| Literature DB >> 34783875 |
Wiebe G Knol1,2, Judit Simon3, Annemarie M Den Harder4, Margreet W A Bekker1, Willem J L Suyker5, Linda M de Heer5, Pim A de Jong4, Tim Leiner4, Béla Merkely3, Miklós Pólos6, Gabriel P Krestin2, Eric Boersma7, Peter J Koudstaal8, Pál Maurovich-Horvat3,9, Ad J J C Bogers1, Ricardo P J Budde10.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To evaluate if routine screening for aortic calcification using unenhanced CT lowers the risk of stroke and alters the surgical approach in patients undergoing general cardiac surgery compared with standard of care (SoC).Entities:
Keywords: Cardiac surgical procedures; Preoperative care; Radiography; Stroke; Tomography, X-ray computed
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34783875 PMCID: PMC8921026 DOI: 10.1007/s00330-021-08360-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Radiol ISSN: 0938-7994 Impact factor: 7.034
Fig. 1Study flowchart. Screening data was available in two of the three participating centers
Baseline characteristics
| Characteristic | SoC group ( | SoC + CT group ( |
|---|---|---|
| Age (years, mean ± SD; range) | 66 ± 11; (23—88) | 66 ± 10; (26 – 98) |
| Sex | ||
| | 74.1% (321/433) | 69.9% (300/429) |
| | 25.9% (112/433) | 30.1% (129/429) |
| Diabetes | ||
| | 15.5% (67) | 11.9% (51) |
| | 7.6% (33/433) | 6.8% (29/429) |
| Hypertension | 65.3% (282/432) | 68.3% (291/426) |
| Smoking | ||
| | 12.3% (52/424) | 13.7% (57/417) |
| | 41.7% (177/424) | 37.6% (157/417) |
| COPD | 10.6% (46/433) | 13.5% (58/429) |
| Chronic kidney disease | 15.9% (69/433) | 17.0% (73/429) |
| Dialysis | 0.9% (4/433) | 0.2% (1/429) |
| Peripheral obstructive arterial disease | 6.7% (29/433) | 5.6% (24/429) |
| Prior cerebrovascular accident | 5.8% (25/433) | 5.6% (24/429) |
| Prior transient ischemic attack | 5.1% (22/433) | 5.8% (25/429) |
| Atrial fibrillation | 16.4% (71/433) | 17.8% (76/429) |
| EuroScore II (in %, median [Q1 –Q3]) | 1.31% [0.85–2.29%] | 1.35% [0.88–2.27%] |
| Prior myocardial infarction | 19.0% (82/432) | 16.3% (70/429) |
| Recent myocardial infarction | 3.7% (16/430) | 4.2% (18/428) |
| Reoperation | 1.6% (7/432) | 2.8% (12/428) |
| NYHA classification | ||
| | 20.0% (82/410) | 19.9% (82/413) |
| | 54.1% (222/410) | 50.8% (210/413) |
| | 21.0% (86/410) | 26.6% (110/413) |
| | 4.9% (20/410) | 2.7% (11/413) |
No significant differences were present between groups after randomization. Proportions are given as % (n)
COPD chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, NYHA New York Heart Association
Type of surgery planned
| Type of surgery | SoC group | SoC + CT group |
|---|---|---|
| Isolated CABG | 39.5% (171/433) | 37.1% (159/429) |
| Isolated AVRa | 21.0% (91/433) | 25.4% (109/429) |
| AVR + CABG | 11.3% (49/433) | 8.6% (37/429) |
| Mitral valve surgerya | 17.6% (76/433) | 20.7% (89/429) |
| Other | 10.6% (46/433) | 7.9% (34/429) |
No significant differences were present between groups after randomization. Proportions are given as % (n). A full list of other types of surgery is provided in the Supplementary Data
aA minimally invasive surgical approach was used in four patients: mitral valve surgery (2 patients), septal defect closure (1 patient), and aortic valve replacement (1 patient)
AVR aortic valve replacement, CABG coronary artery bypass grafting
Results of CXR and CT scan
| Imaging characteristic | SoC group | SoC + CT group |
|---|---|---|
| Any aortic calcification on CXR | 53.2% (230/432) | 53.4% (229/429) |
| Ascending aortic calcification on CXR | 13.0% (56/432) | 12.6% (54/429) |
| CT radiation dose (mSv), median [Q1 – Q3] | 1.68 [0.79–5.62] ( | 0.68 [0.51–0.80] |
| Percentage of CT scans < 1 mSv | 28.6% (8/28) | 83.1% (324/390) |
| Any calcification at ascending aorta on CT | 51.4% (18/35) | 28.4% (108/380) |
| Agatston score at ascending aorta (out of participants with calcification), median [Q1 – Q3] | 638 [66 – 2225] ( | 293 [92 – 842] ( |
| Calcification > 1 cm at ascending aorta on CT | 25.7% (9/35) | 11.6% (45/389) |
| Ventral calcification at ascending aorta on CT | 14.3% (5/35) | 17.2% (67/389) |
| Calcification at ascending aorta at least half the circumference on CT | 5.7% (2/35) | 10.0% (39/389) |
| Any calcification in the aortic arch on CT | 94.1% (32/34) | 69.9% (265/379) |
| Agatston score at the aortic arch (out of participants with calcification), median [Q1 – Q3] | 1298 [627 – 3067] ( | 852 [289 – 2119] ( |
Proportions are given as % (n)
CXR chest radiograph, SoC standard of care
aAn Agatston-score could not be calculated for 8 participants in the SoC group and 6 participants in the SoC + CT group
Study endpoints
| Endpoint | SoC group ( | SoC + CT group ( | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Perioperative stroke | 1.2% [0.4 – 2.7%] (5/433) | 2.1% [1.0 – 3.9%] (9/429) | 0.27 |
| Change of surgical approach | 2.8% [1.4 – 4.8%] (12/433) | 4.0% [2.3 – 6.3%] (17/429) | 0.35 |
| Change to off-pump surgery | 2 | 1 | |
| Additional concomitant surgery | 2 | 2 | |
| Change to percutaneous approach (TAVR or PCI) | 5 | 11 | |
| Postponement of surgery | 0 | 2 | |
| Cancellation of surgery | 3 | 1 | |
| Delirium | 7.2% [4.9 – 10.0%] (31/433) | 7.0% [4.8 – 9.8%] (30/429) | 0.92 |
| In-hospital mortality | 0.9% [0.3 – 2.4%] (4/433) | 1.4% [0.5 – 3.0%] (6/429) | 0.55 |
| Hospital stay (days, median [Q1-Q3]) | 6 [4–7] | 6 [4–7] | 0.53 |
Endpoints in both study arms, based on an intention to treat principle. Proportions are given as % [95% confidence interval] (n)
PCI percutaneous coronary intervention, SoC standard of care, TAVR transcatheter aortic valve replacement
Fig. 2Reasons for changing the surgical approach in both groups
Fig. 3Sample images of CXR and noncontrast CT. Sample images of a 70-year-old male patient whose surgical approach was changed from surgical to transcatheter aortic valve replacement. 1: The posterior-anterior (1a) and lateral (1b) views of the preoperative CXR 2: Ascending aortic calcifications on the axial (2a) and sagittal (2b) plane of the noncontrast CT. The arrow in panel 1a indicates the aortic knob, where only modest calcification is seen. The arrow in panel 1b point at the ventral boundary of the aorta, where no clear calcifications seem to be present. The arrows in panels 2a and 2b indicate the extensive ventral calcifications, hampering aortic manipulation in this area