152 results on '"Daniele, Andreini"'
Search Results
2. Different Phases of Disease in Lymphocytic Myocarditis
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Michela Casella, Alessio Gasperetti, Paolo Compagnucci, Maria Lucia Narducci, Gemma Pelargonio, Valentina Catto, Corrado Carbucicchio, Gianluigi Bencardino, Edoardo Conte, Nicolò Schicchi, Daniele Andreini, Gianluca Pontone, Andrea Giovagnoni, Stefania Rizzo, Frediano Inzani, Cristina Basso, Andrea Natale, Claudio Tondo, Antonio Dello Russo, and Filippo Crea
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- 2023
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3. Diagnostic and Prognostic Role of Cardiac Magnetic Resonance in MINOCA
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Niya Mileva, Pasquale Paolisso, Emanuele Gallinoro, Davide Fabbricatore, Daniel Munhoz, Luca Bergamaschi, Marta Belmonte, Panayot Panayotov, Carmine Pizzi, Emanuele Barbato, Martin Penicka, Daniele Andreini, and Dobrin Vassilev
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Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine - Published
- 2023
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4. Comprehensive Evaluation of Left Ventricle Dysfunction by a New Computed Tomography Scanner
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Daniele Andreini, Edoardo Conte, Saima Mushtaq, Eleonora Melotti, Carlo Gigante, Maria Elisabetta Mancini, Marco Guglielmo, Gerardo Lo Russo, Andrea Baggiano, Andrea Annoni, Alberto Formenti, Alessandra Magini, Gianluca Pontone, Piergiuseppe Agostoni, Antonio L. Bartorelli, Mauro Pepi, Yoshinobu Onuma, and Patrick W. Serruys
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Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine - Published
- 2023
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5. AI Evaluation of Stenosis on Coronary CTA, Comparison With Quantitative Coronary Angiography and Fractional Flow Reserve
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William F. Griffin, Andrew D. Choi, Joanna S. Riess, Hugo Marques, Hyuk-Jae Chang, Jung Hyun Choi, Joon-Hyung Doh, Ae-Young Her, Bon-Kwon Koo, Chang-Wook Nam, Hyung-Bok Park, Sang-Hoon Shin, Jason Cole, Alessia Gimelli, Muhammad Akram Khan, Bin Lu, Yang Gao, Faisal Nabi, Ryo Nakazato, U. Joseph Schoepf, Roel S. Driessen, Michiel J. Bom, Randall Thompson, James J. Jang, Michael Ridner, Chris Rowan, Erick Avelar, Philippe Généreux, Paul Knaapen, Guus A. de Waard, Gianluca Pontone, Daniele Andreini, James P. Earls, and NOVA Medical School|Faculdade de Ciências Médicas (NMS|FCM)
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Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine - Abstract
Copyright © 2022 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. OBJECTIVES: The study compared the performance for detection and grading of coronary stenoses using artificial intelligence-enabled quantitative coronary computed tomography angiography (AI-QCT) analyses to core lab-interpreted coronary computed tomography angiography (CTA), core lab quantitative coronary angiography (QCA), and invasive fractional flow reserve (FFR). BACKGROUND: Clinical reads of coronary CTA, especially by less experienced readers, may result in overestimation of coronary artery disease stenosis severity compared with expert interpretation. AI-based solutions applied to coronary CTA may overcome these limitations. METHODS: Coronary CTA, FFR, and QCA data from 303 stable patients (64 ± 10 years of age, 71% male) from the CREDENCE (Computed TomogRaphic Evaluation of Atherosclerotic DEtermiNants of Myocardial IsChEmia) trial were retrospectively analyzed using an Food and Drug Administration-cleared cloud-based software that performs AI-enabled coronary segmentation, lumen and vessel wall determination, plaque quantification and characterization, and stenosis determination. RESULTS: Disease prevalence was high, with 32.0%, 35.0%, 21.0%, and 13.0% demonstrating ≥50% stenosis in 0, 1, 2, and 3 coronary vessel territories, respectively. Average AI-QCT analysis time was 10.3 ± 2.7 minutes. AI-QCT evaluation demonstrated per-patient sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, negative predictive value, and accuracy of 94%, 68%, 81%, 90%, and 84%, respectively, for ≥50% stenosis, and of 94%, 82%, 69%, 97%, and 86%, respectively, for detection of ≥70% stenosis. There was high correlation between stenosis detected on AI-QCT evaluation vs QCA on a per-vessel and per-patient basis (intraclass correlation coefficient = 0.73 and 0.73, respectively; P < 0.001 for both). False positive AI-QCT findings were noted in in 62 of 848 (7.3%) vessels (stenosis of ≥70% by AI-QCT and QCA of
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- 2023
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6. Pre-procedural planning of coronary revascularization by cardiac computed tomography
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Daniele Andreini, Carlos Collet, Jonathon Leipsic, Koen Nieman, Marcio Bittencurt, Johan De Mey, Nico Buls, Yoshinobu Onuma, Saima Mushtaq, Edoardo Conte, Antonio L. Bartorelli, Giulio Stefanini, Jeroen Sonck, Paul Knaapen, Brian Ghoshhajra, and Patrick Serruys
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Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine - Published
- 2022
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7. Longitudinal Quantitative Assessment of Coronary Atherosclerotic Plaque Burden Related to Serum Hemoglobin Levels
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Ki-Bum Won, Byoung Kwon Lee, Ran Heo, Hyung-Bok Park, Fay Y. Lin, Martin Hadamitzky, Yong-Jin Kim, Ji Min Sung, Edoardo Conte, Daniele Andreini, Gianluca Pontone, Matthew J. Budoff, Ilan Gottlieb, Eun Ju Chun, Filippo Cademartiri, Erica Maffei, Hugo Marques, Pedro de Araújo Gonçalves, Jonathon A. Leipsic, Sang-Eun Lee, Sanghoon Shin, Jung Hyun Choi, Renu Virmani, Habib Samady, Kavitha Chinnaiyan, Daniel S. Berman, Jagat Narula, Jeroen J. Bax, James K. Min, Hyuk-Jae Chang, and NOVA Medical School|Faculdade de Ciências Médicas (NMS|FCM)
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cardiovascular ,CCTA ,Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,Settore MED/11 - Malattie dell'Apparato Cardiovascolare ,Hematology ,hemoglobin level changes ,hemoglobin ,Δ hemoglobin ,PVC ,Heart Disease ,Clinical Research ,6.1 Pharmaceuticals ,coronary computed tomographic angiography ,CCTA, coronary computed tomographic angiography ,CV, cardiovascular ,PVC, plaque volume changes ,atherosclerosis ,coronary computed tomography angiography ,Δ hemoglobin, hemoglobin level changes ,plaque volume changes ,CV ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Heart Disease - Coronary Heart Disease - Abstract
Publisher Copyright: © 2022 The Authors Background: Despite a potential role of hemoglobin in atherosclerosis, data on coronary plaque volume changes (PVC) related to serum hemoglobin levels are limited. Objectives: The authors sought to evaluate coronary atherosclerotic plaque burden changes related to serum hemoglobin levels using serial coronary computed tomographic angiography (CCTA). Methods: A total of 830 subjects (age 61 ± 10 years, 51.9% male) who underwent serial CCTA were analyzed. The median interscan period was 3.2 (IQR: 2.5-4.4) years. Quantitative assessment of coronary plaques was performed at both scans. All participants were stratified into 4 groups based on the quartile of baseline hemoglobin levels. Annualized total PVC (mm3/year) was defined as total PVC divided by the interscan period. Results: Baseline total plaque volume (mm3) was not different among all groups (group I [lowest]: 34.1 [IQR: 0.0-127.4] vs group II: 28.8 [IQR: 0.0-123.0] vs group III: 49.9 [IQR: 5.6-135.0] vs group IV [highest]: 34.3 [IQR: 0.0-130.7]; P = 0.235). During follow-up, serum hemoglobin level changes (Δ hemoglobin; per 1 g/dL) was related to annualized total PVC (β = −0.114) in overall participants (P < 0.05). After adjusting for age, sex, traditional risk factors, baseline hemoglobin and creatinine levels, baseline total plaque volume, and the use of aspirin, beta-blocker, angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor or angiotensin receptor blocker, and statin, Δ hemoglobin significantly affected annualized total PVC in only the composite of groups I and II (β = −2.401; P = 0.004). Conclusions: Serial CCTA findings suggest that Δ hemoglobin has an independent effect on coronary atherosclerosis. This effect might be influenced by baseline hemoglobin levels. (Progression of Atherosclerotic Plaque Determined by Computed Tomographic Angiography Imaging [PARADIGM]; NCT02803411) publishersversion published
