Abstract

BackgroundCoronary artery disease (CAD) and coronary microvascular disease (CMD) are significant contributors to angina pectoris, necessitating reliable diagnostic techniques for effective management. While positron emission tomography has been the non-invasive gold standard for myocardial blood flow (MBF) quantification, stress dynamic CT myocardial perfusion imaging (CTMPI) has emerged as a promising alternative. This study aimed to evaluate the test–retest reproducibility of MBF measurements obtained using dynamic CTMPI. MethodsThe study retrospectively analyzed MBF values from two dynamic CTMPI examinations conducted in the same patient cohort (n = 30) to examine the consistency of MBF quantification and the ability to visually detect and grade abnormal perfusion suggesting ischemia between the tests. Global and remote MBF were defined as the mean MBF and the maximum MBF of all segments, respectively. ResultsMBF quantification revealed strong linear correlations between the tests (r = 0.89 for global MBF, r = 0.88 for remote MBF, and r = 0.82 for all segments), and intraclass correlation coefficients reflected high agreement between the tests (0.94 for global MBF, 0.93 for remote MBF, and 0.90 for all segments). Bland-Altman plots indicated a negligible mean difference with acceptable limits of agreements between the tests for global MBF, remote MBF, and all segments. Visual assessment of the CTMPI maps for abnormal perfusion suggesting ischemia yielded a good inter-test agreement with a weighted kappa value of 0.80. ConclusionDynamic CTMPI can consistently reproduce absolute MBF values and reliably detect myocardial perfusion abnormalities, potentially making it a robust diagnostic tool for evaluating the presence and severity of CAD and CMD.

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