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Abstract
Objective
We evaluated the diagnostic accuracy of myocardial blood flow (MBF) and perfusion
reserve (MPR) measured from low-dose dynamic contrast-enhanced (DCE) imaging with
a whole-heart coverage CT scanner for detecting functionally significant coronary
artery disease (CAD).
Methods
Twenty one patients with suspected or known CAD had rest and dipyridamole stress MBF
measurements with CT and SPECT myocardial perfusion imaging (MPI), and lumen narrowing
assessment with coronary angiography (catheter and/or CT based) within 6 weeks. SPECT
MBF measurements and coronary angiography were used together as reference to determine
the functional significance of coronary artery stenosis. In each CT MPI study, DCE
images of the whole heart were acquired with breath-hold using a low-dose acquisition
protocol to generate MBF maps. Binomial logistic regression analysis was used to determine
the diagnostic accuracy of CT-measured MBF and MPR (ratio of stress to rest MBF) for
assessing functionally significant coronary stenosis.
Results
Mean stress MBF and MPR in ischemic segments were lower than those in non-ischemic
segments (1.37 ± 0.34 vs. 2.14 ± 0.64 ml/min/g; 1.56 ± 0.41 vs. 2.53 ± 0.70; p < 0.05
for all). The receiver operating characteristic curve analysis revealed that MPR (AUC
0.916, 95%CI: 0.885–0.947) had a superior power than stress MBF (AUC 0.869, 95%CI:
0.830–0.909) for differentiating non-ischemic and ischemic myocardial segments (p = 0.045).
On a per-vessel and per-segment analysis, concomitant use of MPR and stress MBF thresholds
further improved the diagnostic accuracy compared to MPR or stress MBF alone for detecting
obstructive coronary lesions (per-vessel: 93.4% vs. 83.6% and 88.5%, respectively;
per-segment: 90.0% vs. 83.7% and 83.1%, respectively). The estimated effective dose
of a rest and stress CT MPI study was 3.04 and 3.19 mSv respectively.
Conclusion
Quantitative rest and stress myocardial perfusion measurement with a large-coverage
CT scanner improves the diagnostic accuracy for detecting functionally significant
coronary stenosis.
The purpose of this study was to investigate the 2-year outcome of percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) guided by fractional flow reserve (FFR) in patients with multivessel coronary artery disease (CAD). In patients with multivessel CAD undergoing PCI, coronary angiography is the standard method for guiding stent placement. The FAME (Fractional Flow Reserve Versus Angiography for Multivessel Evaluation) study showed that routine FFR in addition to angiography improves outcomes of PCI at 1 year. It is unknown if these favorable results are maintained at 2 years of follow-up. At 20 U.S. and European medical centers, 1,005 patients with multivessel CAD were randomly assigned to PCI with drug-eluting stents guided by angiography alone or guided by FFR measurements. Before randomization, lesions requiring PCI were identified based on their angiographic appearance. Patients randomized to angiography-guided PCI underwent stenting of all indicated lesions, whereas those randomized to FFR-guided PCI underwent stenting of indicated lesions only if the FFR was 0.80, the rate of myocardial infarction was 0.2% and the rate of revascularization was 3.2 % after 2 years. Routine measurement of FFR in patients with multivessel CAD undergoing PCI with drug-eluting stents significantly reduces mortality and myocardial infarction at 2 years when compared with standard angiography-guided PCI. (Fractional Flow Reserve Versus Angiography for Multivessel Evaluation [FAME]; NCT00267774). Copyright (c) 2010 American College of Cardiology Foundation. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
The European procedural guidelines for radionuclide imaging of myocardial perfusion and viability are presented in 13 sections covering patient information, radiopharmaceuticals, injected activities and dosimetry, stress tests, imaging protocols and acquisition, quality control and reconstruction methods, gated studies and attenuation-scatter compensation, data analysis, reports and image display, and positron emission tomography. If the specific recommendations given could not be based on evidence from original, scientific studies, we tried to express this state-of-art. The guidelines are designed to assist in the practice of performing, interpreting and reporting myocardial perfusion SPET. The guidelines do not discuss clinical indications, benefits or drawbacks of radionuclide myocardial imaging compared to non-nuclear techniques, nor do they cover cost benefit or cost effectiveness.
The purpose of our study was to determine the effect of Adaptive Statistical Iterative Reconstruction (ASIR) on cardiac CT angiography (CTA) signal, noise, and image quality. We evaluated 62 consecutive patients at three sites who underwent clinically indicated cardiac CTA using an ASIR-capable 64-MDCT scanner and a low-dose cardiac CTA technique. Studies were reconstructed using filtered back projection (FBP), ASIR-FBP composites using 20-80% ASIR, and 100% ASIR. The signal and noise were measured in the aortic root and each of the four coronary arteries. Two blinded readers graded image quality on a 5-point Likert scale and determined the proportion of interpretable segments. All segments were included for analysis regardless of size. In comparison with FBP (0% ASIR), the use of 20%, 40%, 60%, 80%, and 100% ASIR resulted in reduced image noise between groups (-7%, -17%, -26%, -35%, and -43%, respectively; p < 0.001) without difference in signal (p = 0.60). There were significant differences between groups (0%, 20%, 40%, 60%, 80%, and 100% ASIR) in the Likert scores (1.5, 2.1, 3.7, 3.8, 2.0, and 1.1, respectively; p < 0.001) and proportion of interpretable segments (88.7%, 89.3%, 90.5%, 90.4%, 88.0%, and 87.3%, respectively; p < 0.001). Reconstruction using 40% and 60% ASIR had the highest Likert scores and largest proportion of interpretable segments. In comparison with FBP, each was associated with higher Likert scores and increased interpretable segments (p < 0.001 for all). ASIR resulted in noise reduction and significantly impacted image quality. When using a low tube current technique, cardiac CTA reconstruction using 40% or 60% ASIR significantly improved image quality and the proportion of interpretable segments compared with FBP reconstruction.
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