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- 2022
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8. Plaque assessment by coronary CT angiography may predict cardiac events in high risk and very high risk diabetic patients: A long-term follow-up study
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Daniele Andreini, Edoardo Conte, Saima Mushtaq, Marco Magatelli, Federica Traversari, Carlo Gigante, Marta Belmonte, Marcherita Gaudenzi-Asinelli, Andrea Annoni, Alberto Formenti, Maria E. Mancini, Marco Guglielmo, Andrea Baggiano, Eleonora Melotti, Giuseppe Muscogiuri, Maurizio Rondinelli, Gianluca Pontone, Antonio L. Bartorelli, Mauro Pepi, Stefano Genovese, Andreini, D, Conte, E, Mushtaq, S, Magatelli, M, Traversari, F, Gigante, C, Belmonte, M, Gaudenzi-Asinelli, M, Annoni, A, Formenti, A, Mancini, M, Guglielmo, M, Baggiano, A, Melotti, E, Muscogiuri, G, Rondinelli, M, Pontone, G, Bartorelli, A, Pepi, M, and Genovese, S
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Nutrition and Dietetics ,Computed Tomography Angiography ,Prognosi ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Coronary Angiography ,Prognosis ,Diabete ,Risk Assessment ,Coronary artery disease ,Plaque, Atherosclerotic ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Risk Factors ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Cardiac CT ,Humans ,Vulnerable coronary plaque ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Follow-Up Studies - Abstract
Background and aims: The aim of the present study is to evaluate whether advanced coronary atherosclerosis analysis by CCTA may improve prognostic stratification among diabetic patients at high cardiovascular risk (CV risk). Methods and results: The study population consisted of 265 consecutive diabetic patients at high CV risk who underwent CCTA for suspected CAD between January 2011 and December 2016. For every patients both traditional and advanced, qualitative and quantitative coronary plaque analysis were performed. The occurrence of cardiac death, ACS, and non-urgent revascularization were recorded at follow-up. Among the 265 patients enrolled, 21 were lost to follow-up, whereas 244 (92%) had a complete follow-up (mean 45 ± 22 months) and were classified at high (n = 67) or very high cardiovascular risk (n = 177), according to ESC Guidelines. A total of 63 events were recorded (3 Cardiac Death, 3 NSTEMI, 8 unstable angina, 36 late non-urgent revascularization and 13 non-cardiac death) in 57 different patients. Elevated fibro-fatty plaque volume was the only predictor of events over age, gender and traditional risk factor when ACS and MACE were considered as end-points [HR (95% CI) 6.01 (1.65–21.87), p = 0.006 and 3.46 (2.00–5.97); p < 0.001]. Conclusion: The present study confirms the prognostic role of advance coronary atherosclerosis evaluation beyond risk factors and stenosis severity, even in diabetics. Despite the very high cardiovascular risk of study population, a not negligible portion (23%) of patients exhibited totally normal coronaries.
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- 2022
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9. Quantification of extracellular volume with cardiac computed tomography in patients with dilated cardiomyopathy
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Andrea Baggiano, Edoardo Conte, Luigi Spiritigliozzi, Saima Mushtaq, Andrea Annoni, Maria Ludovica Carerj, Francesco Cilia, Fabio Fazzari, Alberto Formenti, Antonio Frappampina, Laura Fusini, Margherita Gaudenzi Asinelli, Daniele Junod, Maria Elisabetta Mancini, Valentina Mantegazza, Riccardo Maragna, Francesca Marchetti, Marco Penso, Luigi Tassetti, Alessandra Volpe, Francesca Baessato, Marco Guglielmo, Alexia Rossi, Chiara Rovera, Daniele Andreini, Mark G. Rabbat, Andrea Igoren Guaricci, Mauro Pepi, and Gianluca Pontone
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Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine - Published
- 2023
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10. Diagnostic accuracy of subendocardial vs. transmural myocardial perfusion defect for the detection of in-stent restenosis or progression of coronary artery disease after percutaneous coronary intervention
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Saima Mushtaq, Gianluca Pontone, Edoardo Conte, Daniela Trabattoni, Stefano Galli, Sebastiano Gili, Sarah Troiano, Giovanni Teruzzi, Andrea Baggiano, Alice Bonomi, Vincenzo Mallia, Davide Marchetti, Matteo Schillaci, Eleonora Melotti, Marta Belmonte, Andrea Igoren Guaricci, Carlo Gigante, Mauro Pepi, Antonio L. Bartorelli, and Daniele Andreini
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Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine - Published
- 2023
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11. Endothelial shear stress computed from coronary computed tomography angiography: A direct comparison to intravascular ultrasound
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Diaa Hakim, Ahmet U. Coskun, Charles Maynard, Zhongyue Pu, Deborah Rupert, Nicholas Cefalo, Michelle Cormier, Mona Ahmed, James Earls, Rob Jennings, Kevin Croce, Saima Mushtaq, Daniele Andreini, Edoardo Conte, David Molony, Habib Samady, James K. Min, and Peter H. Stone
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Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine - Published
- 2023
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12. Mannose as a biomarker of coronary artery disease: Angiographic evidence and clinical significance
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Modena, Maria Grazia, Ele, Ferrannini, Nikolaus, Marx, Daniele, Andreini, Beatrice, Campi, Alessandro, Saba, Marco, Gorini, Giulia, Ferranni, Andrea, Milzi, Marco, Magnoni, Attilio, Maseri, Maggioni, Aldo P., and Mathias Burgmaier on behalf of the CAPIRE investigators
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Computed Tomography Angiography ,Coronary angiography ,Mannose ,Coronary Artery Disease ,Fractional flow reserve ,medicine.disease_cause ,Severity of Illness Index ,Coronary artery disease ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Risk Factors ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Coronary atherosclerosis ,Risk assessment ,Computed coronary tomography angiography ,Optical coherence tomography ,Plasma mannose ,business.industry ,Odds ratio ,Prognosis ,medicine.disease ,Vulnerable plaque ,chemistry ,Cohort ,Cardiology ,Biomarker (medicine) ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Biomarkers - Abstract
High mannose has previously associated with insulin resistance and cardiovascular disease (CVD). Our objective is to establish whether mannose is associated with anatomical evidence of coronary artery disease (CAD).Plasma mannose concentrations were measured by liquid chromatography/tandem mass spectrometry in a discovery cohort (n = 513) and a validation cohort (n = 221) of carefully phenotyped individuals. In both cohorts CAD was quantitated using state-of-the-art imaging techniques (coronary computed coronary tomography angiography (CCTA), invasive coronary angiography and optical coherence tomography). Information on subsequent CVD events/death was collected. Associations of mannose with angiographic variables and biomarkers were tested using univariate and multivariate regression models. Survival analysis was performed using the Kaplan-Meier estimator.Mannose was related to indices of CAD and features of plaque vulnerability. In the discovery cohort, mannose was a marker of quantity and quality of CCTA-proven CAD and subjects with a mannose level in the top quartile had a significantly higher risk of CVD events/death (p = 3.6e-5). In the validation cohort, mannose was significantly associated with fibrous cap thickness 65 μm (odds ratio = 1.32 per each 10 μmol/L mannose change [95% confidence interval, 1.05-1.65]) and was an independent predictor of death (hazard ratio for mannose≥vs 84.6 μmol/L: 4.0(95%CI, 1.4-11.3), p = 0.006).The current data add novel evidence that high mannose is a signature of CAD with a vulnerable plaque phenotype, consistently across measures of severity of vessel involvement and independent of the traditional correlates of CVD, and that it is an independent predictor of incident adverse outcomes.
