| Literature DB >> 27141095 |
Ibrahim Danad1,2, Jackie Szymonifka1,2, Jos W R Twisk3, Bjarne L Norgaard4, Christopher K Zarins5,6, Paul Knaapen7, James K Min1,2.
Abstract
Aims: The aim of this study was to determine the diagnostic performance of single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT), stress echocardiography (SE), invasive coronary angiography (ICA), coronary computed tomography angiography (CCTA), fractional flow reserve (FFR) derived from CCTA (FFRCT), and cardiac magnetic resonance (MRI) imaging when directly compared with an FFR reference standard. Method and results: PubMed and Web of Knowledge were searched for investigations published between 1 January 2002 and 28 February 2015. Studies performing FFR in at least 75% of coronary vessels for the diagnosis of ischaemic coronary artery disease (CAD) were included. Twenty-three articles reporting on 3788 patients and 5323 vessels were identified. Meta-analysis was performed for pooled sensitivity, specificity, likelihood ratios (LR), diagnostic odds ratio, and summary receiver operating characteristic curves. In contrast to ICA, CCTA, and FFRCT reports, studies evaluating SPECT, SE, and MRI were largely retrospective, single-centre and with generally smaller study samples. On a per-patient basis, the sensitivity of CCTA (90%, 95% CI: 86-93), FFRCT (90%, 95% CI: 85-93), and MRI (90%, 95% CI: 75-97) were higher than for SPECT (70%, 95% CI: 59-80), SE (77%, 95% CI: 61-88), and ICA (69%, 95% CI: 65-75). The highest and lowest per-patient specificity was observed for MRI (94%, 95% CI: 79-99) and for CCTA (39%, 95% CI: 34-44), respectively. Similar specificities were noted for SPECT (78%, 95% CI: 68-87), SE (75%, 95% CI: 63-85), FFRCT (71%, 95% CI: 65-75%), and ICA (67%, 95% CI: 63-71). On a per-vessel basis, the highest sensitivity was for CCTA (pooled sensitivity, 91%: 88-93), MRI (91%: 84-95), and FFRCT (83%, 78-87), with lower sensitivities for ICA (71%, 69-74), and SPECT (57%: 49-64). Per-vessel specificity was highest for MRI (85%, 79-89), FFRCT (78%: 78-81), and SPECT (75%: 69-80), whereas ICA (66%: 64-68) and CCTA (58%: 55-61) yielded a lower specificity. Conclusions: In this meta-analysis comparing cardiac imaging methods directly to FFR, MRI had the highest performance for diagnosis of ischaemia-causing CAD, with lower performance for SPECT and SE. Anatomic methods of CCTA and ICA yielded lower specificity, with functional assessment of coronary atherosclerosis by SE, SPECT, and FFRCT improving accuracy.Entities:
Keywords: Cardiac imaging; Diagnostic accuracy; Fractional flow reserve; Meta-analysis
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 27141095 PMCID: PMC5381594 DOI: 10.1093/eurheartj/ehw095
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Heart J ISSN: 0195-668X Impact factor: 35.855
Search syntax
| Source | Search terms | Filters |
|---|---|---|
| PubMed | (noninvasive fractional flow reserve OR noninvasive FFR OR coronary CT angiography OR coronary computed tomography angiography OR coronary angiography OR nuclear myocardial perfusion OR magnetic resonance perfusion OR myocardial perfusion scintigraphy OR SPECT OR stress echocardiography OR stress perfusion OR stress myocardial perfusion OR dobutamine stress) AND (fractional flow reserve OR FFR) | Humans and clinical trial |
| Web of Science | (‘noninvasive fractional flow reserve’ OR ‘noninvasive FFR’ OR ‘coronary CT angiography’ OR ‘coronary computed tomography angiography’ OR ‘coronary angiography’ OR ‘nuclear myocardial perfusion’ OR ‘magnetic resonance perfusion’ OR ‘myocardial perfusion scintigraphy’ OR ‘SPECT’ OR ‘stress echocardiography’ OR ‘stress perfusion’ OR ‘stress myocardial perfusion’ OR ‘dobutamine stress’) AND (‘fractional flow reserve’ OR ‘FFR’) | Cardiovascular systems and ‘article’ |
FFR, fractional flow reserve; SPECT, single-photon emission computed tomography.
Diagnostic performance of CCTA, SE, FFRCT, ICA, MRI, and SPECT for the detection of haemodynamic significant coronary artery disease
| Index test | Sensitivity | Specificity | PLR | NLR | DOR | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Patient-based analysis | ||||||
| CCTA | 694 | 0.90 (0.86–0.93) | 0.39 (0.34–0.44) | 1.54 (1.25–1.90) | 0.22 (0.10–0.50) | 6.91 (2.80–17.03) |
| SE | 115 | 0.77 (0.61–0.88) | 0.75 (0.63–0.85) | 3.00 (1.94–4.65) | 0.34 (0.17–0.66) | 9.51 (3.87–23.38) |
| FFRCT | 609 | 0.90 (0.85–0.93) | 0.71 (0.65–0.75) | 3.34 (1.78–6.25) | 0.16 (0.11–0.23) | 21.94 (9.07–53.07) |
| ICA | 954 | 0.69 (0.65–0.75) | 0.67 (0.63–0.71) | 2.54 (1.25–5.13) | 0.46 (0.39–0.55) | 5.46 (2.54–11.76) |
| MRI | 70 | 0.90 (0.75–0.97) | 0.94 (0.79–0.99) | 10.31 (3.14–33.88) | 0.12 (0.05–0.30) | 92.15 (16.35–519.42) |
| SPECT | 110 | 0.70 (0.59–0.80) | 0.78 (0.68–0.87) | 3.40 (1.04–11.08) | 0.40 (0.19–0.83) | 9.06 (1.48–55.54) |
| Vessel-based analysis | ||||||
| CCTA | 2085 | 0.91 (0.88–0.93) | 0.58 (0.55–0.61) | 2.09 (1.74–2.49) | 0.17 (0.12–0.24) | 13.15 (8.47–20.41) |
| SE | NA | – | – | – | – | – |
| FFRCT | 1050 | 0.83 (0.78–0.87) | 0.78 (0.78–0.81) | 4.02 (1.84–8.80) | 0.22 (0.13–0.35) | 19.15 (5.73–63.95) |
| ICA | 3196 | 0.71 (0.69–0.74) | 0.66 (0.64–0.68) | 2,26 (1.71–2.99) | 0.45 (0.36–0.56) | 5.34 (3.38–8.45) |
| MRI | 371 | 0.91 (0.84–0.95) | 0.85 (0.79–0.89) | 6.16 (2.10–18.02) | 0.11 (0.06–0.20) | 73.53 (22.17–243.82) |
| SPECT | 470 | 0.57 (0.49–0.64) | 0.75 (0.69–0.80) | 2.34 (1.61–3.42) | 0.55 (0.44–0.69) | 4.72 (2.99–7.45) |
PLR, positive likelihood ratio; NLR, negative likelihood ratio; DOR, diagnostic odds ratio; NA, not available. Other abbreviations are as in Figure .
aNumber of patients might differ from the total patients included in this meta-analysis, due to the difference in studies included in either the patient or vessel-based analysis (Supplementary material online, provide detailed information on the studies included in the patient- and vessel-based analysis).