Literature DB >> 30253306

Quantitative 3D Analysis of Coronary Wall Morphology in Heart Transplant Patients: OCT-Assessed Cardiac Allograft Vasculopathy Progression.

Zhi Chen1, Michal Pazdernik2, Honghai Zhang1, Andreas Wahle1, Zhihui Guo1, Helena Bedanova3, Josef Kautzner2, Vojtech Melenovsky2, Tomas Kovarnik4, Milan Sonka5.   

Abstract

Cardiac allograft vasculopathy (CAV) accounts for about 30% of all heart-transplant (HTx) patient deaths. For patients at high risk for CAV complications after HTx, therapy must be initiated early to be effective. Therefore, new phenotyping approaches are needed to identify such HTx patients at the earliest possible time. Coronary optical coherence tomography (OCT) images were acquired from 50 HTx patients 1 and 12 months after HTx. Quantitative analysis of coronary wall morphology used LOGISMOS segmentation strategy to simultaneously identify three wall-layer surfaces for the entire pullback length in 3D: luminal, outer intimal, and outer medial surfaces. To quantify changes of coronary wall morphology between 1 and 12 months after HTx, the two pullbacks were mutually co-registered. Validation of layer thickness measurements showed high accuracy of performed layer analyses with layer thickness measures correlating well with manually-defined independent standard (Rautomated2 = 0.93, y=1.0x-6.2μm), average intimal+medial thickness errors were 4.98 ± 31.24 µm, comparable with inter-observer variability. Quantitative indices of coronary wall morphology 1 month and 12 months after HTx showed significant local as well as regional changes associated with CAV progression. Some of the newly available fully-3D baseline indices (intimal layer brightness, medial layer brightness, medial thickness, and intimal+medial thickness) were associated with CAV-related progression of intimal thickness showing promise of identifying patients subjected to rapid intimal thickening at 12 months after HTx from OCT-image data obtained just 1 month after HTx. Our approach allows quantification of location-specific alterations of coronary wall morphology over time and is sensitive even to very small changes of wall layer thicknesses that occur in patients following heart transplant.
Copyright © 2018 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  CAV prediction; CAV progression; Cardiac allograft vasculopathy (CAV); LOGISMOS; optical coherence tomography (OCT)

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 30253306      PMCID: PMC6237624          DOI: 10.1016/j.media.2018.09.003

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Med Image Anal        ISSN: 1361-8415            Impact factor:   8.545


  25 in total

1.  Fusion of angiography and intravascular ultrasound in vivo: establishing the absolute 3-D frame orientation.

Authors:  A Wahle; G P Prause; C von Birgelen; R Erbel; M Sonka
Journal:  IEEE Trans Biomed Eng       Date:  1999-10       Impact factor: 4.538

2.  Geometrically correct 3-D reconstruction of intravascular ultrasound images by fusion with biplane angiography--methods and validation.

Authors:  A Wahle; P M Prause; S C DeJong; M Sonka
Journal:  IEEE Trans Med Imaging       Date:  1999-08       Impact factor: 10.048

3.  Cine coronary arteriography.

Authors:  F M SONES; E K SHIREY
Journal:  Mod Concepts Cardiovasc Dis       Date:  1962-07

4.  LOGISMOS--layered optimal graph image segmentation of multiple objects and surfaces: cartilage segmentation in the knee joint.

Authors:  Yin Yin; Xiangmin Zhang; Rachel Williams; Xiaodong Wu; Donald D Anderson; Milan Sonka
Journal:  IEEE Trans Med Imaging       Date:  2010-07-19       Impact factor: 10.048

5.  Coronary computed tomography angiography for the detection of cardiac allograft vasculopathy: a meta-analysis of prospective trials.

Authors:  Omar Wever-Pinzon; Jorge Romero; Iosif Kelesidis; James Wever-Pinzon; Carlos Manrique; Deborah Budge; Stavros G Drakos; Ileana L Piña; Abdallah G Kfoury; Mario J Garcia; Josef Stehlik
Journal:  J Am Coll Cardiol       Date:  2014-03-26       Impact factor: 24.094

6.  Optical coherence tomography.

Authors:  D Huang; E A Swanson; C P Lin; J S Schuman; W G Stinson; W Chang; M R Hee; T Flotte; K Gregory; C A Puliafito
Journal:  Science       Date:  1991-11-22       Impact factor: 47.728

7.  Detection of early changes in the coronary artery microstructure after heart transplantation: A prospective optical coherence tomography study.