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- 2022
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13. Association of Tube Voltage With Plaque Composition on Coronary CT Angiography
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Gianluca Pontone, Jagat Narula, Kavitha Chinnaiyan, Pedro de Araújo Gonçalves, Mouaz H. Al-Mallah, Jonathon Leipsic, Edoardo Conte, Matthew J. Budoff, Sanghoon Shin, Hyuk Jae Chang, Eun Ju Chun, Fay Y. Lin, Ilan Gottlieb, Erica Maffei, Habib Samady, Byoung Kwon Lee, Filippo Cademartiri, Martin Hadamitzky, Leslee J. Shaw, Gaurav S. Gulsin, Hugo Marques, Hidenobu Takagi, Renu Virmani, Peter Stone, Jung Hyun Choi, Ji Min Sung, Praveen Indraratna, Yong Jin Kim, Sang Eun Lee, Jeroen J. Bax, Daniel S. Berman, Elina Khasanova, Daniele Andreini, and Georgios Tzimas
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Aorta ,Necrotic core ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Plaque composition ,Coronary computed tomography angiography ,Coronary ct angiography ,Revascularization ,Coronary plaque ,medicine.artery ,Hounsfield scale ,medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Nuclear medicine - Abstract
Objectives This study sought to investigate the impact of low tube voltage scanning heterogeneity of coronary luminal attenuation on plaque quantification and characterization with coronary computed tomography angiography (CCTA). Background The impact of low tube voltage and coronary luminal attenuation on quantitative coronary plaque remains uncertain. Methods A total of 1,236 consecutive patients (age: 60 ± 9 years; 41% female) who underwent serial CCTA at an interval of ≥2 years were included from an international registry. Patients with prior revascularization or nonanalyzable coronary CTAs were excluded. Total coronary plaque volume was assessed and subclassified based on specific Hounsfield unit (HU) threshold: necrotic core, fibrofatty plaque, and fibrous plaque and dense calcium. Luminal attenuation was measured in the aorta. Results With increasing luminal HU ( 500 HU), percent calcified plaque was increased (16%, 27%, and 40% in the median; P Conclusions Low tube voltage usage affected plaque morphology, mainly through an increase in luminal HU with a resultant increase in calcified plaque and a reduction in fibrofatty and necrotic core. These findings should be considered as CCTA-based plaque measures are being used to guide medical management and, in particular, when being used as a measure of treatment response. (Progression of Atherosclerotic Plaque Determined by Computed Tomographic Angiography Imaging [PARADIGM]; NCT02803411 )
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- 2021
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14. Successful Coronary Artery Bypass Grafting Based Solely on Non-Invasive Coronary Computed Tomography Angiography
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Yoshinobu Onuma, Giulio Pompilio, Charles A. Taylor, Hideyuki Kawashima, Daniele Andreini, Patrick W. Serruys, Antonio L. Bartorelli, Saima Mushtaq, Shinichiro Masuda, and Marie-Angele Morel
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Bypass grafting ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,General Medicine ,Canadian Cardiovascular Society ,Fractional flow reserve ,medicine.disease ,Angina ,Coronary artery disease ,surgical procedures, operative ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Internal medicine ,Right coronary artery ,medicine.artery ,medicine ,Cardiology ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Computed tomography angiography ,Artery - Abstract
An 81-year-old female presented with chronic coronary disease (Canadian Cardiovascular Society angina severity grading III). The patient underwent coronary computed tomography angiography (CCTA) that revealed three-vessel coronary artery disease (3VD). This case illustrates that in a patient with 3VD, planning and execution of coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) were successfully performed based solely on CCTA combined with fractional flow reserve derived from computed tomography angiography (FFRCT). Coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) was planned and executed as follows: left internal mammary artery grafted to the left anterior descending artery (LAD), saphenous vein graft (SVG) to the right coronary artery (RCA), and SVG to the obtuse marginal artery (OM). Repeat imaging assessment with non-invasive CCTA and FFRCT at 30-day follow-up confirmed the safety of this approach. The FFRCT values of the RCA and LAD were normalized, whereas a borderline pressure drop was observed in the distal run-off of the OM (FFRCT=0.79). Notably, this is the first case in which post-CABG FFRCT assessment was performed. Post-CABG FFRCT is an investigational novel non-invasive tool for assessing the functional improvement of the epicardial conductance vessels following surgical revascularization.
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- 2022
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15. Feasibility of late gadolinium enhancement (LGE) in ischemic cardiomyopathy using 2D-multisegment LGE combined with artificial intelligence reconstruction deep learning noise reduction algorithm
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Edoardo Conte, Saima Mushtaq, Chiara Martini, Mauro Pepi, Gianluca Pontone, Andrea Baggiano, Martin A. Janich, Stefano Scafuri, Marco Guglielmo, Alberto Formenti, Aurora Bracciani, Giuseppe Muscogiuri, Lorenzo Bonfanti, Marco Gatti, Andrea Annoni, Giulio Pompilio, Serena Dell'Aversana, Francesca Ricci, Maria Elisabetta Mancini, Paola Gripari, Laura Fusini, Daniele Andreini, Mark G. Rabbat, Andrea Igoren Guaricci, Muscogiuri, G, Martini, C, Gatti, M, Dell'Aversana, S, Ricci, F, Guglielmo, M, Baggiano, A, Fusini, L, Bracciani, A, Scafuri, S, Andreini, D, Mushtaq, S, Conte, E, Gripari, P, Annoni, A, Formenti, A, Mancini, M, Bonfanti, L, Guaricci, A, Janich, M, Rabbat, M, Pompilio, G, Pepi, M, and Pontone, G
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Artificial intelligence ,Image quality ,Noise reduction ,Contrast Media ,Gadolinium ,Late gadolinium enhancement ,Standard deviation ,Deep Learning ,Signal-to-noise ratio ,Contrast-to-noise ratio ,Image noise ,Humans ,Medicine ,Ischemic cardiomyopathy ,Image resolution ,Deep learning reconstruction ,business.industry ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Feasibility Studies ,Cardiomyopathies ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Algorithms - Abstract
Background: Despite the low spatial resolution of 2D-multisegment late gadolinium enhancement (2D-MSLGE) sequences, it may be useful in uncooperative patients instead of standard 2D single segmented inversion recovery gradient echo late gadolinium enhancement sequences (2D-SSLGE). The aim of the study is to assess the feasibility and comparison of 2D-MSLGE reconstructed with artificial intelligence reconstruction deep learning noise reduction (NR) algorithm compared to standard 2D-SSLGE in consecutive patients with ischemic cardiomyopathy (ICM). Methods: Fifty-seven patients with known ICM referred for a clinically indicated CMR were enrolled in this study. 2D-MSLGE were reconstructed using a growing level of NR (0%,25%,50%,75%and 100%). Subjective image quality, signal to noise ratio (SNR) and contrast to noise ratio (CNR) were evaluated in each dataset and compared to standard 2D-SSLGE. Moreover, diagnostic accuracy, LGE mass and scan time were compared between 2D-MSLGE with NR and 2D-SSLGE. Results: The application of NR reconstruction ≥50% to 2D-MSLGE provided better subjective image quality, CNR and SNR compared to 2D-SSLGE (p < 0.01). The best compromise in terms of subjective and objective image quality was observed for values of 2D-MSLGE 75%, while no differences were found in terms of LGE quantification between 2D-MSLGE versus 2D-SSLGE, regardless the NR applied. The sensitivity, specificity, negative predictive value, positive predictive value and accuracy of 2D-MSLGE NR 75% were 87.77%,96.27%,96.13%,88.16% and 94.22%, respectively. Time of acquisition of 2D-MSLGE was significantly shorter compared to 2D-SSLGE (p < 0.01). Conclusion: When compared to standard 2D-SSLGE, the application of NR reconstruction to 2D-MSLGE provides superior image quality with similar diagnostic accuracy.
