| Literature DB >> 29803987 |
Thomas J Ford1, David Corcoran2, Keith G Oldroyd3, Margaret McEntegart3, Paul Rocchiccioli3, Stuart Watkins4, Katriona Brooksbank2, Sandosh Padmanabhan2, Naveed Sattar2, Andrew Briggs5, Alex McConnachie6, Rhian Touyz2, Colin Berry7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Coronary angiography is performed to assess for obstructive coronary artery disease (CAD), but "nonobstructive CAD" is a common finding. Microvascular or vasospastic angina may be relevant, but routine confirmatory testing is not evidence based and thus rarely performed. AIM: The aim was to assess the effect of stratified medicine guided by coronary function testing on the diagnosis, treatment, and well-being of patients with angina and nonobstructive CAD.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29803987 PMCID: PMC6018570 DOI: 10.1016/j.ahj.2018.03.010
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am Heart J ISSN: 0002-8703 Impact factor: 4.749
Figure 1Diagnostic coronary angiography lacks sensitivity to detect coronary microvascular dysfunction.
The postmortem stereoarteriogram (left), obtained by infusion of a bismuth microsolution at physiological levels of blood pressure, reveals angiographically smooth coronary arteries with no evidence of CAD. The arteriogram reveals microvessels and innate collateral connections. Image reproduced with permission: William Fulton, MD Thesis (1963), University of Glasgow. The angiogram (right) of the left coronary tree is normal with no evidence of CAD. The microvessels are invisible on the standard angiogram. These images highlight that diagnostic coronary angiography lacks sensitivity in detecting coronary microvascular dysfunction. Clinicians lack information about microvascular and/or vasospastic angina that may lead to suboptimal treatment.
Definitions of coronary artery function disorders with linked therapy
| Endotype | Disorder of coronary artery function | Linked pharmacotherapy | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Microvascular angina | ↑ Microvascular resistance | IMR ≥25. IMR is a quantitative method for specifically assessing microvascular function independent resting hemodynamics. IMR = distal coronary pressure * transit time (average time for 3 saline bolus runs at hyperemia). | |
| ↓ Coronary vasorelaxation | CFR by thermodilution <2.0. This reflects the inability to increase coronary flow above 2 times the resting flow. | ||
| ↓ Microvasodilator capacity | Resistive reserve ratio <2.0. This reflects the vasodilator capacity of the microcirculation to change from baseline to hyperemia (resistance at rest divided by resistance at hyperemia). | ||
| Microvascular spasm | Angina during ACh infusion or bolus with typical ischemic ST-segment changes and epicardial coronary constriction <90% reduction in epicardial coronary artery diameter. Represents inappropriate susceptibility microvascular constriction. | ||
| Vasospastic angina | Epicardial spasm | ||
| Mixed MVA/VSA | CMD and epicardial vasospasm | Epicardial spasm plus any abnormality of | |
| Obstructive CAD | >50% lesion by diameter stenosis in epicardial artery >2.5 mm or an FFR ≤0.80 | ||
| Noncardiac | Nil | Exclusion of diffuse or obstructive epicardial coronary disease (FFR >0.8) without any of the following abnormalities of coronary function: CFR <2.0, IMR ≥25, or functional angina/spasm during ACh. | Cessation of antianginal therapy. stop antiplatelet and statin unless other indication |
ACh, Acetylecholine; CMD, coronary microvascular dysfunciton; VSA, vasospastic angina; GTN, glyceryl trinitrate; ESC, European Society of Cardiology.
Figure 2Schematic study design: flow diagram.
Eligibility criteria
| Inclusion criteria |
|---|
| Aged ≥18 y |
| A clinically indicated plan for invasive coronary angiography |
| Symptoms of angina (according to the Rose and Seattle angina questionnaires). |
| Exclusion criteria |
| A noncoronary indication for invasive angiography, eg, valve disease, hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy |
| During the angiogram: obstructive disease evident in a main coronary artery (diameter >2.5 mm), ie, a coronary stenosis >50% or an FFR ≤0.80. |
| Substudies: contraindication to contrast-enhanced CMR, eg, severe renal dysfunction (glomerular filtration rate <30 mL/min), non–CMR-compatible pacemaker or defibrillator. |
CMR, cardiovascular magnetic resonance.
Patients with obstructive disease are eligible to participate in the registry follow-up.
Secondary outcomes
| Secondary outcomes | Time frame | |
|---|---|---|
| Feasibility and safety | Feasibility of the stratified medicine approach defined by protocol compliance as measured by deviations from the protocol. | Up to 3 y |
| Enrolment rates, procedure duration, and protocol compliance relating to enrolment, crossover, integrity of blinding, adherence with therapy during follow-up, and compliance with follow-up assessments. | ||
| Procedure-related serious adverse events | Day 1 | |
| Diagnostic utility | Diagnosis of endotypes (disease strata): obstructive CAD, coronary vasospastic angina, microvascular angina, endothelial dysfunction (no angina), normal (noncardiac, normal coronary function results, no angina). | Day 1 |
| Impact of disclosure of the coronary function test results on the diagnosis and certainty of the diagnosis (diagnostic utility) | ||
| Clinical utility | Impact of disclosure of the coronary function test results on medical decisions (including treatment and investigations) and to compare these decisions against medical decisions formed by an independent panel of experts (reference data set). | Day 1 |
| Assess the relationships between cardiovascular risk factors, reflected by validated risk scores (eg, ASSIGN, JBS3), and parameters of coronary function in medically managed patients. | ||
| Vascular function | To assess whether patients have abnormal peripheral vascular function (using in vitro wire myography studies of vascular function). | 42 d |
| Cardiac stress perfusion MRI | Assess the diagnostic accuracy of stress perfusion magnetic resonance (CMR) imaging for identification of endotypes based on reference tests of coronary function. | 42 d |
| Detection of clinically significant (actionable) incidental findings using magnetic resonance imaging. The incidental findings may be cardiac or noncardiac. | ||
| Detection of myocardial pathology using multiparametric CMR | ||
| Health status | Health status and symptoms will be assessed at baseline and again at 6 m, 12 m, and closeout using the SAQ. The secondary outcome is the within-subject change in SAQ score over time. | 6, 12, and 24 m and/or closeout up to 3 y |
| Assess the participants' general health status and self-reported quality of life using the EQ5D questionnaire. | ||
| Assess the participants' self-reported levels of anxiety and depression using the Patient Health Questionnaire-4 | ||
| Assess the participants' self-reported levels of treatment satisfaction using the Treatment Satisfaction Questionnaire for Medication | ||
| Assess the participants' perception of their illness using the brief Illness Perception Questionnaire | ||
| Assess the participants' self-reported activity during daily life (Duke Activity Status Index) and physical activity (International Physical Activity Questionnaire) | ||
| Obstructive disease registry | Health status and symptoms will be assessed using the SAQ and health status questionnaires for patients with obstructive disease entered into the registry. A comparison of mean within-subject change in the health status domains above will be made between the registry patients and the randomized study groups. | 6 m |
| Health economics | Assess resource utilization including primary and secondary care costs for tests, procedures and outpatient visits, and medicines between the randomized groups | Up to 36 m |
ASSIGN, ASSIGN score estimates a person's risk of developing cardiovascular disease developed for use in Scotland; JBS3, Joint British Societies recommendations on the prevention of Cardiovascular Disease (JBS3) is a calculator for cardiovascular disease risk.