverse
healthcare systems, internationally and on all continents.
By characterising the ACS population, the team was able to define the
deficiencies in management and outcome and to provide a key resource for
raising hypotheses for subsequent testing in randomised trials
(anti-platelet therapy, anti-thrombin therapy and interventional
strategies). A number of independent international trials have now used
the GRACE score to define populations at particular risk, and populations
with the potential for benefit.
References to the research
3.1 Fox K, Eagle K, Gore J, Steg P, Anderson F; GRACE and GRACE2
Investigators. The Global Registry of Acute Coronary Events, 1999 to 2009
— GRACE. Heart. 2010;96:1095-101. DOI: 10.1136/hrt2009.190827.
3.2 Fox K, Carruthers K, Dunbar D, et al. Underestimated and
under-recognized: the late consequences of acute coronary syndrome (GRACE
UK-Belgian Study). Eur Heart J. 2010;31:2755-64. DOI:
10.1093/eurheartj/ehq326.
3.3 Fox K, Anderson F Jr, Goodman S, et al; GRACE Investigators. Time
course of events in acute coronary syndromes: implications for clinical
practice from the GRACE registry. Nat Clin Pract Cardiovasc Med.
2008;5580-9. DOI: 10.1038/ncpcardio1302.
3.4 Fox K, Dabbous O, Goldberg R, et al. Prediction of risk of death and
myocardial infarction in the six months after presentation with acute
coronary syndrome: prospective multinational observational study (GRACE).
BMJ. 2006;333:1091. DOI: 10.1136/bmj.38985.646481.55.
3.5 Fox K, Steg P, Eagle K, et al; GRACE Investigators. Decline in rates
of death and heart failure in acute coronary syndromes, 1999-2006. JAMA.
2007;297:1892-900. DOI: 10.1001/jama.297.17.1892.
3.6 Budaj A, Flasinska K, Gore J,...Fox K; GRACE Investigators. Magnitude
of and risk factors for in-hospital and post discharge stroke in patients
with acute coronary syndromes: findings from a Global Registry of Acute
Coronary Events. Circulation. 2005;111:3242-7. DOI:
10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.104.512806.
Details of the impact
Impact on public policy
The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) tested all
of the published risk scores for ACS using an unselected population of
approximately 70,000 patients from the United Kingdom. NICE guideline 94
[5.1], published in 2010, European Society of Cardiology (ESC; 2011)
[5.2], American Heart Association and American College of Cardiology
(2012) [5.3] guidelines now recommend that the GRACE risk score should be
used because of its superior performance when compared to the other
published risk-scoring tools. Fifty-five countries have pledged to
implement the ESC cardiovascular guidelines.
Impact on clinical practice
Recent publications from others have extended the role of the GRACE risk
score to other indications including pulmonary embolism [5.4] and contrast
renal nephropathy. In addition, an independent study demonstrated that the
score predicts outcome (whereas stress imaging does not) in follow-up
patients after chest pain [5.5]. Similarly, the GRACE risk score remains
accurate at predicting hospital and long-term fatality in ACS patients in
the era of high-sensitivity troponin and B-type natriuretic peptide [5.6].
The GRACE risk score has been extensively tested, and implemented
internationally: PubMed (May 2013) retrieved 291 published manuscripts and
4034 citations involving the GRACE risk score, and on Google there are 46
pages of citations using the term "GRACE risk score". Examples [5.4-5.8]
include studies from clinical settings as diverse as Brazil, Portugal and
China that demonstrate the superiority of the GRACE score.
The GRACE Steering Committee (Chair, K Fox) made the GRACE risk score
freely available to download to a mobile device (2011; more than 10,000
downloads from Google Play alone). In addition, a simplified version of
the GRACE risk score was developed in 2012, externally validated in the
French Acute MI FAST registry; the updated version is now implemented and
freely available (July 2013). The GRACE risk score app provides a
user-friendly interface of the variables that convey 90% of the risk of
the full multivariable GRACE risk model. The clinician uses this
information alongside his or her clinical evaluation to guide management
of the patient. The app received coverage in UK and international media
(The Times [5.9], The Times of India and many others) and has been
requested by NHS England's Pan-London Clinical Leadership Advisory Group
for Cardiology for use in its inter-hospital transfer system [5.10]. The
GRACE score will also be incorporated into a "pocket guidelines" app
developed by the ESC for distribution to clinicians in the 55 affiliated
countries.