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- 2021
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16. Plaque Character and Progression According to the Location of Coronary Atherosclerotic Plaque
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A. Maxim Bax, Umberto Gianni, Filippo Cademartiri, Donghee Han, Yao Lu, Sang Eun Lee, Xiaoyue Ma, Ji Min Sung, Gianluca Pontone, Edoardo Conte, Hugo Marques, Mouaz H. Al-Mallah, Benjamin Goebel, Matthew J. Budoff, Jonathon Leipsic, Ilan Gottlieb, Kavitha Chinnaiyan, Leslee J. Shaw, Daniele Andreini, Jung Hyun Choi, Byoung Kwon Lee, Eun Ju Chun, Martin Hadamitzky, Hyuk Jae Chang, Erica Maffei, Yong Jin Kim, Sanghoon Shin, Benjamin C. Lee, Fay Y. Lin, Jagat Narula, Yeonyee E. Yoon, and Pedro de Araújo Gonçalves
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Acute coronary syndrome ,Computed Tomography Angiography ,Coronary Artery Disease ,Culprit ,Cohort Studies ,Plaque volume ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Registries ,Aged ,business.industry ,Coronary computed tomography angiography ,Mean age ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Plaque, Atherosclerotic ,Lumen Diameter ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Disease Progression ,Cardiology ,Female ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Artery - Abstract
Although acute coronary syndrome culprit lesions occur more frequently in the proximal coronary artery, whether the proximal clustering of high-risk plaque is reflected in earlier-stage atherosclerosis remains unclarified. We evaluated the longitudinal distribution of stable atherosclerotic lesions on coronary computed tomography angiography (CCTA) in 1,478 patients (mean age, 61 years; men, 58%) enrolled from a prospective multinational registry of consecutive patients undergoing serial CCTA. Of 3,202 coronary artery lesions identified, 2,140 left lesions were classified (based on the minimal lumen diameter location) into left main (LM, n = 128), proximal (n = 739), and other (n = 1,273), and 1,062 right lesions were classified into proximal (n = 355) and other (n = 707). Plaque volume (PV) was the highest in proximal lesions (median, 26.1 mm3), followed by LM (20.6 mm3) and other lesions (15.0 mm3, p
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- 2021
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17. PO-04-222 OUTFLOW TRACT VERSUS NON-OUTFLOW TRACT VENTRICULAR ARRHYTHMIAS IN ATHLETES: MYOCARDIAL SUBSTRATE AND LONG-TERM CLINICAL OUTCOMES
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Paolo Compagnucci, Michela Casella, Maria Lucia Narducci, Michela Cammarano, GIOVANNI VOLPATO, Gemma Pelargonio, Daniele Andreini, Edoardo Conte, Vincenzo Palmieri, Francesca Coretti, Gerardo Lo Russo, Filippo Crea, Claudio Tondo, and Antonio Dello Russo
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Physiology (medical) ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine - Published
- 2023
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18. TCTAP A-037 Feasibility and Accuracy of Holographic Graft Length Measurement, A Sub-study of the FAST TRACK CABG Trial
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Tsung Ying Tsai, Shigetaka Kageyama, Yoshinobu Onuma, Giulio Pompilio, Daniele Andreini, Saima Mushtaq Saima Mushtaq, Mark La Meir, Johan De Mey, Kaoru Tanaka, Torsten Doenst, John D. Puskas, and Patrick W. Serruys
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Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine - Published
- 2023
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19. Clinical Risk Prediction in Patients With Left Ventricular Myocardial Noncompaction
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Josep Ramon Marsal, Laura Gutierrez-Garcia, Juan Ramón Gimeno-Blanes, Pier Giorgio Masci, Juan Jiménez-Jáimez, Gisela Teixido-Tura, Marta Codina-Solà, Gerard Oristrell, Coloma Tiron, Ignacio Ferreira-González, Andrea Guala, Pablo García-Pavía, Paula Fernández-Álvarez, Juan José Santos-Mateo, Esther Zorio, José Luis de la Pompa, Artur Evangelista, José Manuel García-Pinilla, Daniele Andreini, Eduardo Villacorta, Tomás Ripoll-Vera, Ángela López-Sainz, José Rodríguez-Palomares, José Antonio Sorolla-Romero, Gianluca Pontone, Lucia La Mura, Javier Limeres, Jan Bogaert, Mar Borregan, Augusto Sao Avilés, Julián Palomino-Doza, Rafaela Soler-Fernandez, Aida Ribera, Josefa González-Carrillo, José M. Larrañaga-Moreira, Guillem Casas, Giovanni Donato Aquaro, Roberto Barriales-Villa, Antoni Bayes-Genis, Sociedad Catalana de Cardiología, Hospital Universitario Virgen de la Arrixaca, Fundación La Marató TV3, Hospital Universitario y Politécnico La Fe, Unión Europea. Fondo Europeo de Desarrollo Regional (FEDER/ERDF), Instituto de Salud Carlos III, Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España), and Centro de Investigación Biomédica en Red - CIBERCV (Enfermedades Cardiovasculares)
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Patient-Specific Modeling ,Adult ,Male ,Noncompaction cardiomyopathy ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Embolism ,Risk Assessment ,Young Adult ,noncompaction cardiomyopathy ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,In patient ,Longitudinal Studies ,cardiovascular diseases ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Heart Failure ,late gadolinium enhancement ,Isolated Noncompaction of the Ventricular Myocardium ,Ejection fraction ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Arrhythmias, Cardiac ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Middle Aged ,major adverse cardiovascular events ,medicine.disease ,physiologic hypertrabeculation ,Spain ,left ventricular ejection fraction ,Heart failure ,Cardiology ,Left ventricular noncompaction ,Female ,genotype ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Mace ,Cohort study - Abstract
Left ventricular noncompaction (LVNC) is a heterogeneous entity with uncertain prognosis. This study sought to develop and validate a prediction model of major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE) and to identify LVNC cases without events during long-term follow-up. This is a retrospective longitudinal multicenter cohort study of consecutive patients fulfilling LVNC criteria by echocardiography or cardiovascular magnetic resonance. MACE were defined as heart failure (HF), ventricular arrhythmias (VAs), systemic embolisms, or all-cause mortality. A total of 585 patients were included (45 ± 20 years of age, 57% male). LV ejection fraction (LVEF) was 48% ± 17%, and 18% presented late gadolinium enhancement (LGE). After a median follow-up of 5.1 years, MACE occurred in 223 (38%) patients: HF in 110 (19%), VAs in 87 (15%), systemic embolisms in 18 (3%), and 34 (6%) died. LVEF was the main variable independently associated with MACE (P < 0.05). LGE was associated with HF and VAs in patients with LVEF >35% (P < 0.05). A prediction model of MACE was developed using Cox regression, composed by age, sex, electrocardiography, cardiovascular risk factors, LVEF, and family aggregation. C-index was 0.72 (95% confidence interval: 0.67-0.75) in the derivation cohort and 0.72 (95% confidence interval: 0.71-0.73) in an external validation cohort. Patients with no electrocardiogram abnormalities, LVEF ≥50%, no LGE, and negative family screening presented no MACE at follow-up. LVNC is associated with an increased risk of heart failure and ventricular arrhythmias. LVEF is the variable most strongly associated with MACE; however, LGE confers additional risk in patients without severe systolic dysfunction. A risk prediction model is developed and validated to guide management. The project was partially funded by a grant from the Catalan Society of Cardiology (Barcelona, Spain). Hospital Universitario Virgen de la Arrixaca (Murcia, Spain) was supported by a grant from the Foundation Marató TV3 (218/C/2015) (Barcelona, Spain). Hospital Universitario y Politécnico La Fe (Valencia, Spain) was partially supported by Fondo Europeo de Desarrollo Regional (“Unión Europea, Una forma de hacer Europa”) (Madrid, Spain) and the Instituto de Salud Carlos III (La Fe Biobank PT17/0015/ 0043) (Madrid, Spain). Dr Guala was supported by funding from the Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities (IJC2018-037349-I) (Madrid, Spain). Dr La Mura was supported by a research grant from the Cardiopath PhD program (Naples, Italy). Prof de la Pompa was supported by grants PID2019-104776RB-I00 and CB16/11/00399 (CIBER CV) from the Spanish Ministry of Science, Innovation and Universities. Dr Bayes-Genis was supported by grants from CIBER Cardiovascular (CB16/11/00403 and 16/11/00420) (Madrid, Spain) and AdvanceCat 2014-2020 (Barcelona, Spain); and has received advisory board and lecture fees from Novartis, Boehringer Ingelheim, Vifor, Roche Diagnostics, and Critical Diagnostics. Dr Pontone has received speaker honorarium and/or institutional research grants from GE Healthcare, Bracco, Boehringer Ingelheim, and HeartFlow. All other authors have reported that they have no relationships relevant to the contents of this paper to disclose. Sí
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- 2021
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20. Metabolomic correlates of coronary atherosclerosis, cardiovascular risk, both or neither. Results of the 2 × 2 phenotypic CAPIRE study
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Antonio Noto, Roberto Latini, Marco Magnoni, Felicita Andreotti, Christian Cadeddu Dessalvi, Daniele Andreini, Eleuterio Ferrannini, Aldo P. Maggioni, Attilio Maseri, Martino Deidda, and Giuseppe Mercuro
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Metabolite ,Phenylalanine ,CAD ,Coronary Artery Disease ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Coronary Angiography ,Coronary artery disease ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,0302 clinical medicine ,Metabolomics ,Risk Factors ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,cardiovascular diseases ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Tyrosine ,Coronary atherosclerosis ,business.industry ,medicine.disease ,Phenotype ,Endocrinology ,chemistry ,Cardiovascular Diseases ,Heart Disease Risk Factors ,Urea cycle ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business - Abstract
Background Traditional cardiovascular risk factors (RFs) and coronary artery disease (CAD) do not always run parallel. We investigated functional-metabolic correlations of CAD, RFs, or neither in the CAPIRE (Coronary Atherosclerosis in Outlier Subjects: Protective and Novel Individual Risk Factors Evaluation) 2 × 2 phenotypic observational study. Methods Two hundred and fortyone subjects were included based on RF burden, presence/absence of CAD (assessed by computed tomography angiography), age and sex. Participants displayed one of four phenotypes: CAD with ≥3 RFs, no-CAD with ≥3 RFs, CAD with ≤1 RF and no-CAD with ≤1 RF. Metabolites were identified by gas chromatography–mass spectrometry and pathways by metabolite set enrichment analysis. Results Characteristic patterns and specific pathways emerged for each phenotypic group: amino sugars for CAD/high-RF; urea cycle for no-CAD/high-RF; glutathione for CAD/low-RF; glycine and serine for no-CAD/low-RF. Presence of CAD correlated with ammonia recycling; absence of CAD with the transfer of acetyl groups into mitochondria; high-risk profile with alanine metabolism (all p The comparative case-control analyses showed a statistically significant difference for the two pathways of phenylalanine, tyrosine and tryptophan biosynthesis and phenylalanine metabolism in the CAD/Low-RF vs NoCAD/Low-RF comparison. Conclusions The present 2 × 2 observational study identified specific metabolic pathways for each of the four phenotypes, providing novel functional insights, particularly on CAD with low RF profiles and on the absence of CAD despite high-risk factor profiles.
