Abstract

Objectives: In the United States, the real-world feasibility and outcome of using fractional flow reserve from coronary computed tomography angiography (FFRCT) is unknown. We sought to determine whether a strategy that combined coronary computed tomography angiography (CTA) and FFRCT could safely reduce the need for invasive coronary angiography (ICA), as compared to coronary CTA alone. Methods: The study included 387 consecutive patients with suspected CAD referred for coronary CTA with selective FFRCT and 44 control patients who underwent CTA alone. Lesions with 30–90% diameter stenoses were considered of indeterminate hemodynamic significance and underwent FFRCT. Nadir FFRCT ≤ 0.80 was positive. The rate of patients having ICA, revascularization and major adverse cardiac events were recorded. Results: Using coronary CTA and selective FFRCT, 121 patients (32%) had at least one vessel with ≥50% diameter stenosis; 67/121 (55%) patients had at least one vessel with FFRCT ≤ 0.80; 55/121 (45%) underwent ICA; and 34 were revascularized. The proportion of ICA patients undergoing revascularization was 62% (34 of 55). The number of patients with vessels with 30–50% diameter of stenosis was 90 (23%); 28/90 (31%) patients had at least one vessel with FFRCT ≤ 0.80; 8/90 (9%) underwent ICA; and five were revascularized. In our institutional practice, compared to coronary CTA alone, coronary CTA with selective FFRCT reduced the rates of ICA (45% vs. 80%) for those with obstructive CAD. Using coronary CTA with selective FFRCT, no major adverse cardiac events occurred over a mean follow-up of 440 days. Conclusion: FFRCT safely deferred ICA in patients with CAD of indeterminate hemodynamic significance. A high proportion of those who underwent ICA were revascularized.

Highlights

  • Identifying coronary artery disease (CAD) in patients with symptoms of chest pain is critical in clinical medicine

  • Functional-stress testing has served as the standard cardiovascular diagnostic practice for those with stable symptoms suspected to represent CAD, it has been reported to have low diagnostic yield at the time of invasive coronary angiography (ICA) [1]

  • Consecutive patients with suspected CAD referred for coronary computed tomography angiography (CTA) and fractional flow reserve (FFR) to be calculated noninvasively (FFRCT) between May 2015 and June 2017 without known CAD at Loyola University, Chicago (Chicago, IL USA) were included in the analysis

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Summary

Introduction

Identifying coronary artery disease (CAD) in patients with symptoms of chest pain is critical in clinical medicine. Functional-stress testing has served as the standard cardiovascular diagnostic practice for those with stable symptoms suspected to represent CAD, it has been reported to have low diagnostic yield at the time of invasive coronary angiography (ICA) [1]. A recent study of over 15,000 patients found that among patients referred for ICA, those with a positive stress test were less likely to have obstructive CAD and receive revascularization compared to those with either a negative stress test or no testing at all [4]. The ideal noninvasive test would identify patients with CAD and lesion-specific ischemia and strengthen the correlation between symptoms and anatomic findings. Coronary computed tomographic angiography (CTA) has emerged as the gold standard noninvasive test for detecting CAD [5,6,7,8]. FFRCT has been validated through a number of accuracy studies and a large clinical utility trial [16,17,18,19,20,21]

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