# Acute Coronary Syndromes: State-of-the-Art Diagnosis, Management, and Secondary Prevention

**Authors:** Xun Yuan, Stephan Nienaber, Ibrahim Akin, Tito Kabir, Christoph A. Nienaber

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/jcm15010016 · Journal of Clinical Medicine · 2025-12-19

## TL;DR

This review updates the diagnosis, treatment, and prevention strategies for acute coronary syndromes based on recent research and guidelines.

## Contribution

The paper synthesizes recent advancements in ACS care from 2023 to 2025, offering practical algorithms for risk-stratified treatment.

## Key findings

- High-sensitivity troponin and GRACE 3.0 improve early diagnosis and risk stratification.
- Culprit-only PCI is favored acutely for STEMI, with staged treatment for non-culprit lesions.
- Shorter DAPT and early aspirin withdrawal may be safe in low-risk patients, but not in unselected ACS.

## Abstract

Background: Acute coronary syndromes (ACSs) remain a leading cause of death and disability. Since the publication of the 2023 ESC ACS guidelines, multiple studies and an ESC/EAS dyslipidaemia update have refined how clinicians diagnose, revascularize, and treat ACS across the care continuum. Content: This state-of-the-art review synthesizes advances from 2023 to 2025 across five domains. Diagnosis: High-sensitivity troponin-based accelerated pathways remain foundational; GRACE 3.0 improves calibration for early vs. delayed angiography, while selective use of CCTA and routine use of intracoronary imaging/physiology help define the mechanism and optimize PCI. Revascularization: complete revascularization continues to underpin care in multivessel disease, with recent data favouring culprit-only PCI acutely and staged non-culprit treatment during the index stay in most STEMI presentations, particularly with heart-failure physiology. Antithrombotic therapy: Aspirin remains critical early after ACS-PCI; emerging evidence supports shorter DAPT and aspirin withdrawal after 1 month in carefully selected, low-ischaemic-risk patients, whereas day-0 aspirin-free strategies in unselected ACS are not non-inferior. Secondary prevention: A “strike early and strong” approach to LDL-cholesterol—often with combination therapy in hospital—is emphasized, alongside nuanced roles for SGLT2 inhibitors and GLP-1 receptor agonists. Special populations and implementation: Sex- and age-aware tailoring (including MINOCA/SCAD evaluation), pragmatic bleeding-risk mitigation, digitally enabled cardiac rehabilitation, and registry-driven quality improvement translate evidence into practice. Summary: Contemporary ACS care is moving from uniform protocols toward risk-stratified, mechanism-informed pathways. We offer practical algorithms and checklists to align interventional timing, antithrombotic intensity/duration, and secondary prevention with individual patient risk—bridging new evidence to bedside decisions.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** acute coronary syndromes (MONDO:0005542), heart failure (MONDO:0005252)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** bleeding (MESH:D006470), ischaemic (MESH:D018917), ACS (MESH:D000168), multivessel disease (MESH:D004194), heart-failure (MESH:D006333), death (MESH:D003643), STEMI (MESH:D000072657), ACSs (MESH:D054058)
- **Chemicals:** Aspirin (MESH:D001241), Antithrombotic (-)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

109 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12787086/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12787086