Abstract

SummaryBackgroundCoronary artery inflammation inhibits adipogenesis in adjacent perivascular fat. A novel imaging biomarker—the perivascular fat attenuation index (FAI)—captures coronary inflammation by mapping spatial changes of perivascular fat attenuation on coronary computed tomography angiography (CTA). However, the ability of the perivascular FAI to predict clinical outcomes is unknown.MethodsIn the Cardiovascular RISk Prediction using Computed Tomography (CRISP-CT) study, we did a post-hoc analysis of outcome data gathered prospectively from two independent cohorts of consecutive patients undergoing coronary CTA in Erlangen, Germany (derivation cohort) and Cleveland, OH, USA (validation cohort). Perivascular fat attenuation mapping was done around the three major coronary arteries—the proximal right coronary artery, the left anterior descending artery, and the left circumflex artery. We assessed the prognostic value of perivascular fat attenuation mapping for all-cause and cardiac mortality in Cox regression models, adjusted for age, sex, cardiovascular risk factors, tube voltage, modified Duke coronary artery disease index, and number of coronary CTA-derived high-risk plaque features.FindingsBetween 2005 and 2009, 1872 participants in the derivation cohort underwent coronary CTA (median age 62 years [range 17–89]). Between 2008 and 2016, 2040 patients in the validation cohort had coronary CTA (median age 53 years [range 19–87]). Median follow-up was 72 months (range 51–109) in the derivation cohort and 54 months (range 4–105) in the validation cohort. In both cohorts, high perivascular FAI values around the proximal right coronary artery and left anterior descending artery (but not around the left circumflex artery) were predictive of all-cause and cardiac mortality and correlated strongly with each other. Therefore, the perivascular FAI measured around the right coronary artery was used as a representative biomarker of global coronary inflammation (for prediction of cardiac mortality, hazard ratio [HR] 2·15, 95% CI 1·33–3·48; p=0·0017 in the derivation cohort, and 2·06, 1·50–2·83; p<0·0001 in the validation cohort). The optimum cutoff for the perivascular FAI, above which there is a steep increase in cardiac mortality, was ascertained as −70·1 Hounsfield units (HU) or higher in the derivation cohort (HR 9·04, 95% CI 3·35–24·40; p<0·0001 for cardiac mortality; 2·55, 1·65–3·92; p<0·0001 for all-cause mortality). This cutoff was confirmed in the validation cohort (HR 5·62, 95% CI 2·90–10·88; p<0·0001 for cardiac mortality; 3·69, 2·26–6·02; p<0·0001 for all-cause mortality). Perivascular FAI improved risk discrimination in both cohorts, leading to significant reclassification for all-cause and cardiac mortality.InterpretationThe perivascular FAI enhances cardiac risk prediction and restratification over and above current state-of-the-art assessment in coronary CTA by providing a quantitative measure of coronary inflammation. High perivascular FAI values (cutoff ≥–70·1 HU) are an indicator of increased cardiac mortality and, therefore, could guide early targeted primary prevention and intensive secondary prevention in patients.FundingBritish Heart Foundation, and the National Institute of Health Research Oxford Biomedical Research Centre.

Highlights

  • Of 910 articles retrieved, we identified no cohort studies investigating the prognostic value of perivascular fat attenuation phenotyping on coronary computed tomography angiography (CTA)

  • We developed an imaging biomarker—the perivascular fat attenuation index (FAI)—to visualise and quantify these changes in perivascular fat, by mapping spatial changes in perivascular fat attenuation using routine coronary CTA

  • Between 2008 and 2016, 2246 consecutive patients were enrolled to the Cleveland study and underwent coronary CTA. 206 (9%) scans were excluded from the analysis; 2040 patients contributed outcome data to this study. 1126 (55%) partici­ pants were men, and the median age of all patients in the validation cohort was 53 years

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Summary

Introduction

Coronary computed tomography angiography (CTA) is a sensitive and widely used non-invasive imaging modality for diagnosing coronary artery disease;[1,2] it is used for diagnosis and management of chest pain.[3]. Of 910 articles retrieved, we identified no cohort studies investigating the prognostic value of perivascular fat attenuation phenotyping on coronary computed tomography angiography (CTA). Clinical studies showed a significant association between coronary artery disease and higher perivascular FAI values, and dynamic changes of the perivascular FAI around culprit—but not stable—lesions in patients with acute coronary syndromes. The added prognostic value of perivascular fat attenuation phenotyping in real-life cohorts of patients undergoing diagnostic coronary CTA remains unknown

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