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- 2021
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21. Coronary Computed Tomographic Angiography for Complete Assessment of Coronary Artery Disease
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Jonathon Leipsic, Hironori Hara, Yoshinobu Onuma, Juhani Knuuti, Bjarne L. Nørgaard, Jeroen J. Bax, Patrick W. Serruys, Daniele Andreini, Scot Garg, Koen Nieman, Saima Mushtaq, Marc R. Dweck, and Hideyuki Kawashima
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Noninvasive imaging ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Coronary computed tomography angiography ,Coronary anatomy ,State of the art review ,medicine.disease ,Revascularization ,Coronary artery disease ,Computed tomographic angiography ,Medicine ,cardiovascular diseases ,Radiology ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Intravascular imaging - Abstract
Coronary computed tomography angiography (CTA) has shown great technological improvements over the last 2 decades. High accuracy of CTA in detecting significant coronary stenosis has promoted CTA as a substitute for conventional invasive coronary angiography in patients with suspected coronary artery disease. In patients with coronary stenosis, CTA-derived physiological assessment is surrogate for intracoronary pressure and velocity wires, and renders possible decision-making about revascularization solely based on computed tomography. Computed tomography coronary anatomy with functionality assessment could potentially become a first line in diagnosis. Noninvasive imaging assessment of plaque burden and morphology is becoming a valuable substitute for intravascular imaging. Recently, wall shear stress and perivascular inflammation have been introduced. These assessments could support risk management for both primary and secondary cardiovascular prevention. Anatomy, functionality, and plaque composition by CTA tend to replace invasive assessment. Complete CTA assessment could provide a 1-stop-shop for diagnosis, risk management, and decision-making on treatment.
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- 2021
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22. Percutaneous Coronary Revascularization
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Masafumi Ono, Daniele Andreini, Giulio Pompilio, Scot Garg, Patrick W. Serruys, Hironori Hara, Hideyuki Kawashima, Spencer B. King, David R. Holmes, and Yoshinobu Onuma
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Percutaneous ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Percutaneous coronary intervention ,Precision medicine ,Revascularization ,medicine.disease ,Comorbidity ,Coronary revascularization ,Coronary artery disease ,Drug-eluting stent ,medicine ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Intensive care medicine ,business - Abstract
Over the last 4 decades, percutaneous coronary intervention has evolved dramatically and is now an acceptable treatment option for patients with advanced coronary artery disease. However, trialists have struggled to establish the respective roles for percutaneous coronary intervention and coronary artery bypass graft surgery, especially in patients with multivessel disease and unprotected left-main stem coronary artery disease. Several pivotal trials and meta-analyses comparing these 2 revascularization strategies have enabled the relative merits of each technique to be established with regard to the type of ischemic syndrome, the coronary anatomy, and the patient's overall comorbidity. Precision medicine with individualized prognosis is emerging as an important method of selecting treatment. However, the never-ending advancement of technology, in conjunction with the emergence of novel pharmacological agents, will in the future continue to force us to reconsider the evolving question: "Which treatment strategy is better and for which patient?"
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- 2021
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23. Platelet and Endothelial Activation as Potential Mechanisms Behind the Thrombotic Complications of COVID-19 Patients
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Daniele Andreini, Fabrizio Veglia, Marta Brambilla, Alice Bonomi, Benedetta Porro, Martino F. Pengo, Viviana Cavalca, Stefano Vicini, Marina Camera, Paola Canzano, Daniela Trabattoni, Andrea Cascella, Paolo Poggio, Elena Tortorici, Emanuela Omodeo Salè, Susanna Fiorelli, Gianfranco Parati, Elena Tremoli, Nicola Cosentino, Canzano, P, Brambilla, M, Porro, B, Cosentino, N, Tortorici, E, Vicini, S, Poggio, P, Cascella, A, Pengo, M, Veglia, F, Fiorelli, S, Bonomi, A, Cavalca, V, Trabattoni, D, Andreini, D, Omodeo Sale, E, Parati, G, Tremoli, E, and Camera, M
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0301 basic medicine ,endothelium ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Pharmacology ,Nitric oxide ,Endothelial activation ,03 medical and health sciences ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,Tissue factor ,0302 clinical medicine ,P2Y12 ,platelet activation ,Medicine ,antiplatelet drug ,Platelet ,Platelet activation ,Interleukin 6 ,IL-6 ,biology ,business.industry ,COVID-19 ,tissue factor ,030104 developmental biology ,Coagulation ,chemistry ,inflammation ,platelets ,circulating microvesicle ,biology.protein ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Editorial Comment - Abstract
The authors hypothesized that the cytokine storm described in COVID-19 patients may lead to consistent cell-based tissue factor (TF)-mediated activation of coagulation, procoagulant microvesicles (MVs) release, and massive platelet activation. COVID-19 patients have higher levels of TF+ platelets, TF+ granulocytes, and TF+ MVs than healthy subjects and coronary artery disease patients. Plasma MV-associated thrombin generation is present in prophylactic anticoagulated patients. A sustained platelet activation in terms of P-selectin expression and platelet–leukocyte aggregate formation, and altered nitric oxide/prostacyclin synthesis are also observed. COVID-19 plasma, added to the blood of healthy subjects, induces platelet activation similar to that observed in vivo. This effect was blunted by pre-incubation with tocilizumab, aspirin, or a P2Y12 inhibitor.
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- 2021
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24. The Journal of Cardiovascular Computed Tomography: 2020 Year in review
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Jonathon Leipsic, Michael T. Lu, James P. Earls, Seamus P. Whelton, Maros Ferencik, Damini Dey, Heidi Gransar, Todd C. Villines, Jonathan R. Weir-McCall, Marcus Y. Chen, Carlo N. De Cecco, Gudrun Feuchtner, Andrew D. Choi, Pál Maurovich-Horvat, Armin Arbab-Zadeh, Daniele Andreini, Harvey S. Hecht, Mohamed Marwan, Edward D. Nicol, Gianluca Pontone, Subhi J. Al'Aref, Michelle C. Williams, Weir-McCall, Jonathan [0000-0001-5842-842X], and Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Cardiac computed tomography ,Biomedical Research ,Heart Diseases ,Heart disease ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Computed Tomography Angiography ,Computed tomography ,Coronary Artery Disease ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Coronary Angiography ,Coronary artery calcium ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,Coronary artery disease ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Risk Factors ,Pandemic ,Cardiac CT ,Humans ,Medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Social media ,Coronary CT angiography ,Structural heart disease ,Journal of cardiovascular computed tomography ,Computed tomography angiography ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,SARS-CoV-2 ,business.industry ,Year in review ,COVID-19 ,Prognosis ,medicine.disease ,Family medicine ,Host-Pathogen Interactions ,Periodicals as Topic ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business - Abstract
The purpose of this review is to highlight the most impactful, educational, and frequently downloaded articles published in the Journal of Cardiovascular Computed Tomography (JCCT) for the year 2020. The JCCT reached new records in 2020 for the number of research submissions, published manuscripts, article downloads and social media impressions. The articles in this review were selected by the Editorial Board of the JCCT and are comprised predominately of original research publications in the following categories: Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), coronary artery disease, coronary physiology, structural heart disease, and technical advances. The Editorial Board would like to thank each of the authors, peer-reviewers and the readers of JCCT for making 2020 one of the most successful years in its history, despite the challenging circumstances of the global COVID-19 pandemic.
