Abstract

Introduction:Chest pain is a common symptom for cardiology referrals. The ACC-AHA guidelines recommend exercise stress electrocardiography (TMX) as the initial diagnostic test. However, the TMX only has moderate sensitivity and non-diagnostic cases may require further stress imaging studies. In this study we aimed to look at the feasibility of combining coronary artery calcium (CAC) score with TMX to refine risk stratification. This may be an alternative to stress imaging in cases of non low-risk TMX, with the added advantage of short time turnaround time and low radiation dose.Methods:A total of 145 patients who presented consecutively to the National Heart Centre Singapore with chest pain were included in this study. These were intermediate risk patients with an average Duke Clinical Score of 38.8%. All patients underwent both TMX and computed tomography scan of the coronary arteries (CTCA) which also includes CAC. The primary outcome was defined as obstructive coronary artery disease i.e. >50% left main artery stenosis and/or >70% stenosis in other epicardial arteries.Results:The combination of TMX and CAC was comparable to stress imaging in detecting obstructive coronary artery disease. When added to TMX, CAC has an integrated discriminative improvement of 74.1%, achieved an area under the curve of 0.974 and adjusted R2 of 0.670 in detecting the primary outcome.Conclusion:The strategy of combining TMX and CAC is feasible in clinical practice to refine risk stratification in outpatients with intermediate risk chest pain. The calcium score readout also further guides therapy for primary prevention.Highlights:Treadmill exercise is one of the first line tests for cardiac chest pain work up.Non diagnostic test treadmill results requires further adjunctive tests.Downstream stress imaging causes delay in time to diagnosis.Coronary artery calcium scoring needs minimal preparation with fast turnaround time.Addition of coronary artery calcium to treadmill performs comparably to stress imaging.This is a feasible alternative to risk stratify non diagnostic treadmill tests and guide therapy for primary prevention.

Highlights

  • Chest pain is a common symptom for cardiology referrals

  • All patients were in the intermediate risk category as classified by the Duke clinical score

  • The Duke clinical score, duke treadmill score, CAC score and a positive myocardial perfusion scan were univariately significantly associated with the diagnosis of >70% epicardial artery stenosis on computed tomography scan of the coronary arteries (CTCA)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Chest pain is a common symptom for cardiology referrals. The ACC-AHA guidelines recommend exercise stress electrocardiography (TMX) as the initial diagnostic test. In this study we aimed to look at the feasibility of combining coronary artery calcium (CAC) score with TMX to refine risk stratification This may be an alternative to stress imaging in cases of non low-risk TMX, with the added advantage of short time turnaround time and low radiation dose. Methods: A total of 145 patients who presented consecutively to the National Heart Centre Singapore with chest pain were included in this study These were intermediate risk patients with an average Duke Clinical Score of 38.8%. Stress imaging modalities such as positron emission tomography (PET) and singlephoton emission computed tomography (SPECT) have better sensitivities of approximately 80% These tests help refine diagnostic accuracy but at cost of higher radiation exposure

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call