Abstract

Plaque ulceration is a marker of previous plaque rupture. We studied the association between atherosclerotic plaque composition at baseline and plaque ulceration at baseline and follow-up. We included symptomatic patients with a carotid stenosis of <70% who underwent MDCTA and MR imaging at baseline (n = 180). MDCTA was repeated at 2 years (n = 73). We assessed the presence of ulceration using MDCTA. Baseline MR imaging was used to assess the vessel wall volume and the presence and volume of plaque components (intraplaque hemorrhage, lipid-rich necrotic core, and calcifications) and the fibrous cap status. Associations at baseline were evaluated with binary logistic regression and reported with an OR and its 95% CI. Simple statistical testing was performed in the follow-up analysis. At baseline, the prevalence of plaque ulceration was 27% (49/180). Increased wall volume (OR = 12.1; 95% CI, 3.5-42.0), higher relative lipid-rich necrotic core (OR = 1.7; 95% CI, 1.3-2.2), higher relative intraplaque hemorrhage volume (OR = 1.7; 95% CI, 1.3-2.2), and a thin-or-ruptured fibrous cap (OR = 3.4; 95% CI, 1.7-6.7) were associated with the presence of ulcerations at baseline. In 8% (6/73) of the patients, a new ulcer developed. Plaques with a new ulceration at follow-up had at baseline a larger wall volume (1.04 cm3 [IQR, 0.97-1.16 cm3] versus 0.86 cm3 [IQR, 0.73-1.00 cm3]; P = .029), a larger relative lipid-rich necrotic core volume (23% [IQR, 13-31%] versus 2% [IQR, 0-14%]; P = .002), and a larger relative intraplaque hemorrhage volume (14% [IQR, 8-24%] versus 0% [IQR, 0-5%]; P < .001). Large atherosclerotic plaques and plaques with intraplaque hemorrhage and lipid-rich necrotic cores were associated with plaque ulcerations at baseline and follow-up.

Highlights

  • BACKGROUND AND PURPOSEPlaque ulceration is a marker of previous plaque rupture

  • Increased wall volume, higher relative lipid-rich necrotic core, higher relative intraplaque hemorrhage volume, and a thin-or-ruptured fibrous cap were associated with the presence of ulcerations at baseline

  • Plaques with a new ulceration at follow-up had at baseline a larger wall volume (1.04 cm3 [interquartile range (IQR), 0.97–1.16 cm3] versus 0.86 cm3 [IQR, 0.73–1.00 cm3]; P 1⁄4 .029), a larger relative lipid-rich necrotic core volume (23% [IQR, 13–31%] versus 2% [IQR, 0–14%]; P 1⁄4 .002), and a larger relative intraplaque hemorrhage volume (14% [IQR, 8–24%] versus 0% [IQR, 0–5%]; P, .001)

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Summary

Objectives

The aim of the current study was to investigate, in symptomatic patients with mild-to-moderate (30%–69%) carotid artery stenosis, which plaque components at baseline are predictive of plaque rupture at follow-up

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