Authors:  Tor Skibsted Clemmensen; Niels Ramsing Holm; Hans Eiskjær; Lars Jakobsen; Katrine Berg; Omeed Neghabat; Brian Bridal Løgstrup; Evald Høj Christiansen; Jouke Dijkstra; Christian Juhl Terkelsen; Michael Maeng; Steen Hvitfeldt Poulsen
Journal:  J Heart Lung Transplant       Date:  2017-10-23       Impact factor: 10.247

8.  Lumen loss in transplant coronary artery disease is a biphasic process involving early intimal thickening and late constrictive remodeling: results from a 5-year serial intravascular ultrasound study.

Authors:  H Tsutsui; K M Ziada; P Schoenhagen; A Iyisoy; W A Magyar; T D Crowe; J D Klingensmith; D G Vince; G Rincon; R E Hobbs; M Yamagishi; S E Nissen; E M Tuzcu
Journal:  Circulation       Date:  2001-08-07       Impact factor: 29.690

9.  Learning-Based Cost Functions for 3-D and 4-D Multi-Surface Multi-Object Segmentation of Knee MRI: Data From the Osteoarthritis Initiative.

Authors:  Satyananda Kashyap; Honghai Zhang; Karan Rao; Milan Sonka
Journal:  IEEE Trans Med Imaging       Date:  2018-05       Impact factor: 10.048

Review 10.  Allograft Vasculopathy: The Achilles' Heel of Heart Transplantation.

Authors:  Sharon Chih; Aun Yeong Chong; Lisa M Mielniczuk; Deepak L Bhatt; Rob S B Beanlands
Journal:  J Am Coll Cardiol       Date:  2016-07-05       Impact factor: 24.094

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  4 in total

1.  Heart rate and early progression of cardiac allograft vasculopathy: A prospective study using highly automated 3-D optical coherence tomography analysis.

Authors:  Michal Pazdernik; Dan Wichterle; Zhi Chen; Helena Bedanova; Josef Kautzner; Vojtech Melenovsky; Vladimir Karmazin; Ivan Malek; Peter Stiavnicky; Ales Tomasek; Eva Ozabalova; Jan Krejci; Andreas Wahle; Honghai Zhang; Tomas Kovarnik; Milan Sonka
Journal:  Clin Transplant       Date:  2020-01-09       Impact factor: 2.863

Review 2.  Automated Coronary Optical Coherence Tomography Feature Extraction with Application to Three-Dimensional Reconstruction.

Authors:  Harry J Carpenter; Mergen H Ghayesh; Anthony C Zander; Jiawen Li; Giuseppe Di Giovanni; Peter J Psaltis
Journal:  Tomography       Date:  2022-05-17

3.  Donor specific anti-HLA antibodies and cardiac allograft vasculopathy: A prospective study using highly automated 3-D optical coherence tomography analysis.

Authors:  Michal Pazdernik; Helena Bedanova; Zhi Chen; Josef Kautzner; Vojtech Melenovsky; Ivan Malek; Antonij Slavcev; Michaela Bartonova; Vladimir Karmazin; Tomas Eckhardt; Ales Tomasek; Eva Ozabalova; Tomas Kovarnik; Peter Wohlfahrt; Milan Sonka
Journal:  Transpl Immunol       Date:  2020-10-15       Impact factor: 2.032

4.  Optical coherence tomography and multiphoton microscopy offer new options for the quantification of fibrotic aortic valve disease in ApoE-/- mice.

Authors:  Anett Jannasch; Christian Schnabel; Roberta Galli; Saskia Faak; Petra Büttner; Claudia Dittfeld; Sems Malte Tugtekin; Edmund Koch; Klaus Matschke
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2021-03-12       Impact factor: 4.379

  4 in total

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