Abstract Background Angina in the absence of obstructive coronary artery disease (CAD) is a growing cause of morbidity and mortality, exceeding the economic burden of CAD. Roughly 50-70% of patients undergoing invasive angiography for anginal symptoms have non-obstructive CAD. Within this category, there are distinct sub-populations including patients with angina without evidence of ischemia on prior stress testing (ANOCA), evidence of ischemia on stress testing (INOCA), or history of obstructive CAD with prior revascularization (ANOCA-HxCAD). Coronary microvascular dysfunction (CMD) and/or epicardial vasospasm are common causes of angina in the absence of epicardial CAD despite optimal medical therapy. Differences between these groups, in terms of risk factors and diagnoses remain relatively unknown. Purpose To compare clinical characteristics, symptoms, and diagnoses between patients with ANOCA, INOCA, and ANOCA-HxCAD. Methods In a prospective registry-based cohort study of 306 patients without obstructive CAD (<50% stenosis in epicardial artery) undergoing coronary functional angiography (CFA), we assessed differences in clinical characteristics, symptoms, and CFA diagnoses: (1) endothelial-independent CMD (coronary flow reserve [CFR] <2.5) to adenosine testing, (2) endothelial-dependent CMD (coronary blood flow [CBF]<50% or no change in vessel diameter to 54 mcg intracoronary acetylcholine [ACH]), (3) epicardial vasospasm to 108 mcg intracoronary ACH in 3 groups of patients (ANOCA, INOCA, and ANOCA-HxCAD). Results Among the 306 patients undergoing CFA, 89% were female with a median age of 58 years (49, 67). Patients with ANOCA-HxCAD had a significantly higher prevalence of hypertension, diabetes, heart failure with preserved ejection fraction, and experienced worse dyspnea on exertion as measured by University of San Diego Shortness of Breath (UCSD SOB) in comparison to ANOCA or INOCA patients. However, there were no differences between the groups in terms of anginal severity, functional capacity, or quality of life. In terms of CFA diagnoses, vasospasm was more prevalent in ANOCA-HxCAD (p<0.001) and CMD was more prevalent in ANOCA and INOCA patients (p=0.034) (Table 1). Conclusions Despite differences in clinical characteristics, patients without obstructive CAD have similar anginal severity, functional capacity, and quality of life regardless of evidence of ischemia on prior stress imaging or history of revascularization. There are differences in CFA diagnoses with higher prevalence of CMD in ANOCA and INOCA patients and higher prevalence of vasospasm in ANOCA-HxCAD patients. Determining the underlying diagnoses changes clinical management; therefore, CFA should be considered in all patients without obstructive CAD.
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