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STress computed tomogRaphy perfusion and stress cArdiac magnetic resonance for ThE manaGement of suspected or known coronarY artery disease: resources and outcomes impact

  • Andrea Baggiano
  • , Francesca Baessato
  • , Saima Mushtaq
  • , Andrea Daniele Annoni
  • , Francesco Cannata
  • , Maria Ludovica Carerj
  • , Alberico Del Torto
  • , Fabio Fazzari
  • , Alberto Formenti
  • , Antonio Frappampina
  • , Laura Fusini
  • , Daniele Junod
  • , Maria Elisabetta Mancini
  • , Valentina Mantegazza
  • , Riccardo Maragna
  • , Francesca Marchetti
  • , Francesco Paolo Sbordone
  • , Luigi Tassetti
  • , Alessandra Volpe
  • , Marco Guglielmo
  • Alexia Rossi, Chiara Rovera, Mark G Rabbat, Andrea Igoren Guaricci, Claudio Cau, Luca Saba, Giovanni Berna, Chiarella Sforza, Mauro Pepi, Gianluca Pontone

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

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Abstract

BACKGROUND: The aim of this study is to describe resources and outcomes of coronary computed tomography angiography plus Stress CT perfusion (CCTA ​+ ​Stress-CTP) and stress cardiovascular magnetic resonance (Stress-CMR) in symptomatic patients with suspected or known CAD.

METHODS: Six hundred and twenty-four consecutive symptomatic patients with intermediate to high-risk pretest likelihood for CAD or previous history of revascularization referred to our hospital for clinically indicated CCTA ​+ ​Stress-CTP or Stress-CMR were enrolled. Stress-CTP scans were performed in 223 patients while 401 patients performed Stress-CMR. Patient follow-up was performed at 1 year after index test performance. Endpoints were all cardiac events, as a combined endpoint of revascularization, non-fatal MI and death, and hard cardiac events, as combined endpoint of non-fatal MI and death.

RESULTS: Twenty-nine percent of patients who underwent CCTA ​+ ​Stress-CTP received revascularization, 7% of subjects assessed with Stress-CMR were treated invasively, and a low number of non-fatal MI and death was observed with both strategies (hard events in 0.4% of patients that had CCTA ​+ ​Stress-CTP as index test, and in 3% of patients evaluated with Stress-CMR). According to the predefined endpoints, CCTA ​+ ​Stress-CTP group showed high rate of all cardiac events and low rate of hard cardiac events, respectively. The cumulative costs were 1970 ​± ​2506 Euro and 733 ​± ​1418 Euro for the CCTA ​+ ​Stress-CTP group and Stress-CMR group, respectively.

CONCLUSIONS: The use of CCTA ​+ ​Stress-CTP strategy was associated with high referral to revascularization but with a favourable trend in terms of hard cardiac events and diagnostic yield in identifying individuals at lower risk of adverse events despite the presence of CAD.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)553-558
Number of pages6
JournalJournal of cardiovascular computed tomography
Volume18
Issue number6
Early online date14 Aug 2024
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Nov 2024

Keywords

  • Cardiac magnetic resonance
  • Computed tomography perfusion
  • Coronary artery disease
  • Coronary computed tomography angiography
  • Major adverse cardiac events

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