Impact on health and welfare
The GRACE programme identified that survivors of non-ST elevation ACS
(previously perceived as minor or threatened heart attacks) had higher
long-term risks of death and recurrent myocardial infarction and
ST-elevation myocardial infarction [3.1, 3.2]. In consequence, a series of
international randomised trials has focussed on improving outcomes in
non-ST elevation ACS, including Fox's British Heart Foundation-funded RITA
3 trial. By facilitating appropriate treatment, the GRACE risk score has
contributed to a change in practice and improved outcomes [3.5]. Fox and
colleagues demonstrated temporal changes in outcomes, improved use of
evidence-based therapies, a decline in deaths and myocardial infarction
and approximately a halving of new heart failure [3.5]. These findings for
international GRACE sites are corroborated by British Heart Foundation
statistics. Modelling by the UoE team suggests that implementation of the
GRACE score results in a saving of 30-80 lives for every 10,000 patients
presenting with non-ST elevation ACS.
Sources to corroborate the impact
5.1 NICE guideline 94 (March 2010). Unstable angina and NSTEMI The early
management of unstable angina and non-ST-segment-elevation myocardial
infarction.
http://www.nice.org.uk/nicemedia/live/12949/47921/47921.pdf.
5.2 Hamm C, Bassand J, Agewall S, et al; ESC Committee for Practice
Guidelines. ESC Guidelines for the management of acute coronary syndromes
in patients presenting without persistent ST-segment elevation: The Task
Force for the management of acute coronary syndromes (ACS) in patients
presenting without persistent ST-segment elevation of the European Society
of Cardiology (ESC). Eur Heart J. 2011;32:2999-3054. DOI:
10.1093/eurheartj/ehr236.
5.3 Jneid H, Anderson J, Wright R, et al; American College of Cardiology
Foundation; American Heart Association Task Force on Practice Guidelines.
2012 ACCF/AHA focused update of the guideline for the management of
patients with unstable angina/non-ST-elevation myocardial infarction: a
report of the American College of Cardiology Foundation/American Heart
Association Task Force on Practice Guidelines. Circulation,
2012;126:875-910. DOI: 10.1161/CIR.0b013e318256f1e0.
5.4 Paiva L, Providencia R, Barra S, Faustino A, Botelho A, Marques A.
Cardiovascular risk assessment of pulmonary embolism with the GRACE risk
score. Am J Cardiol. 2013;111: 425-31. DOI: 10.1016/j.amjcard.2012.10.020.
5.5 van der Zee P, Verberne H, Cornel J, et al. GRACE and TIMI risk
scores but not stress imaging predict long-term cardiovascular follow-up
in patients with chest pain after a rule-out protocol. Neth Heart J.
2011;19: 324-30. DOI: 10.1007/s12471-011-0154-9.
5.6 Meune C, Drexler B, Haaf P, et al. The GRACE score's performance in
predicting in-hospital and 1-year outcome in the era of high-sensitivity
cardiac troponin assays and B-type natriuretic peptide. Heart.
2011;97:1479-83. DOI: 10.1136/hrt2010.220988.
5.7 D'Ascenzo F, Biondi-Zoccai G, Moretti C, et al. TIMI, GRACE and
alternative risk scores in acute coronary syndromes: a meta-analysis of 40
derivation studies on 216,552 patients and of 42 validation studies on
31,625 patients. Contemp Clin Trials. 2012;33:507-14. DOI:
10.1016/j.cct2012.01.001.
5.8 Abu-Assi E, Garciá Acuña J, Peña-Gil C, González-Juanatey J.
Validation of the GRACE risk score for predicting death within 6 months of
follow-up in a contemporary cohort of patients with acute coronary
syndrome. Rec Esp Cardiol 2010; 63(6):640-8. DOI:
10.1016/S1885-5857(10)70138-9.
5.9 The Times (3rd Sep 2013). Scots university app aids
cardiac diagnosis.
http://www.thetimes.co.uk/tto/news/uk/scotland/article3859051.ece.
5.10 Letter from the Pan-London Clinical Leadership Advisory Group for
Cardiology (August 2013), requesting use of the GRACE risk score app for
the inter-hospital transfer system. [Available on request.]