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25. Association of high-risk coronary atherosclerosis at CCTA with clinical and circulating biomarkers: Insight from CAPIRE study
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Edoardo Conte, Daniele Andreini, Marco Magnoni, Serge Masson, Saima Mushtaq, Sergio Berti, Mauro Canestrari, Giancarlo Casolo, Domenico Gabrielli, Roberto Latini, Paolo Marraccini, Tiziano Moccetti, Maria Grazia Modena, Gianluca Pontone, Marco Gorini, Aldo P. Maggioni, Attilio Maseri, A. Maseri, D. Andreini, S. Berti, M. Canestrari, G. Casolo, D. Gabrielli, R. Latini, M. Magnoni, P. Marraccini, S. Masson, T. Moccetti, M.G. Modena, G. Pontone, F. Gaspari, S. Ferrari, A. Cannata, N. Stucchi, M. Fois, R. Bernasconi, G. Balconi, T. Vago, T. Letizia, B. Bottazzi, R. Leone, I. Suliman, M. Sommaruga, P. Gremigni, R. Olivieri, L. Pennacchietti, M. Magnacca, M.G. Rossi, E. Pasotti, A. Clemente, S. Mushtaq, E. Mauro, R. Rossi, F. Pigazzani, L. Faggioni, M. Ciardetti, and M. Puppato
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Male ,Computed Tomography Angiography ,Coronary Artery Disease ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Coronary Angiography ,Logistic regression ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,0302 clinical medicine ,Risk Factors ,Prevalence ,Medicine ,Prospective Studies ,Age Factors ,Coronary ct angiography ,Middle Aged ,Prognosis ,Inflammatory biomarkers ,Plaque, Atherosclerotic ,Serum Amyloid P-Component ,C-Reactive Protein ,Italy ,Cohort ,Female ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Coronary plaque ,Clinical risk factor ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Cardiac computed tomography ,Risk Assessment ,03 medical and health sciences ,Sex Factors ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Diabetes mellitus ,Internal medicine ,Multidetector Computed Tomography ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Coronary atherosclerosis ,Aged ,Glycated Hemoglobin ,Inflammation ,business.industry ,High-risk plaque features ,medicine.disease ,Cardiovascular prevention ,Circulating biomarkers ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,business ,Biomarkers - Abstract
Background High-risk coronary atherosclerosis features evaluated coronary CT angiography (CCTA) were suggested to have a prognostic role. The present study aimed to evaluate the association of circulating biomarkers with high-risk plaque features assessed by CCTA. Methods A consecutive cohort of subjects who underwent CCTA because of suspected CAD was screened for inclusion in the CAPIRE study. Based on risk factors (RF) burden patients were defined as having a low clinical risk (0–1 RF with the exclusion of patients with diabetes mellitus as single RF) or an high clinical risk (≥3 RFs). In all patients, measurement of inflammatory biomarkers and CCTA analysis focused on high-risk plaque features were performed. Univariate and multivariate logistic regression analysis were used to evaluate the relationship between clinical and biological variables with CCTA advanced plaque features. Results 528 patients were enrolled in CAPIRE study. Older age and male sex appeared to be predictors of qualitative high-risk plaque features and associated with the presence of elevated total, non-calcified and low-attenuation plaque volume. Among circulating biomarkers only hs-CRP was found to be associated with qualitative high-risk plaque features (OR 2.02, p = 0.004 and 2.02, p = 0.012 for LAP and RI > 1.1, respectively) with borderline association with LAP-Vol (OR 1.52, p = 0.076); HbA1c and PTX-3 resulted to be significantly associated with quantitative high-risk plaque features (OR 1.71, p = 0.003 and 1.04, p = 0.002 for LAP-Vol, respectively). Conclusions Our results support the association between inflammatory biomarkers (hs-CRP, PTX- 3), HbA1c and high-risk atherosclerotic features detected by CCTA. Male sex and older age are significant predictors of high-risk atherosclerosis.
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26. Graft patency and progression of coronary artery disease after CABG assessed by angiography-derived fractional flow reserve
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Takuya Mizukami, Bernard De Bruyne, Carlo Gigante, Jeroen Sonck, Eric Wyffels, Carlos Collet, Antonio L. Bartorelli, Daniele Andreini, Saima Mushtaq, Emanuele Barbato, Sakura Nagumo, Giulio Pompilio, Jozef Bartunek, Marc Vanderheyden, Alessandra Tanzilli, Gigante, C., Mizukami, T., Sonck, J., Nagumo, S., Tanzilli, A., Bartunek, J., Vanderheyden, M., Wyffels, E., Barbato, E., Pompilio, G., Mushtaq, S., Bartorelli, A., De Bruyne, B., Andreini, D., Collet, C., ACS - Heart failure & arrhythmias, and Graduate School
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Coronary Artery Disease ,Fractional flow reserve ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Coronary Angiography ,Coronary artery disease ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Graft occlusion ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,angiography-derived ffr ,In patient ,cardiovascular diseases ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Coronary Artery Bypass ,graft occlusion ,Vascular Patency ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Graft patency ,business.industry ,Graft Occlusion, Vascular ,competitive flow ,cabg ,ffr ,medicine.disease ,Fractional Flow Reserve, Myocardial ,surgical procedures, operative ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Angiography ,Coronary vessel ,cardiovascular system ,Cardiology ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Artery - Abstract
Background: Graft occlusion after coronary artery bypass graft surgery (CABG) has been associated with native coronary artery competitive flow. Objectives: The present study aims to characterize the functional progression of coronary artery disease (CAD) in native vessels after CABG, and to assess the relationship between preoperative FFR as derived from angiography and graft occlusion. Methods: Multicenter study of consecutive patients undergoing CABG between 2013 and 2018, in whom a follow-up angiogram had been performed. Serial vessel-fractional flow reserve (vFFR) analyses were obtained in each major native coronary vessel before and after CABG, excluding post-anastomotic segments and graft conduits. Results: In 73 patients, serial angiograms were suitable for vFFR analysis, including 118 grafted (86 arterial and 32 saphenous grafts) and 64 non-grafted vessels. The median time between CABG and follow-up angiography was 2.4 years [IQR 1.5, 3.3]. Functional CAD progression, by means of decline in vFFR, was observed in grafted but not in non-grafted vessels (delta vFFR in grafted vessels 0.10 [IQR 0.05, 0.18] vs. 0.01 [IQR -0.01, 0.03], in non-grafted vessels, p < 0.001). Preoperative vFFR predicted graft occlusion (AUC: 0.66, 95% CI 0.52 to 0.80, p = 0.031). Conclusions: In patients undergoing CABG, preoperative vFFR derived from conventional angiograms without use of pressure wire was able to predict graft occlusion. Graft occlusion was more frequent in vessels with high vFFR values. Grafted native coronary vessels exhibited accelerated functional CAD progression, whereas in non-grafted native coronaries the functional status remained unchanged.
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27. State-of-the-art-myocardial perfusion stress testing: Static CT perfusion
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Marco Guglielmo, Maria Elisabetta Mancini, Gianluca Pontone, Flavia Nicoli, Andrea Baggiano, Alessandra Tanzilli, Alberto Formenti, Giuseppe Muscogiuri, Antonio L. Bartorelli, Andrea Annoni, Daniele Andreini, Edoardo Conte, Saima Mushtaq, Mauro Pepi, Mushtaq, S, Conte, E, Pontone, G, Baggiano, A, Annoni, A, Formenti, A, Mancini, M, Guglielmo, M, Muscogiuri, G, Tanzilli, A, Nicoli, F, Bartorelli, A, Pepi, M, and Andreini, D
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Computed Tomography Angiography ,Stress testing ,Perfusion scanning ,Coronary Artery Disease ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Coronary Angiography ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,Coronary artery disease ,Myocardial perfusion ,Static modality ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Predictive Value of Tests ,medicine ,Stress Echocardiography ,Myocardial ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Aged ,Functional evaluation ,business.industry ,Myocardial Perfusion Imaging ,Reproducibility of Results ,Middle Aged ,Prognosis ,medicine.disease ,CT perfusion ,Functional assessment ,Coronary Vessels ,Female ,Fractional Flow Reserve, Myocardial ,Fractional Flow Reserve ,Radiation exposure ,Radiology ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Cardiac magnetic resonance ,Perfusion - Abstract
Large multicenter studies and meta-analysis have documented the diagnostic accuracy and the prognostic implications of stress echocardiography, cardiac magnetic resonance and, mainly, nuclear stress tests. However, none of them provides a comprehensive anatomical and functional evaluation within the same study as stress CT perfusion. Myocardial CT perfusion is the only non-invasive modality that allows to quantifying coronary stenosis and determining its functional relevance, constituting a potential “one-stop-shop” method for the diagnosis and global management of patients with known or suspected coronary artery disease. In comparison with the dynamic modality, that requires increased radiation, precise acquisition protocols and dedicated post-processing softwares, static CT perfusion was associated with less radiation exposure, non-inferior diagnostic accuracy, easier interpretation of images and is nowadays more widely available.
