PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Lay Cheng Toh AU - Christina Khoo AU - Cheng Huang Goh AU - Gary Choa AU - Lit Sin Quek AU - Jonathan Phang AU - Franco Wong AU - Keith Tsou AU - Yew Seng Kwan AU - Pipin Kojodjojo TI - Impact of a rapid access chest pain clinic in Singapore to improve evaluation of new-onset chest pain AID - 10.1136/postgradmedj-2021-141427 DP - 2022 Jan 30 TA - Postgraduate Medical Journal PG - postgradmedj-2021-141427 4099 - http://pmj.bmj.com/content/early/2022/01/30/postgradmedj-2021-141427.short 4100 - http://pmj.bmj.com/content/early/2022/01/30/postgradmedj-2021-141427.full AB - Background Chest pain (CP) accounts for 5% of emergency department (ED) visits, unplanned hospitalisations and costly admissions. Conversely, outpatient evaluation requires multiple hospital visits and longer time to complete testing. Rapid access chest pain clinics (RACPCS) are established in the UK for timely, cost-effective CP assessment. This study aims to evaluate the feasibility, safety, clinical and economic benefits of a nurse-led RACPC in a multiethnic Asian country.Methods Consecutive CP patients referred from a polyclinic to the local general hospital were recruited. Referring physicians were left to their discretion to refer patients to the ED, RACPC (launched in April 2019) or outpatients. Patient demographics, diagnostic journey, clinical outcomes, costs, HEART (History, ECG, Age, Risk Factors, Troponin) scores and 1-year overall mortality were recorded.Results 577 CP patients (median HEAR score of 2.0) were referred; 237 before the launch of RACPC. Post RACPC, fewer patients were referred to the ED (46.5% vs 73.9%, p<0.01), decreased adjusted bed days for CP, more non-invasive tests (46.8 vs 39.2 per 100 referrals, p=0.07) and fewer invasive coronary angiograms (5.6 vs 12.2 per 100 referrals, p<0.01) were performed. Time from referral to diagnosis was shortened by 90%, while requiring 66% less visits (p<0.01). System cost to evaluate CP was reduced by 20.7% and all RACPC patients were alive at 12 months.Conclusions An Asian nurse-led RACPC expedited specialist evaluation of CP with less visits, reduced ED attendances and invasive testing whilst saving costs. Wider implementation across Asia would significantly improve CP evaluation.