| Literature DB >> 30852545 |
Matthew Lee1, Sarah Moharem-Elgamal2,3, Rylan Beckingham1, Mark Hamilton3, Nathan Manghat3, Elena Giulia Milano4,5, Chiara Bucciarelli-Ducci1,3, Massimo Caputo1,3, Giovanni Biglino1,3,5.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the feasibility of three-dimensional (3D) printing models of coronary artery anomalies based on cardiac CT data and explore their potential for clinical applications.Entities:
Keywords: 3d printing; computed tomography; coronary arteries; coronary artery anomalies
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30852545 PMCID: PMC6430025 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2018-025227
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Acquisition and clinical information of patients and their scans for each case
| Cases | Acquisition information | Clinical information | ||||
| Scanner | Slice thickness (mm) | Detectors | Age (year) | Gender | Pathology | |
| Case 1 | Toshiba Aquilion ONE | 0.50 | 320 | 39 | M | Normal coronary anatomy |
| Case 2 | Toshiba Aquilion ONE | 0.50 | 320 | 13 | F | Multiple anomalous coronary arteries |
| Case 3 | Toshiba Aquilion ONE | 0.50 | 320 | 10 | F | Coronary fistula |
| Case 4 | Toshiba Aquilion ONE | 0.50 | 320 | 36 | M | Myocardial bridging of coronary artery |
| Case 5 | SOMATOM Definition AS+ | 0.75 | 128 | 48 | M | Tetralogy of Fallot; LCX and LAD come off separately from aorta |
| Case 6 | Toshiba Aquilion ONE | 0.50 | 320 | 18 | M | Transposition of great arteries; Abnormal circumflex artery |
| Case 7 | SOMATOM Definition AS+ | 0.75 | 128 | 52 | F | Kawasaki’s disease; left main stem coronary artery aneurysm |
| Case 8 | Toshiba Aquilion ONE | 0.50 | 320 | 56 | F | Anomalous left coronary artery from pulmonary artery |
LAD, left anterior descending artery; LCX, left circumflex artery.
Figure 1Illustrated diagram of study design. 2D, two-dimensional; 3D, three-dimensional; CAD, computer aided design.
Purposes for inclusion of various specialties within clinician group
| Party | Purpose for inclusion in feedback | How would three-dimensional (3D) modelling be useful to this party? |
| Researcher | Strong cardiovascular background but likely limited experience with cardiac imaging and congenital heart disease. | Appreciation of anatomy across different congenital coronary artery diseases; potential use of models in future research. |
| Cardiac surgeon | Experienced with cardiac anatomy, pathology and imaging; specific focus on potential use of models for preoperative assessment. | Understanding specific visuospatial anatomy abnormality; preoperative planning and practice. |
| Radiologist/imaging expert | Extremely experienced with imaging; assessing whether 3D models improve/complement appreciation from CT alone. | Visuospatial appreciation of abnormality in addition to what they see on scans. |
| Cardiologist | Experienced with cardiac anatomy, pathology and imaging; assessing whether models can improve/complement understanding. | Use for complex cases with difficult coronary anatomy; support management decisions based on measurable dimensions. |
Figure 2CT Scans and models of each case, with the blue arrows pointing to the abnormality on the CT. Case 1 (first row left 1.1–1.3): normal coronary anatomy; axial view progressing inferiorly (1.1, 1.2). Case 2 (first row right 2.1–2.3): multiple anomalous coronary arteries; axial view progressing inferiorly (2.1, 2.2). Case 3 (second row left 3.1–3.3): coronary fistula; sagittal view progressing right (3.1, 3.2). Case 4 (secondd row right 4.1–4.3): myocardial bridging; axial view progressing inferiorly (4.1, 4.2). Case 5 (third row left 5.1–5.3): separate left circumflex (LCX) and left anterior descending (LAD) arteries from the aorta, tetralogy of Fallot; coronal view (5.1) and axial view (5.2). Case 6 (third row right 6.1–6.3): transposition of great arteries with abnormal circumflex artery; axial view progressing inferiorly (6.1, 6.2). Case 7 (fourth row left 7.1–7.3): Kawasaki’s disease with left main stem coronary artery aneurysm; coronal view (7.1), axial view (7.2). Case 8 (fourth row right 8.1–8.3): anomalous left coronary artery from pulmonary artery; axial view progressing inferiorly (8.1, 8.2).
