Abstract

BackgroundCoronary artery ectasia (CAE) is associated with ascending aortic (AA) ectasia. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the diagnostic performance of different echocardiographic parameters (EP) in predicting the presence of CAE. MethodsFour hundred-eighteen patients with AA ectasia candidate to coronary angiography were identified and divided in two groups in respect of the presence of CAE. Receiver-operating characteristic curves areas (AUC) were used to assess the discrimination power of the following EP: aortic annulus diameter, sinuses of Valsalva (SV) diameter, sino-tubular junction (STJ) diameter, AA diameter, STJ to SV ratio (STJ-to-SV) and STJ to AA ratio (STJ-to-AA). All these parameters were indexed by body surface area. The relationship between the best EP and the presence of CAE was investigated by means of multivariable logistic regression. ResultsThe rate of CAE in the study population was 32%. On univariable logistic regression, aortic annulus, STJ, STJ-to-SV and STJ-to-AA were associated with the presence of CAE after Bonferroni correction. STJ-to-SV emerged as the parameter with the best discrimination power (AUC = 0.81) compared to STJ (AUC = 0.69), STJ-to-AA (AUC = 0.68), aortic annulus (AUC = 0.59), AA (AUC = 0.56) and SV (AUC = 0.55); (p for comparison <0.01). An 89.6% value for STJ-to-SV ratio emerged as the best cut-off to diagnose CAE with a sensitivity = 75%, specificity = 82%, positive predictive value = 66% and negative predictive value = 88%. On multivariable analysis, STJ-to-SV was still associated with the presence of CAE (OR = 1.15;95%CI:1.11–1.19;p < 0.01). ConclusionIn patients with dilated aorta, STJ-to-SV sampled by transthoracic echocardiography shows a good diagnostic performance in predicting the presence of CAE.

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