Abstract
BackgroundCT advances allow coronary arterial tree to be entirely covered during one CTP scan. Our aim was to investigate the potential value of single-phase coronary CT angiography (SP-CCTA) extracted from stress dynamic myocardial CT perfusion (CTP) for coronary artery stenosis assessment. MethodsConsecutive symptomatic patients were prospectively recruited and scanned with an ATP-stress dynamic myocardial CTP and routine CCTA protocol using third-generation DSCT. Noise reduction was applied to optimize image quality (IQ), the CTP phase with the best enhancement of the coronary arteries was selected as the SP-CCTA. IQ was assessed qualitatively. Using coronary angiography (CAG) as the reference standard, the diagnostic performance for stenosis detection was compared for SP-CCTA and routine CCTA. Results56 patients underwent the CTP and CCTA examination, among which 39 patients underwent CAG. The qualitative IQ scores of SP-CCTA were similar to that of routine CCTA (p > 0.05). On a per-segment basis, the sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, negative predictive value, diagnostic accuracy and area under the receiver-operating-characteristic curve results of SP-CCTA and routine CCTA for diagnosis of stenosis ≥50% exhibited no significant difference (SP-CCTA: 78.1%, 94.9%, 77.4%, 95.1%, 91.6% and 0.935 vs. routine CCTA: 74.7%, 95.3%, 78.0%, 95.3%, 91.6% and 0.937; all p > 0.05). The mean effective radiation dose of CTP and routine CCTA plus CTP were 3.92 ± 1.72 mSv and 5.98 ± 2.01 mSv (p < 0.05), respectively. ConclusionsThe IQ and diagnostic value of SP-CCTA was equivalent to routine CCTA on third-generation DSCT. SP-CCTA images from CTP may potentially replace a separate routine CCTA, allowing the possibility of “one-stop” cardiac examination for high-risk CAD patients who need myocardial ischemia assessment.
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