International Journal of Cardiology
Volume 137, Issue 2 , Pages 108-115, October 2009

Cardiac computed tomographic angiography for risk stratification and prediction of late cardiovascular outcome events in patients with a chest pain syndrome

  • Ronen Rubinshtein

      Affiliations

    • Department of Cardiovascular Medicine. Lady Davis Carmel Medical Center and the Ruth and Bruce Rappaport School of Medicine, Technion-Israel Institute of Technology, Haifa, Israel
  • ,
  • David A. Halon

      Affiliations

    • Department of Cardiovascular Medicine. Lady Davis Carmel Medical Center and the Ruth and Bruce Rappaport School of Medicine, Technion-Israel Institute of Technology, Haifa, Israel
  • ,
  • Tamar Gaspar

      Affiliations

    • Department of Radiology, Lady Davis Carmel Medical Center and the Ruth and Bruce Rappaport School of Medicine, Technion-Israel Institute of Technology, Haifa, Israel
  • ,
  • Nathan Peled

      Affiliations

    • Department of Radiology, Lady Davis Carmel Medical Center and the Ruth and Bruce Rappaport School of Medicine, Technion-Israel Institute of Technology, Haifa, Israel
  • ,
  • Basil S. Lewis

      Affiliations

    • Department of Cardiovascular Medicine. Lady Davis Carmel Medical Center and the Ruth and Bruce Rappaport School of Medicine, Technion-Israel Institute of Technology, Haifa, Israel
    • Corresponding Author InformationCorrespondence author. Department of Cardiovascular Medicine, The Heart Hospital at Lady Davis Carmel Medical Center, 7 Michal Street, Haifa, 34362, Israel. Tel.: +972 4 8250288; fax: +972 4 8343755.

Received 7 February 2008; received in revised form 30 May 2008; accepted 28 June 2008. published online 21 August 2008.

Abstract 

Background

Contrast-enhanced multidetector cardiac computed tomographic angiography (CCTA) has high sensitivity and specificity for diagnosing anatomic coronary stenoses, but its role in predicting late clinical outcome events has not been well studied.

Methods

We examined predictive value of CCTA for late major adverse cardiovascular (CV) outcome events (MACE)(CV death, myocardial infarction, myocardial revascularization) (follow-up 18.2±6.3, range 9–30 months) in 545 consecutive symptomatic patients (368 (68%) men, 177 (32%) women) with clinical suspicion, but without previously diagnosed, coronary artery disease (CAD) who underwent 40- or 64-channel CCTA.

Results

MACE occurred in 53/545 (9.7%) patients (early 30 day CCTA-driven events excluded): CV death/myocardial infarction in 3/327 (0.9%) patients with no coronary luminal narrowing >25% (group 1), in 3/127 (2.4%) with ≥1 luminal narrowing(s) of 26–69% (group 2) and in 9/91 (9.9%) with ≥1 coronary luminal narrowing(s) of ≥70% (group 3) (p<0.0001). CV death/myocardial infarction/revascularization occurred in 5/327 (1.5%) group 1 patients, 19/127 (14.9%) group 2 and 29/91 (31.9%) group 3 (p<0.0001). Multivariate analysis (adjusting for age, gender, coronary risk factors and coronary calcium score) identified CCTA stenosis (>25%) as a powerful independent predictor of MACE (HR 10.9, 95%CI 4.1–29.0, p<0.0001).

Conclusions

CCTA was useful to predict late clinical outcome events in patients undergoing evaluation of a chest pain syndrome.

Keywords: Multidetector computed tomography, Non-invasive coronary angiography, Outcome events, Prognosis

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PII: S0167-5273(08)00826-7

doi:10.1016/j.ijcard.2008.06.031

International Journal of Cardiology
Volume 137, Issue 2 , Pages 108-115, October 2009