Details of each printed model
| Case | Reconstruction time (hours) | Resin volume (mL) | Layers (n) | Print duration |
| Case 1 | 4.5 | 139.2 | 3202 | 22 hours 51 min |
| Case 2 | 6 | 88.36 | 2498 | 14 hours 24 min |
| Case 3 | 5 | 81.71 | 2282 | 12 hours 43 min |
| Case 4 | 9 | 130.6 | 2626 | 29 hours 30 min |
| Case 5 | 7 | 214.3 | 3225 | 33 hours 05 min |
| Case 6 | 6.5 | 107.3 | 2683 | 17 hours 45 min |
| Case 7 | 4.5 | 76.70 | 2479 | 13 hours 45 min |
| Case 8 | 4 | 154.0 | 3334 | 25 hours 01 min |
Dominant themes emerging from comments received by clinicians and researchers
| Clinicians’ comments | n | Researchers’ comments | n |
| Enhanced visuospatial awareness using the model | 5 | Model was easier to understand after some guidance | 4 |
| It was useful to remove parts of structures to follow the coronary arteries | 3 | Removal of certain parts useful to give focus on the part of interest | 2 |
| Models would be effective for training of postgraduates and medical students | 3 | Use of colouring to delineate coronary arteries and abnormalities would make model more effective | 2 |
| Anomalous left coronary artery from pulmonary artery (case 8) was difficult to identify on the CT scans, but the anatomy was clear on the model | 3 | Understanding of anatomy improved as more models looked at | 1 |
| Use of colouring to delineate coronary arteries and abnormalities would make model more effective | 2 |
Evaluation of model usefulness
| Case | Diagnosis | Clarity of anatomy average | Clarity of abnormality average | Usefulness average | Effectiveness over CT scan | ||||||||
| Clinicians | Researchers | P value | Clinicians | Researchers | P value | Clinicians | Researchers | P value | Clinicians | Researchers | P value | ||
| 2 | Multiple anomalous coronaries | 8.9±1.5 | 6.9±1.5 | 0.021* | 9.4±1.4 | 6.9±1.5 | 0.006* | 9.2±1.4 | 6.7±1.6 | 0.009* | 4.6±0.7 | 3.9±0.6 | 0.036* |
| 3 | Coronary fistula | 7.5±3.0 | 7.0±1.1 | 0.520 | 7.9±2.7 | 6.5±1.8 | 0.108 | 8.0±2.8 | 7.1±1.1 | 0.142 | 4.1±0.8 | 4.0±0 | 0.607 |
| 4 | Bridging | 8.2±2.8 | 7.4±0.8 | 0.072 | 8.1±2.7 | 7.4±0.7 | 0.068 | 8.4±2.7 | 7.3±0.9 | 0.033* | 4.4±1.1 | 4.3±0.5 | 0.365 |
| 5 | Separate LCX and LAD from aorta | 9.2±1.4 | 7.2±1.2 | 0.010* | 9.2±1.4 | 7.0±1.8 | 0.010* | 9.1±1.4 | 7.0±1.6 | 0.013 | 4.2±0.7 | 3.8±0.7 | 0.158 |
| 6 | TGA, abnormal circumflex | 9.5±0.7 | 7.5±0.9 | 0.002* | 9.4±0.9 | 7.5±0.8 | 0.003* | 9.5±0.8 | 7.6±0.8 | 0.003* | 4.8±0.5 | 4.4±0.5 | 0.221 |
| 7 | Kawasaki’s aneurysm | 9.2±1.4 | 8.1±1.1 | 0.041* | 9.4±1.4 | 8.2±1.0 | 0.027* | 9.2±1.4 | 8.4±0.9 | 0.055 | 4.6±0.7 | 4.4±0.5 | 0.346 |
| 8 | ALCAPA | 10.0±0 | 7.8±0.7 | <0.001* | 9.9±0.3 | 7.8±1.0 | <0.001* | 9.9±0.3 | 8.1±0.6 | <0.001* | 5.0±0 | 4.3±0.5 | 0.005* |
* indicates statistical significance.
ALCAPA, anomalous left coronary artery from pulmonary artery; LAD, left anterior descending; LCX, left circumflex; TGA, transposition of the great arteries.
Figure 3Detail of Kawasaki model for appreciation of coronary aneurysm (indicated by yellow arrows), two different views (A and B).
Figure 4Detail of ALCAPA model for appreciation of coronary ostium in the pulmonary artery (A) and course of the left coronary artery (B), as indicated by the yellow arrows. ALCAPA, anomalous left coronary artery from pulmonary artery.