Abstract

BackgroundStress cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) to screen for silent myocardial ischaemia in asymptomatic high risk patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus (DM) has never been performed, and its effectiveness is unknown. Our aim was to determine the feasibility of a screening programme using stress CMR by obtaining preliminary data on the prevalence of silent ischaemia caused by obstructive coronary artery disease (CAD) and quantify myocardial perfusion in asymptomatic high risk patients with type 2 diabetes.MethodsIn this prospective cohort study, we recruited 63 asymptomatic DM patients (mean age 66 years ± 4.4 years; 77.8% male); with Framingham risk score ≥ 20% from 3 sites from June 2017 to August 2018. Normal volunteers were recruited to determine normal global myocardial perfusion reserve index (MPRI). Adenosine stress CMR and global MPRI was performed and measured in all subjects. Positive stress CMR cases were referred for catheter coronary angiography (CCA) with/without fractional flow reserve (FFR) measurements. Positive CCA was defined as an FFR ≤ 0.8 or coronary narrowing ≥ 70%. Patients were followed up for major adverse cardiovascular events. Prevalence is presented as patient numbers and percentage. Mann–Whitney U test was used to compare global MPRI between patients and normal volunteers.Results13 patients had positive stress CMR with positive CCA (20.6% of patient population), while 9 patients with positive stress CMR examinations had a negative CCA. 5 patients (7.9%) had infarcts detected of which 2 patients had no stress perfusion defects. 12 patients had coronary artery stents inserted, whilst 1 patient declined stent placement. DM patients had lower global MPRI than normal volunteers (n = 7) (1.43 ± 0.27 vs 1.83 ± 0.31 respectively; p < 0.01). After a median follow-up of 653 days, there was no death, heart failure, acute coronary syndrome hospitalisation or stroke.Conclusion20.6% of asymptomatic DM patients (with Framingham risk ≥ 20%) had silent obstructive CAD. Furthermore, asymptomatic patients have reduced global MPRI than normal volunteers.Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov Registration Number: NCT03263728 on 28th August 2017; https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03263728.

Highlights

  • Stress cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) to screen for silent myocardial ischaemia in asymp‐ tomatic high risk patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus (DM) has never been performed, and its effectiveness is unknown

  • A study using stress CMR to screen for myocardial ischaemia with catheter coronary angiography confirmation followed by intervention has never been performed

  • * p < 0.05 asymptomatic DM patients had lower global myocardial perfusion reserve index (MPRI) compared to normal volunteers

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Summary

Introduction

Stress cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) to screen for silent myocardial ischaemia in asymp‐ tomatic high risk patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus (DM) has never been performed, and its effectiveness is unknown. Previous trials using coronary computed tomography angiograms or nuclear myocardial perfusion imaging to screen for asymptomatic obstructive CAD requiring intervention have been unsuccessful at reducing cardiovascular and all-cause mortality, when compared to optimised medical therapy where cardiovascular risk factors are treated to reduce cardiovascular complications [3, 4]. Possible reasons for this include, the choice of imaging modality, the intervention chosen (e.g. bare metal stents vs drug eluting stents), anatomical or fractional flow reserve (FFR) guidance and patient cohort (e.g. unselected DM patients vs high risk DM patients). The effectiveness of stress CMR to identify asymptomatic DM patients with silent ischaemia and its impact on patient outcomes are unknown

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