| Literature DB >> 33303383 |
Leslee J Shaw1, Ron Blankstein2, Jeroen J Bax3, Maros Ferencik4, Marcio Sommer Bittencourt5, James K Min6, Daniel S Berman7, Jonathon Leipsic8, Todd C Villines9, Damini Dey10, Subhi Al'Aref11, Michelle C Williams12, Fay Lin11, Lohendran Baskaran11, Harold Litt13, Diana Litmanovich14, Ricardo Cury15, Umberto Gianni11, Inge van den Hoogen16, Alexander R van Rosendael11, Matthew Budoff17, Hyuk-Jae Chang18, Harvey E Hecht19, Gudrun Feuchtner20, Amir Ahmadi19, Brian B Ghoshajra21, David Newby12, Y S Chandrashekhar22, Jagat Narula19.
Abstract
Coronary computed tomographic angiography (CCTA) provides a wealth of clinically meaningful information beyond anatomic stenosis alone, including the presence or absence of nonobstructive atherosclerosis and high-risk plaque features as precursors for incident coronary events. There is, however, no uniform agreement on how to identify and quantify these features or their use in evidence-based clinical decision-making. This statement from the Society of Cardiovascular Computed Tomography and North American Society of Cardiovascular Imaging addresses this gap and provides a comprehensive review of the available evidence on imaging of coronary atherosclerosis. In this statement, we provide standardized definitions for high-risk plaque (HRP) features and distill the evidence on the effectiveness of risk stratification into usable practice points. This statement outlines how this information should be communicated to referring physicians and patients by identifying critical elements to include in a structured CCTA report - the presence and severity of atherosclerotic plaque (descriptive statements, CAD-RADS™ categories), the segment involvement score, HRP features (e.g., low attenuation plaque, positive remodeling), and the coronary artery calcium score (when performed). Rigorous documentation of atherosclerosis on CCTA provides a vital opportunity to make recommendations for preventive care and to initiate and guide an effective care strategy for at-risk patients.Entities:
Keywords: Acute coronary syndrome; Atherosclerotic plaque; High risk plaque; Prevention; Prognosis
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33303383 DOI: 10.1016/j.jcct.2020.11.002
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cardiovasc Comput Tomogr ISSN: 1876-861X