| Literature DB >> 34162405 |
Elbert Edy1, Alastair J Rankin2,3, Patrick B Mark2,3, Giles H Roditi2,4, Jennifer S Lees2,3, Pauline Hall Barrientos5, Rosemary Woodward6, Sokratis Stoumpos2,3, Ioannis Koktzoglou7,8, Robert R Edelman7,9, Aleksandra Radjenovic2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Vascular calcification is an independent predictor of cardiovascular disease in patients with chronic kidney disease. Computed tomography (CT) is the gold-standard for detecting vascular calcification. Radial volumetric-interpolated breath-hold examination (radial-VIBE), a free-breathing gradient-echo cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) sequence, has advantages over CT as it is ionising radiation-free. However, its capability in detecting thoracic aortic calcification (TAC) has not been investigated. This study aims to compare radial-VIBE to CT for the detection of TAC in the descending aorta of patients with end-stage renal disease (ESRD) using semi-automated methods, and to investigate the association between TAC and coronary artery calcification (CAC).Entities:
Keywords: Cardiovascular disease; Computed tomography; End-stage renal disease; Magnetic resonance imaging; Radial volumetric interpolated breath-hold examination (radial-VIBE) sequence; Thoracic aortic calcification
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34162405 PMCID: PMC8223384 DOI: 10.1186/s12968-021-00769-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cardiovasc Magn Reson ISSN: 1097-6647 Impact factor: 5.364
Fig. 1Sagittal (a) radial-volumetric interpolated breath-hold examination (VIBE) cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) and (b) computed-tomography (CT) images of descending thoracic aorta. A 9 cm segment of thoracic aorta from the same patient is chosen on both CT and radial-VIBE images. Red horizontal lines mark the level of the top of the vertebra that is closest to the inferior surface of the heart. Yellow vertical lines correspond to 9 cm of thoracic aorta
Fig. 2Representative images of calcifications on CT (a, c) and radial-VIBE (b, d). Images a and b are axial slices; Images c and d are sagittal slices. Calcifications are indicated by the red arrows. For this participant, volume of calcification detected by CT = 835 mm3, radial-VIBE volume = 634 mm3
Characteristics of TICKER and ViKTORIES participants at baseline
| Characteristics | ViKTORIES N = 72 | TICKER N = 24 | Combined N = 96 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age, Mean ± SD* (year) | 57.9 ± 8.9 | 64.7 ± 1.86 | 59.6 (9.3) |
| Male sex (%) | 45 (62.8) | 15 (62.5) | 60 (66.7) |
| White race (%) | 70 (97.2) | 21 (87.5) | 91 (94.8) |
| Diabetes (%) | 18 (25) | 11 (45.8) | 29 (30.2) |
| Smoking status (%) | |||
| Non-smoker | 47 (65.3) | 18 (75.0) | 65 (67.7) |
| Ex-smoker | 19 (26.4) | 5 (20.8) | 24 (7.3) |
| Current smoker | 6 (8.3) | 1 (4.2) | 7 (25.0) |
| Previous cardiovascular disease† | 17 (23.6) | 11 (45.8) | 28 (29.2) |
| eGFR, mean ± SD (ml/min/1.73 m2)‡ | 52.5 ± 21.8 | – | – |
| Renal replacement therapy vintage (years) | |||
| Median | 7.10 | 1.96 | – |
| Interquartile range | 10.48 | 2.69 | – |
*SD denotes standard deviation
†Participants were considered to have previous cardiovascular disease if they had one or more of the following: history of ischaemic heart disease, heart failure, coronary revascularisation (including percutaneous coronary intervention and/or coronary artery bypass graft), stroke and/or transient ischaemic attack, and/or peripheral arterial disease
‡eGFR denotes estimated glomerular filtration rate
Fig. 3Scatterplot of thoracic aortic calcification volume measured by radial-VIBE against CT. Red solid line is the line of best fit and green dashed lines represent its 95% confidence intervals (CI); black dashed line is the line of unity. The linear regression equation and R-squared value are on the bottom right; Spearman’s rank correlation coefficient , with its 95% CI and p-value, are on the top left
Fig. 4Bland–Altman plot of difference in aortic calcification volume against mean calcification volume. Difference in calcification volume = radial volumetric interpolated breath-hold examination (radial-VIBE) minus CT volume. The linear regression equations for bias and its estimated regression based 95% limits of agreement (LOA) are on the top right. Blue solid line represents bias; green-dashed lines are the estimated regression based 95% LOA; black-dashed lines are the crude 95% LOA
Fig. 5Representative images of under-detection (a, b) and over-detection (d, e) on radial-VIBE compared to CT. Images a and b are axial slices of radial-VIBE and image C is an axial slice of CT from the same patient. Red arrows on images a and b indicate calcifications, which appear as hypointense voxels. Red areas on image b illustrate the voxels that are considered as calcifications by the segmentation algorithm. Images d and e are identical axial slices of radial-VIBE belonging to another patient, and image F is the corresponding CT slice. Red areas on image e are the voxels considered as calcifications by the segmentation algorithm, which are likely to be noise and not genuine calcifications. For these two patients, the subjective analysis deemed excellent agreement between radial-VIBE and CT, despite the quantitative analysis differing significantly