| Literature DB >> 27926497 |
Yu Chen1, Yuqi Fan1, Zhaofang Yin1, Huili Zhang1, Yang Zhang1, Zhihua Han1, Changqian Wang1.
Abstract
Coronary computed tomographic angiography (CCTA) can image the coronary vasculature rapidly and detect the presence and severity of luminal stenosis accurately. However, whether CCTA based care strategy could gain more benefits than conventional strategy with functional tests for patients with low-to-intermediate risk chest pain remains unknown. In this study we performed a meta-analysis to compare the clinical efficacy of CCTA versus conventional strategy. Eight randomized controlled trials with 14749 patients were finally included in this review after database searching. Compared with conventional strategy, CCTA significantly increased the rates of invasive coronary angiography (RR 1.44; 95% CI 1.28 to 1.63) and revascularization (RR 1.94; 95% CI 1.65 to 2.29), but did not change the rates of major adverse cardiovascular events (RR 1.10; 95% CI 0.92 to 1.30), death (RR 0.95; 95% CI 0.64 to 1.40) and hospital readmission (RR 0.96; 95% CI 0.66 to 1.40). Consequently, compared with conventional strategy, CCTA seemed not to improve clinical outcomes for patients with low-to-intermediate risk chest pain.Entities:
Keywords: chest pain; coronary computed tomographic angiography; coronary heart disease; functional test; meta-analysis
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 27926497 PMCID: PMC5356783 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.13782
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Figure 1Flow chart of study selection
Main characteristics of the included RCTs
| RCTs | Age (mean) | Male | HTN | DM | Dyslipidemia | Smoking | Family history | Follow up | Previous CAD | Functional test type |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Goldstein 2007 [12] | 50 | 50% | 39% | 10% | 36% | 18% | 42% | 6m | 0% | MPI |
| Goldstein 2011 [13] | 50 | 46% | 37% | 7% | 33% | 22% | 30% | 6m | 0% | MPI |
| Hoffman 2012 [14] | 54 | 53% | 54% | 17% | 46% | 50% | 27% | 1m | 0% | MPI/sECG/sUCG |
| Linde 2013 [15] | 56 | 57% | 42% | 11% | 38% | 64% | 25% | 4m | 14% | MPI/sECG |
| Hamilton-Craig 2014[11] | 52 | 58% | 31% | 7% | 25% | 23% | 33% | 12m | 0% | sECG |
| Hollander 2015[9] | 49 | 46% | 51% | 16% | 28% | 32% | 29% | 12m | NA | MPI/sECG/sUCG |
| Douglas 2015[8] | 61 | 47% | 65% | 21% | 68% | 16% | 32% | 25m | 0% | MPI/sECG/sUCG |
| Levsky 2015[10] | 57 | 37% | 72% | 32% | 51% | 15% | NA | 12m | 0% | MPI |
Abbreviations: RCT: randomized controlled trial; CAD: coronary atherosclerosis heart disease; HTN: hypertension; DM: diabetes mellitus;MPI: myocardial perfusion imaging; sECG: stress electrocardiograph; sUCG: stress echocardiography; NA: not applicable.
Figure 2Risk of bias graph
Figure 3Comparisons of CCTA versus conventional strategy on MACE
Figure 4Comparisons of CCTA versus conventional strategy on death
Figure 5Comparisons of CCTA versus conventional strategy on hospital readmission
Figure 6Comparisons of CCTA versus conventional strategy on ICA
Figure 7Comparisons of CCTA versus conventional strategy on revascularization
Subgroup analyses
| Short-term Follow-up | Long-term Follow-up | |
|---|---|---|
| MACE | 1.41 (0.82, 1.59) | 1.06 (0.74, 1.53) |
| Death | zero events | 0.95 (0.64, 1.40) |
| Hospital readmission | 0.72 (0.38, 1.36) | 1.09 (0.60, 1.98) |
| ICA | 1.38 (1.09, 1.76) | 1.40 (0.96, 2.03) |
| Revascularization | 1.94 (1.33, 2.84) | 1.91 (1.45, 2.52) |
Figure 8Funnel plots of MACE for CCTA versus conventional strategy