| Literature DB >> 35608758 |
Aurelio Secinaro1, Lamia Ait-Ali2, Davide Curione1, Alberto Clemente3, Alberto Gaeta4, Andrea Giovagnoni5, Annalisa Alaimo6, Antonio Esposito7, Bertrand Tchana8, Camilla Sandrini9, Elena Bennati10, Emanuela Angeli11, Francesco Bianco12, Francesca Ferroni13, Francesca Pluchinotta14, Francesca Rizzo15, Francesco Secchi16,17, Gaia Spaziani10, Gianluca Trocchio18, Giuseppe Peritore19, Giovanni Puppini20, Maria Cristina Inserra21, Nicola Galea22, Nicola Stagnaro15, Paolo Ciliberti23, Placido Romeo21, Riccardo Faletti24, Simona Marcora25, Valentina Bucciarelli12, Luigi Lovato26, Pierluigi Festa2.
Abstract
Cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) and computed tomography (CCT) are advanced imaging modalities that recently revolutionized the conventional diagnostic approach to congenital heart diseases (CHD), supporting echocardiography and often replacing cardiac catheterization. Nevertheless, correct execution and interpretation require in-depth knowledge of all technical and clinical aspects of CHD, a careful assessment of risks and benefits before each exam, proper imaging protocols to maximize diagnostic information, minimizing harm. This position paper, written by experts from the Working Group of the Italian Society of Pediatric Cardiology and from the Italian College of Cardiac Radiology of the Italian Society of Medical and Interventional Radiology, is intended as a practical guide for applying CCT and CMR in children and adults with CHD, wishing to support Radiologists, Pediatricians, Cardiologists and Cardiac Surgeons in the multimodality diagnostic approach to these patients. The first part provides a review of the most relevant literature in the field, describes each modality's advantage and drawback, making considerations on the main applications, image quality, and safety issues. The second part focuses on clinical indications and appropriateness criteria for CMR and CCT, considering the level of CHD complexity, the clinical and logistic setting and the operator expertise.Entities:
Keywords: Cardiovascular computed tomography; Cardiovascular magnetic resonance; Congenital heart disease; Multimodality imaging; Pediatric cardiology
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35608758 PMCID: PMC9308607 DOI: 10.1007/s11547-022-01490-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Radiol Med ISSN: 0033-8362 Impact factor: 6.313
Fig. 1CCT 3D volume rendering images, sagittal view of a 54-year-old woman with bypass aortic coarctation palliation (a). CCT 3D volume rendering images of a double aortic arch with 3D rendering of airways structures (asterisks) showing anatomical relationships between them and the vascular ring (b). CCT Cardiovascular computed tomography, 3D tridimensional
Fig. 2CMR quantification of biventricular volumes through semiautomatic delineation of epicardial and endocardial borders in a ventricle base to apex stack of short axis slides: the absence of geometric assumptions and panoramicity assures optimal reproducibility and high measurement accuracy
Risk and hazard comparison between CMR and CCT
| Risks and hazards | CMR | CCT |
|---|---|---|
| Biological effects | Unknown cancer risk of non-ionizing EMF | Cancer risk of ionizing radiation |
| Genotoxic effects | Damage should be reversible | – |
| RF field | Heating/Burns | – |
| Gradient field | Loud noise/peripheral nerve stimulation/induced voltages in abandoned PM wires or long conducting implants | – |
| Main magnetic field | Magnetic force and torque on: | – |
| Fm external devices | Ferromagnetic projectiles (tools, beds, stretchers…) | – |
| Fm implanted devices | Electromagnetic field interactions with devices and artifacts | – |
| Sedation or general anesthesia | Limits intrinsic thermoregulation | – |
| Contrast medium | Not always necessary | Necessary |
| NSF | Allergic-like reactions | |
| CI renal failure | CI renal failure |
CCT cardiovascular computed tomography, CI contrast induced, CMR cardiovascular magnetic resonance, EMF electro-magnetic fields, Fm, ferromagnetic, NSF nephrogenic systemic fibrosis, PM pacemaker, RF radiofrequency
Advantages and disadvantages of CMR and CCT in CHD
| CMR | CCT | |
|---|---|---|
| Advantages | Combined functional and morphological information | Fast acquisition |
| Accurate ventricular volumes and vessel flow quantification | Good temporal resolution | |
| No ionizing radiation | Limited artifacts due to movement and fast heart-rates | |
| High Temporal resolution (up to 30 ms) | Highly detailed information on vascular anatomy | |
| Non-contrast scan | Accurate delineation of coronary anomalies | |
| 3D images feasible and accurate | Functional data (retrospective ECG-gated scan) | |
| Accurate information on vascular anatomy | ||
| Detection of coronary anomalies | ||
| Disadvantages | Longer scan time (from 40 min on) | Radiation exposure |
| Suboptimal imaging in case of arrhythmias | Suboptimal imaging in case of arrhythmias | |
| More susceptible to respiratory artifacts | Iodinated contrast always needed | |
| Need for general anesthesia for non-cooperative pts | ||
| Limited access for metallic implants or claustrophobia | ||
| Gadolinium adverse events (NSF, Brain Deposits) | ||
| Temporal resolution | ~ 30 ms | 66–75 ms (DSCT) |
