Clinical Impact of Rest Dual-energy Computed Tomography Myocardial Perfusion in Patients with Coronary Artery Disease.

Journal: In Vivo (Athens, Greece)
Published:
Abstract

Background/aim: To evaluate the hypothesis that patients with suspected coronary artery disease (CAD) assessed using rest dual-energy computed tomography-derived myocardial perfusion imaging (DECT-P), could have fewer invasive coronary angiographies (ICA), showing non-obstructive CAD. Materials and

Methods: Patients who had undergone coronary computed tomography angiography (cCTA), rest DECT-P and ICA were analyzed.

Results: We evaluated 51 patients (62.7% males, mean age 51.6±12.8 years). Rest DECT-P identified perfusion defects in three (10.7%) of the 28 patients with cCTA negative for luminal stenosis and in 10 (43.5%) of the 23 patients with cCTA positive for luminal stenosis. In total, 21 patients underwent both cCTA and ICA, of which seven (33.3%) showed obstructive CAD. Rest DECT-P revealed false-negative results in four cases (19.1%) and false-positive results in six cases (28.6%).

Conclusion: Adding rest DECT-P to cCTA has no incremental diagnostic value over cCTA alone, to exclude haemodynamically significant CAD. Therefore, a rest-stress-DECT-P protocol or a CT-based FFR calculation might be a promising concept to improve diagnostic accuracy in a real clinical setting.

Authors
Stefan Baumann, Marlon Rutsch, Tobias Becher, Philipp Kryeziu, Holger Haubenreisser, Nils Vogler, Celi Schoenike, Martin Borggrefe, Stefan Schoenberg, Ibrahim Akin, Thomas Henzler, Dirk Lossnitzer
Relevant Conditions

Coronary Heart Disease