| Literature DB >> 29197024 |
Behzad Sharif1,2,3, Manish Motwani4, Reza Arsanjani4,5, Rohan Dharmakumar6,7,8, Mathews B Fish9, Guido Germano4,8, Debiao Li6,7,8, Daniel S Berman6,4,8, Piotr Slomka10,11,12.
Abstract
In the context of myocardial perfusion imaging (MPI) with cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR), there is ongoing debate on the merits of using technically complex acquisition methods to achieve whole-heart spatial coverage, rather than conventional 3-slice acquisition. An adequately powered comparative study is difficult to achieve given the requirement for two separate stress CMR studies in each patient. The aim of this work is to draw relevant conclusions from SPECT MPI by comparing whole-heart versus simulated 3-slice coverage in a large existing dataset. SPECT data from 651 patients with suspected coronary artery disease who underwent invasive angiography were analyzed. A computational approach was designed to model 3-slice MPI by retrospective subsampling of whole- heart data. For both whole-heart and 3-slice approaches, the diagnostic performance and the stress total perfusion deficit (TPD) score-a measure of ischemia extent/severity-were quantified and compared. Diagnostic accuracy for the 3-slice and whole-heart approaches were similar (area under the curve: 0.843 vs. 0.855, respectively; P = 0.07). The majority (54%) of cases missed by 3-slice imaging had primarily apical ischemia. Whole-heart and 3-slice TPD scores were strongly correlated (R2 = 0.93, P < 0.001) but 3-slice TPD showed a small yet significant bias compared to whole-heart TPD (- 1.19%; P < 0.0001) and the 95% limits of agreement were relatively wide (- 6.65% to 4.27%). Incomplete ventricular coverage typically acquired in 3-slice CMR MPI does not significantly affect the diagnostic accuracy. However, 3-slice MPI may fail to detect severe apical ischemia and underestimate the extent/severity of perfusion defects. Our results suggest that caution is required when comparing the ischemic burden between 3-slice and whole-heart datasets, and corroborate the need to establish prognostic thresholds specific to each approach.Entities:
Keywords: Cardiac magnetic resonance; Coronary artery disease; Myocardial ischemia; Myocardial ischemic burden; Myocardial perfusion imaging; Whole heart imaging
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29197024 PMCID: PMC5859027 DOI: 10.1007/s10554-017-1265-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Cardiovasc Imaging ISSN: 1569-5794 Impact factor: 2.357
Fig. 1Schematic description of the total perfusion deficit (TPD) score for analysis of SPECT myocardial perfusion imaging (MPI). TPD is a continuous measure of the combined extent and severity of perfusion defects, designed to be equivalent to the visual summed segmental score. Derived automatically from SPECT MPI data using the Quantitative Perfusion SPECT (QPS) software, presence and severity of stress-induced hypoperfusion is measured relative to gender-matched normal perfusion limits for each pixel on the polar map (using a mean absolute deviation threshold of 3.0). Whole-heart stress TPD is computed by integrating the stress hypoperfusion severities across the left ventricular polar map, expressed in a percentage format
Fig. 2Demonstration of the 3-slice binary mask (blue color) superimposed on the whole-heart LV polar map used in the QPS software for retrospective analysis of SPECT MPI data. Two consecutive rings from the whole-heart polar map in the QPS software were combined (thickness ≈ 10 mm) at the center of apical, mid ventricular, and basal positions (defined by the AHA 17-segment LV model), respectively. To simulate 3-slice imaging using the SPECT MPI datasets, this binary mask was applied to the whole-heart data (polar map) in order to select only 3 short-axis slices as conventionally acquired in magnetic resonance MPI (apical, mid ventricular, and basal slices). LV left ventricular, MPI myocardial perfusion imaging. (Color figure online)
Characteristics of the studied patient population
| Characteristic | Patients |
|---|---|
| Number | 651 |
| Age (years) | 64 ± 12 |
| Male (%) | 57 |
| Female (%) | 43 |
| Mean body mass index ± SD | 31 ± 6.3 |
| Diabetes mellitus (%) | 27 |
| Hypertension (%) | 64 |
| Hyperlipidemia (%) | 51 |
| Smoking (%) | 19 |
| Exercise SPECT (%) | 34 |
| Adenosine SPECT (%) | 66 |
| Mean ejection fraction ± SD (%) | 61.7 ± 12.2 |
| ICA results (disease defined as ≥ 70% stenosis) | |
| No disease | 187 (29%) |
| LAD disease | 280 (43%) |
| LCX disease | 169 (26%) |
| RCA disease | 247 (38%) |
| 1-vessel disease‡ | 232 (36%) |
| 2-vessel disease‡ | 127 (19%) |
| 3-vessel disease‡ | 70 (11%) |
A total of 651 SPECT myocardial perfusion imaging studies were analyzed. All patients underwent correlative invasive coronary angiography (ICA)
LAD left anterior descending artery, LCX left circumflex artery, RCA right coronary artery, SD standard deviation, SPECT single-photon emission computed tomography
‡Vessel refers to one of the major epicardial arteries (left main, LAD, LCX, or RCA)
Fig. 3Comparison of the diagnostic accuracy of whole-heart myocardial perfusion imaging (MPI) versus 3-slice MPI with invasive coronary angiography (ICA) as the reference. a Receiver-operating characteristic (ROC) curves corresponding to whole-heart imaging (using the whole-heart TPD scores) versus 3-slice imaging (using the 3-slice TPD scores) for detection of significant CAD, defined as ≥ 70% coronary stenosis (any main epicardial vessel or branches with diameter ≥ 2 mm) based on ICA (n = 651). b The area under the ROC curves (AUCs) for whole-heart imaging and 3-slice imaging are 0.855 and 0.843, respectively (P = 0.07), indicating a statistically insignificant difference in terms of diagnostic performance. The 95% confidence interval corresponding to each AUC is also provided in panel (b). CAD coronary artery disease, TPD total perfusion deficit
Fig. 4Example stress SPECT MPI data for a case wherein ischemia is detected on the basis of the whole-heart TPD score but 3-slice TPD measurement fails to detect the severe ischemia. a Polar map with raw perfusion data; b automatically analyzed whole-heart polar maps generated in the QPS software (whole-heart stress TPD = 6.0%). The presented case is the stress MPI data for a 58-year-old female patient showing a severe apical perfusion defect, which is consistent with her invasive angiography results that indicated 90% LAD stenosis. In b, the measured perfusion defect region is shown in black and the numbers in each segment indicate the corresponding defect extent (in percentage) for that segment. The 3-slice stress TPD (computed from the conventional short-axis slice positions as shown in Fig. 2) was 0.9%, which is below the 3% abnormality threshold. LAD left anterior descending, MPI myocardial perfusion imaging, TPD total perfusion deficit
Fig. 5Evaluation of correlation and agreement between whole-heart versus 3-slice stress TPD scores in patients with significant CAD (≥ 70% stenosis; n = 464). a Scatter plot and linear regression of whole-heart TPD against 3-slice TPD showing a very strong correlation (R2 = 0.93, P < 0.001) but a noticeable intercept of 1.41% (95% CI: 1.01% to 1.80%) indicating the presence of a systematic bias. b Bland–Altman analysis demonstrates a moderate level of agreement between whole-heart and 3-slice TPD scores that decreases at higher TPD values (95% limits of agreement: − 6.65% to 4.27%), and a small but significant systematic bias of − 1.19% (P < 0.0001; 95% CI: − 1.45% to − 0.94%). CAD coronary artery disease, CI confidence interval, TPD total perfusion deficit