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- 2020
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28. DIFFERENTIAL PATTERNS OF ATHEROSCLEROSIS IN PATIENTS WITH FOCAL AND DIFFUSE CORONARY ARTERY DISEASE
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Koshiro Sakai, Takuya Mizukami, Jonathon Leipsic, Bjarne Linde Norgaard, Jeroen Sonck, Hiromasa Otake, Brian Ko, Bon Kwon Koo, Michael Maeng, Jesper M⊘ller Jensen, Toshiro Shinke, Daniele Andreini, Nils P. Johnson, Bernard De Bruyne, and Carlos A. Collet
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Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine - Published
- 2023
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29. Relationship between Coronary Volume, Myocardial Mass and Post-PCI Fractional Flow Reserve
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CARLOS COLLET, Niya Mileva, Hirofumi Ohashi, Pasquale Paolisso, Jonathon Leipsic, Takuya Mizukami, Jeroen Sonck, Hiromasa Otake, Brian Ko, Michael Maeng, Daniel Munhoz, Sakura Nagumo, Marta Belmonte, Dobrin Vassilev, Daniele Andreini, Emanuele Barbato, Bon Kwon Koo, and Bernard De Bruyne
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History ,Polymers and Plastics ,Business and International Management ,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering - Published
- 2022
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30. CRT-100.07 Feasibility and Accuracy of Holographic Graft Length Measurement, a Sub-study of the FAST TRACK CABG Trial
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TsungYing Tsai, Shigetaka Kageyama, Yoshinobu Onuma, Giulio Pompilio, Daniele Andreini, Saima Mushtaq, Gianluca Pontone, Mark La Meir, Johan De Mey, Kaoru Tanaka, Torsten Doenst, Ulf Teichgräber, Ulrich Schneider, John Puskas, Jagat Narula, and Patrick W. Serruys
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Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine - Published
- 2023
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31. CRT-600.09 Comparison of the SYNTAX Score 2020 Based on Coronary Artery Computed Tomography or Invasive Coronary Angiography
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Patrick W. Serruys, Shinichiro Masuda, Shigetaka Kageyama, Nozomi Kotoku, Kai Ninomiya, Ulrich Schneider, Ulf Teichgraber, Torsten Doenst, John D. Puskas, Jagat Narula, Kaoru Tanaka, Johan de May, Mark La Meir, Antonio L. Bartorelli, Saima Mushtaq, Giulio Pompilio, Daniele Andreini, and Yoshinobu Onuma
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Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine - Published
- 2023
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32. Extent of subclinical atherosclerosis on coronary computed tomography and impact of statins in patients with diabetes without known coronary artery disease: Results from CONFIRM registry
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Kashif Shaikh, Arslan Ahmed, Heidi Gransar, JuHwan Lee, Jonathon Leipsic, Rine Nakanishi, Venkata Alla, Jeroen J. Bax, Benjamin J.W. Chow, Daniel S. Berman, Erica Maffei, Fay Y. Lin, Aiza Ahmad, Augustin DeLago, Gianluca Pontone, Gudrun Feuchtner, Hugo Marques, James K. Min, Joerg Hausleiter, Martin Hadamitzky, Philipp A. Kaufmann, Pedro de Araújo Gonçalves, Ricardo C. Cury, Yong-Jin Kim, Hyuk-Jae Chang, Ronen Rubinshtein, Todd C. Villines, Yao Lu, Leslee J. Shaw, Stephen Acenbach, Mouaz H. Al.Mallah, Daniele Andreini, Filippo Cademartiri, Tracy Q. Callister, and Matthew J. Budoff
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Adult ,Endocrinology ,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism ,Diabetes Mellitus ,Internal Medicine ,Humans ,Coronary Artery Disease ,Registries ,Middle Aged ,Hydroxymethylglutaryl-CoA Reductase Inhibitors ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,Atherosclerosis - Abstract
Absence of subclinical atherosclerosis is considered safe to defer statin therapy in general population. However, impact of statins on atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease in patients with diabetes stratified by coronary artery calcium (CAC) scores and extent of non-obstructive CAD on coronary computed tomography angiography (CCTA) has not been evaluated.CONFIRM (Coronary CT Angiography EvaluatioN For Clinical Outcomes: An InteRnational Multi-center Registry) study enrolled consecutive adults 18 years of age between 2005 and 2009 who underwentA total of 7247 patients (Mean age 56.8 years) with a median follow up of 5 years were included. For DM patients, baseline statin therapy significantly reduced MACE for patients with CAC ≥100 (HR: 0.24; 95 % CI 0.07-0.87; p = 0.03) and SIS≥3 (HR: 0.23; 95 % CI 0.06-0.83; p = 0.024) compared to those not on statin therapy. Among Diabetics with lower CAC (100) and SIS (≤3) scores, MACE was similar in statin and non-statin groups. In contrast, among non-DM patients, MACE was similar in statin and no statin groups irrespective of baseline CAC (1-99 or ≥100) and SIS.In this large multicenter cohort of patients, the presence and extent of subclinical atherosclerosis as assessed by CAC and SIS identified patients most likely to derive benefit from statin therapy.
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- 2022
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33. Carotid Wallstent Versus Roadsaver Stent and Distal Versus Proximal Protection on Cerebral Microembolization During Carotid Artery Stenting
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Piero Montorsi, Luigi Caputi, Sarah Troiano, Paolo Ravagnani, Franco Fabbiocchi, Stefano Galli, Gianluca Pontone, Giovanni Teruzzi, Giuseppe Calligaris, Daniela Trabattoni, Luca Grancini, Andrea Annoni, Davide Restelli, Antonio L. Bartorelli, Daniele Andreini, and Stefano De Martini
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Ultrasonography, Doppler, Transcranial ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Carotid arteries ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Prosthesis Design ,Embolic Protection Devices ,Lesion ,Proximal protection ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Risk Factors ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Carotid Stenosis ,In patient ,cardiovascular diseases ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Vascular Patency ,Aged ,Embolic protection ,Aged, 80 and over ,business.industry ,Endovascular Procedures ,Stent ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Transcranial Doppler ,Stenosis ,Treatment Outcome ,Intracranial Embolism ,Italy ,Cerebrovascular Circulation ,Cardiology ,Female ,Stents ,medicine.symptom ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business - Abstract
The aim of this study was to randomly compare the double-layer Roadsaver stent (RS) (Terumo, Tokyo, Japan) with the single-layer Carotid Wallstent (CW) (Boston Scientific, Santa Clara, California) in association with either distal embolic protection with the FilterWire (FW) device (Boston Scientific) or proximal protection with the Mo.Ma Ultra device (Medtronic, Santa Rosa, California) in patients with lipid-rich carotid plaques.The role of both stent type and brain protection during carotid artery stenting (CAS) remains unsettled.A total of 104 consecutive patients with carotid artery stenosis were randomized to CAS with FW + RS (group 1, n = 27), FW + CW (group 2, n = 25), Mo.Ma + RS (group 3, n = 27), or Mo.Ma + CW (group 4, n = 25). The primary endpoint was the number of microembolic signals (MES) on transcranial Doppler among groups in the following CAS steps: 1 and 2) target vessel access; 3) lesion wiring; 4) pre-dilation; 5) stent crossing; 6) stent deployment; 7) stent dilation; and 8) device retrieval and deflation.No significant differences in baseline characteristics were found among the 4 groups. Compared with the FW device, the Mo.Ma Ultra device significantly reduced mean MES count (p 0.0001) during lesion crossing, stent crossing, stent deployment, and post-dilation. Compared with the CW, the RS significantly reduced MES count (p = 0.016) in steps 6 to 8, including spontaneous MES (29% of patients). The combination of Mo.Ma + RS performed significantly better than Mo.Ma + CW (p = 0.043). Clinical major adverse cardiac and cerebrovascular events occurred in 3 patients (p = 0.51). After CAS, peak systolic velocity significantly decreased in all patients. In-stent restenosis developed in 1 patient (0.98%) at 6-month follow-up. The RS was an independent predictor of external carotid artery patency over time.In patients with high-risk, lipid-rich plaque undergoing CAS, Mo.Ma + RS led to the lowest microembolic signals count. (Role of the Type of Carotid Stent and Cerebral Protection on Cerebral Microembolization During Carotid Artery Stenting. A Randomized Study Comparing Carotid Wallstent vs Roadsaver® Stent and Distal vs Proximal Protection; NCT02915328).
