| Literature DB >> 26782999 |
Mhairi Doris1, David E Newby2.
Abstract
Coronary artery disease is the leading cause of death worldwide. Many trials to date have investigated the diagnostic accuracy of coronary computed tomography angiography (CCTA) when compared to the gold standard diagnostic test, invasive coronary angiography. However, whether the use of a non-invasive anatomical test, such as CCTA, can translate into improved patient risk stratification, management and outcome has yet to be established. The Scottish COmputed Tomography of the HEART (SCOT-HEART) trial sought to address these questions and determined whether CCTA, when used in addition to standard care, could aid the diagnosis, further investigation and treatment of patients referred to the cardiology clinic with suspected angina due to coronary heart disease. In this trial, CCTA clarified the diagnosis of angina due to coronary heart disease in a quarter of patients and this led to major alterations in treatment and management that appeared to reduce the risk of subsequent coronary heart disease death or non-fatal myocardial infarction. The SCOT-Heart trial has established that CCTA is a valuable diagnostic test in patients with suspected angina pectoris due to coronary heart disease and leads to greater clarity, more focused appropriate treatments and better coronary heart disease outcomes.Entities:
Keywords: Angina; CT coronary angiography; Coronary heart disease; Myocardial infarction; Outcomes
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26782999 PMCID: PMC4717156 DOI: 10.1007/s11886-015-0695-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Cardiol Rep ISSN: 1523-3782 Impact factor: 2.931
Summary of important CCTA studies to date
| Primary aim | First author/title and year, reference number | Patients ( | Population characteristics | Disease prevalence (% >50 % stenosis) | Major findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Diagnostic accuracy of CCTA compared to invasive angiography | Budoff MJ et al. (ACCURACY) | 230 | Typical/atypical pain. No known CAD | 25 | NPV of 99 % compared with invasive angiography |
| Miller, J et al. | 291 | Only patients with CAC ≤600 included in primary analysis | 56 | 90 % PPV of CCTA | |
| Meijboom et al. | 360 | Acute and stable anginal symptoms | 68 | 99 % sensitivity and NPV of 97 % in detecting significant stenosis. Specificity of 64 % [ | |
| Triage of patients from Emergency Department (accuracy in diagnosis of ACS) | Hoffman et al. | 368 | Acute chest pain with normal initial troponin and ECG | 18.5 | 100 % sensitivity and NPV for diagnosis of ACS in absence of CAD [ |
| Goldstein et al. (CT-STAT) | 699 | Low-risk acute chest pain presenting to ED | 4 (>70 % stenosis) | 54 % reduction in time to diagnosis compared with MPI, lower cost of care and no difference in adverse outcomes [ | |
| Prognostic Value of CCTA | Puchner et al. (ROMICATII) | 472 | Acute chest pain. Low-risk patients | 10 | Presence of high-risk plaques independent predictor of ACS |
| Chow et al. | 2076 | Various indications (58 % chest pain) | 30 | CTA measures of CAD and TPS have incremental prognostic value over clinical predictors [ | |
| Hadamitzky M et al. | 1584 | Suspected, but not known CAD | 20 | Severity of CAD on CTA and TPS predicted death or non-fatal MI over standard clinical risk scores during 5 years follow-up [ | |
| Assessing clinical effectiveness of CCTA in diagnosis, management and outcomes. | Douglas P et al. (PROMISE) | 10,003 | Symptomatic patients referred for investigation | 11 | CTA associated with fewer invasive angiograms showing no obstructive disease. Reduction in CHD death/non-fatal MI at 12 months. No difference in outcome at 25 months [ |
| Newby DE | 4146 | Recent onset chest pain, suspected CHD | 42 | CTA clarified diagnosis of angina secondary to CHD in 1 in 4 patients [ |
OR odds ratio, MPI myocardial perfusion imaging, TPS total plaque score
Fig. 1Example of coronary computed tomography angiography (CCTA) image in a 55-year-old gentleman with a calcium Agatston score of 1400