Improved Cardiac Risk Assessment With Noninvasive Measures of Coronary Flow Reserve

Author:

Murthy Venkatesh L.1,Naya Masanao1,Foster Courtney R.1,Hainer Jon1,Gaber Mariya1,Di Carli Gilda1,Blankstein Ron1,Dorbala Sharmila1,Sitek Arkadiusz1,Pencina Michael J.1,Di Carli Marcelo F.1

Affiliation:

1. From the Division of Cardiovascular Medicine, Department of Medicine (V.L.M., S.D., M.D.C.), Non-Invasive Cardiovascular Imaging Program, Departments of Medicine and Radiology (V.L.M., M.N., S.D., M.D.C.), and Division of Nuclear Medicine and Molecular Imaging (C.R.F., A.S., S.D., M.D.C.), Department of Radiology, Brigham & Women's Hospital; Harvard Clinical Research Institute (M.J.C.); and Department of Biostatistics, Boston University (M.J.C.), Boston, MA.

Abstract

Background— Impaired vasodilator function is an early manifestation of coronary artery disease and may precede angiographic stenosis. It is unknown whether noninvasive assessment of coronary vasodilator function in patients with suspected or known coronary artery disease carries incremental prognostic significance. Methods and Results— A total of 2783 consecutive patients referred for rest/stress positron emission tomography were followed up for a median of 1.4 years (interquartile range, 0.7–3.2 years). The extent and severity of perfusion abnormalities were quantified by visual evaluation of myocardial perfusion images. Rest and stress myocardial blood flows were calculated with factor analysis and a 2-compartment kinetic model and were used to compute coronary flow reserve (coronary flow reserve equals stress divided by rest myocardial blood flow). The primary end point was cardiac death. Overall 3-year cardiac mortality was 8.0%. The lowest tertile of coronary flow reserve (<1.5) was associated with a 5.6-fold increase in the risk of cardiac death (95% confidence interval, 2.5–12.4; P <0.0001) compared with the highest tertile. Incorporation of coronary flow reserve into cardiac death risk assessment models resulted in an increase in the c index from 0.82 (95% confidence interval, 0.78–0.86) to 0.84 (95% confidence interval, 0.80–0.87; P =0.02) and in a net reclassification improvement of 0.098 (95% confidence interval, 0.025–0.180). Addition of coronary flow reserve resulted in correct reclassification of 34.8% of intermediate-risk patients (net reclassification improvement=0.487; 95% confidence interval, 0.262–0.731). Corresponding improvements in risk assessment for mortality from any cause were also demonstrated. Conclusion— Noninvasive quantitative assessment of coronary vasodilator function with positron emission tomography is a powerful, independent predictor of cardiac mortality in patients with known or suspected coronary artery disease and provides meaningful incremental risk stratification over clinical and gated myocardial perfusion imaging variables.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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