| 140–150 ms (single source CT) | ||
| Spatial resolution | ~ 0.9–1 mm (voxel size) | ~ 0.4 × 0.4 × 0.6 mm |
CCT cardiovascular computed tomography, CMR cardiovascular magnetic resonance, DSCT dual source computed tomography, NSF nephrogenic systemic fibrosis
Fig. 330-year-old female with repaired Tetralogy of Fallot (ToF). CMR SSFP image, RVOT sagittal plane shows a slightly reduced homograft caliber with post-stenosis pulmonary artery dilation (a). 21-year-old male after aortic coarctation and VSD repair. MRA MPR axial image shows residual pulmonary bifurcation and proximal branch arteries stenosis post pulmonary banding (b). 31-year-old female with repaired ToF. CMR SSFP 4-chamber view demonstrates right ventricular dilatation (c). CMR LGE short-axis view shows RVOT post-surgical scar (arrows) (d). CMR cardiovascular magnetic resonance, Hg Homograft, La left atrium, LPA left pulmonary artery, LGE late gadolinium enhancement, Lv left ventricle, MPA pulmonary artery, MPR Multiplanar Reformation, MRA Magnetic Resonance Angiography, Ra right atrium, RPA right pulmonary artery, Rv right ventricle, RVOT right ventricle outflow tract, SSFP Steady State Free Precession, VSD Ventricular septal defect
Fig. 431-year-old male with a repaired ToF. CCT MPR image, RVOT sagittal plane: infundibular and pulmonary stenosis (a), note the anatomical detail of valvular cusp (arrow). 16-year-old female with a cTGA after Arterial Switch operation. CCT 3D volume rendering images demonstrate high resolution post-surgical anatomy (b), LCA reimplantation kinking and stretching (black arrow) is well depicted (c). 2-year-old child with coronary artery fistula. CCT 3D volume rendering image optimally shows the fistula (white arrows) between LAD artery and Rv chamber (d). Ao Ascending aorta, CCT Cardiovascular computed tomography, cTGA Complete transposition of the great arteries, 3D Tridimensional, D Diagonal artery, LAD Left Anterior descending artery, LCA Left coronary artery, Lv Left ventricle, MPA Main pulmonary artery, MPR Multiplanar Reformation, RPA Right pulmonary artery, Rv Right ventricle, ToF Tetralogy of Fallot
Fig. 534-year-old male with Mustard repair of c-TGA and loop recorder implantation. CMR SSFP 4-chamber view shows atrio-ventricular concordance and the pulmonary baffle (asterisk). The ventricular apex is canceled by artifacts (a). 18-year-old Fontan patient with pacemaker implantation. CCT axial plane displays the wires and the pacemaker generator (arrows) with minimal artifacts upon thoracic aorta (b). Adult male patient with Mustard repair of c-TGA and baffle leakage. CMR SSFP 4-chamber images show the flow turbulence (arrow) before the treatment (c) and a huge artifact (arrow) caused by the metallic closure device (d). Adult male with ASD after endovascular closure. CCT axial image well depicts the closure device without limitations to cardiac chambers visualization (e). CCT cardiovascular computed tomography, CMR cardiovascular magnetic resonance, cTGA complete transposition of the great arteries, SSFP Steady State Free Precession, La left atrium, Lv left ventricle, Ra right atrium, Rv right ventricle
levels of recommendation of CMR/CCT in CHD
| Level 1 | Level 2 | Level 3 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Definition | |||
| Refer to | |||
| General indication | Non-complex CHD in cooperative patients | Follow-up of CHD in adolescents and adults | Complex CHD pre/post-repair (e.g., univentricular heart Fontan, atrial switch, isomerism) |
| Native or repaired Aortic Coarctation | Non-complex CHD in children | Fragile patients | |
| Anatomy of PVR, anatomy of Ao Arch | Conotruncal anomalies post-repair (TOF, TGA post arterial switch, Truncus…) | Anesthesiologic difficulties (Williams syndrome patients requiring anesthesia) | |
| Pulmonary vascular disorders anatomy of ASD, VSD | Post Ross intervention | Technical difficulties (highly specific sequences/protocols/facilities) | |
| Ebstein/tricuspid dysplasia | |||
| Simple shunt quantification | |||
| Semilunar valve regurgitation | |||
| Airway/lungs anomalies | |||
| Coronary anomalies* |
Ao aortic ASD, atrial septal defect, AV artero-venous, CHD congenital heart disease, PVR pulmonary venous return, VSD ventricular septal defect, TOF Tetralogy of Fallot, TGA transposition of the great arteries. The choice of CMR versus CCT depends on the information required for patient's management and local availability. When both can provide the same information with no added risks (i.e., anesthesia), CMR is preferable
*At least 64-rows or superior CT technology is required. Specific low-radiation dose CT equipment is highly preferable
Fig. 6Overview of some of the emergent imaging applications in CHD. T2 map in a short axis basal view of the ventricles in a RV dilatation due to left-to-right shunt (a). High complexity CHD 3D printing model: supero-inferior ventricle with a complex relationship of the ventricular septal defect (b). 4D flow reconstruction of thoracic aorta: flow streamlines panoramic sagittal oblique visualization in a bicuspid aortic valve patient. Color-coding of different flow velocities (c)
| Level 1 | Level 2 | Level 3 | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Levels of recommendation of CMR/CCT in CHD | |||
| Definition | |||
| Refer to | |||
|
| |||