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- 2020
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34. Performance of a deep learning algorithm for the evaluation of CAD-RADS classification with CCTA
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Gualtiero I. Colombo, Giuseppe Muscogiuri, Marco Guglielmo, Vitanio Palmisano, Mauro Pepi, Giulia Rizzon, Andrea Igoren Guaricci, Annachiara Cavaliere, Andrea Baggiano, Gloria Cicala, Luca Saba, Carlo N. De Cecco, Antonella Loffreno, Mattia Chiesa, Gianluca Pontone, Laura Fusini, Michela Trotta, Daniele Andreini, Mark G. Rabbat, Marco Gatti, Francesca Baessato, Serena Dell'Aversana, Muscogiuri, G, Chiesa, M, Trotta, M, Gatti, M, Palmisano, V, Dell'Aversana, S, Baessato, F, Cavaliere, A, Cicala, G, Loffreno, A, Rizzon, G, Guglielmo, M, Baggiano, A, Fusini, L, Saba, L, Andreini, D, Pepi, M, Rabbat, M, Guaricci, A, De, C, C. N., C, and G., P
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Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Artificial intelligence ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Computed Tomography Angiography ,Convolutional neural network ,CAD ,Diagnostic accuracy ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Coronary Angiography ,Severity of Illness Index ,Coronary artery disease ,03 medical and health sciences ,Deep Learning ,0302 clinical medicine ,Predictive Value of Tests ,medicine ,Humans ,CADRADS ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Deep cnn ,Plaque characterization ,Coronary Artery Disease ,Female ,Middle Aged ,Algorithms ,business.industry ,Deep learning ,Coronary computed tomography angiography ,Retrospective cohort study ,medicine.disease ,Predictive value ,030104 developmental biology ,Radiology ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business - Abstract
Background and aims Artificial intelligence (AI) is increasing its role in diagnosis of patients with suspicious coronary artery disease. The aim of this manuscript is to develop a deep convolutional neural network (CNN) to classify coronary computed tomography angiography (CCTA) in the correct Coronary Artery Disease Reporting and Data System (CAD-RADS) category. Methods Two hundred eighty eight patients who underwent clinically indicated CCTA were included in this single-center retrospective study. The CCTAs were stratified by CAD-RADS scores by expert readers and considered as reference standard. A deep CNN was designed and tested on the CCTA dataset and compared to on-site reading. The deep CNN analyzed the diagnostic accuracy of the following three Models based on CAD-RADS classification: Model A (CAD-RADS 0 vs CAD-RADS 1–2 vs CAD-RADS 3,4,5), Model 1 (CAD-RADS 0 vs CAD-RADS>0), Model 2 (CAD-RADS 0–2 vs CAD-RADS 3–5). Time of analysis for both physicians and CNN were recorded. Results Model A showed a sensitivity, specificity, negative predictive value, positive predictive value and accuracy of 47%, 74%, 77%, 46% and 60%, respectively. Model 1 showed a sensitivity, specificity, negative predictive value, positive predictive value and accuracy of 66%, 91%, 92%, 63%, 86%, respectively. Conversely, Model 2 demonstrated the following sensitivity, specificity, negative predictive value, positive predictive value and accuracy: 82%, 58%, 74%, 69%, 71%, respectively. Time of analysis was significantly lower using CNN as compared to on-site reading (530.5 ± 179.1 vs 104.3 ± 1.4 sec, p=0.01) Conclusions Deep CNN yielded accurate automated classification of patients with CAD-RADS.
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- 2020
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35. Meta-Analysis of the Prognostic Role of Late Gadolinium Enhancement and Global Systolic Impairment in Left Ventricular Noncompaction
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Lukasz Mazurkiewicz, Pier Giorgio Masci, Magdalena Marczak, Juerg Schwitter, Alexander Ivanov, Michele Emdin, Daniele Andreini, Antonio De Luca, John F. Heitner, Bernhard Gerber, Andrea Barison, Giovanni Donato Aquaro, Chrysanthos Grigoratos, Mihaela Silvia Amzulescu, Jacek Grzybowski, UCL - SSS/IREC/CARD - Pôle de recherche cardiovasculaire, and UCL - (SLuc) Service de pathologie cardiovasculaire
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Male ,Left ventricular noncompaction ,Time Factors ,Left ,Contrast Media ,Disease ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Late gadolinium enhancement ,Ventricular Function, Left ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,Sudden cardiac death ,Ventricular Dysfunction, Left ,0302 clinical medicine ,Risk Factors ,Ventricular Dysfunction ,Ventricular Function ,Isolated Noncompaction of the Ventricular Myocardium ,Ventricular Remodeling ,Middle Aged ,Prognosis ,hypertrabeculation ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,late gadolinium enhancement ,Meta-analysis ,embryonic structures ,Cardiology ,left ventricular noncompaction ,Female ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Hypertrabeculation ,Risk Assessment ,03 medical and health sciences ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Internal medicine ,prognosis ,systolic impairment ,Fibrosis ,Humans ,Myocardium ,medicine ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,cardiovascular diseases ,business.industry ,Systolic impairment ,Odds ratio ,medicine.disease ,Confidence interval ,Transplantation ,Heart failure ,business - Abstract
The objective of this meta-analysis was to assess the predictive value of late gadolinium enhancement (LGE) and global systolic impairment for future major adverse cardiovascular events in left ventricular noncompaction (LVNC). The prognosis of patients with LVNC, with and without left ventricular dysfunction and LGE, is still unclear. A systematic review of published research and a meta-analysis reporting a combined endpoint of hard (cardiac death, sudden cardiac death, appropriate defibrillator firing, resuscitated cardiac arrest, cardiac transplantation, assist device implantation) and minor (heart failure hospitalization and thromboembolic events) events was performed. Four studies with 574 patients with LVNC and 677 with no LVNC and an average follow-up duration of 5.2 years were analyzed. In patients with LVNC, LGE was associated with the combined endpoint (pooled odds ratio: 4.9; 95% confidence interval: 1.63 to 14.6; p = 0.005) and cardiac death (pooled odds ratio: 9.8; 95% confidence interval: 2.44 to 39.5; p < 0.001). Preserved left ventricular systolic function was found in 183 patients with LVNC: 25 with positive LGE and 158 with negative LGE. In LVNC with preserved ejection fraction, positive LGE was associated with hard cardiac events (odds ratio: 6.1; 95% confidence interval: 2.1 to 17.5; p < 0.001). No hard cardiac events were recorded in patients with LVNC, preserved ejection fraction, and negative LGE. Patients with LVNC but without LGE have a better prognosis than those with LGE. When LGE is negative and global systolic function is preserved, no hard cardiac events are to be expected. Currently available criteria allow diagnosis of LVNC, but to further define the presence and prognostic significance of the disease, LGE and/or global systolic impairment must be considered for better risk stratification.
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- 2019
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36. Left atrial appendage closure guided by 3D computed tomography printing technology: A case control study
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Andrea Igoren Guaricci, Anna Maltagliati, Stefania Marconi, Marco Guglielmo, Gianluca Pontone, Gianpiero Italiano, Fabrizio Costa, Mauro Pepi, Michele Conti, Giuseppe Muscogiuri, Claudio Tondo, Gaetano Fassini, Andrea Baggiano, Alessio Gasperetti, Mark G. Rabbat, Maria Elisabetta Mancini, Ferdinando Auricchio, Daniele Andreini, Conti, M, Marconi, S, Muscogiuri, G, Guglielmo, M, Baggiano, A, Italiano, G, Mancini, M, Auricchio, F, Andreini, D, Rabbat, M, Guaricci, A, Fassini, G, Gasperetti, A, Costa, F, Tondo, C, Maltagliati, A, Pepi, M, and Pontone, G
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Male ,Models, Anatomic ,Leak ,medicine.medical_treatment ,3D printing technology ,Pilot Projects ,Computed tomography ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Prosthesis Design ,Prosthesis ,Prosthesis Implantation ,03 medical and health sciences ,Postoperative Complications ,0302 clinical medicine ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Left atrial ,Atrial Fibrillation ,Occlusion ,Humans ,Medicine ,Atrial Appendage ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Implanted device ,Aged ,Retrospective Studies ,Potential impact ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Models, Cardiovascular ,Atrial fibrillation ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Treatment Outcome ,Percutaneous left atrial appendage closure ,Printing, Three-Dimensional ,Female ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Nuclear medicine ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Background We sought to evaluate the additional value of left atrial appendage (LAA) 3D printing derived from computed tomography (CCT) in determining the size for LAA occlusion (LAAO) devices as compared to standard measurement by using occurrence of LAA leak as endpoint. Methods We evaluated 6 patients with LAA leak (cases) and 14 matched patients without LAA leak (controls) after LAAO. For each group, a patient-specific 3D printed model of LAA was manufactured using CT pre-operative images. The size recommended by the 3D printed model was compared with the size of the implanted device. Results Compared to the 3D printed model, 55% of the devices were underestimated, the two sizing approaches agreed in 35% of the patients, while the 3D printed model overestimated the size in 10% of patients. The prevalence of LAA leak was significantly higher in the subset of patients with underestimation of prosthesis implanted with the standard approach as compared to the other patients (p = 0.019). Conclusion 3D printing of the LAA may provide additional value to standard practice for LAAO device prosthesis sizing with the potential impact to reduce LAA leak.
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- 2019
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37. Multimodality imaging of left atrium in patients with atrial fibrillation
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Marco Guglielmo, Edoardo Conte, Mark G. Rabbat, Saima Mushtaq, Andrea Baggiano, Mauro Pepi, Daniele Andreini, Andrea Igoren Guaricci, Paola Gripari, Alberto Formenti, Gianluca Pontone, Andrea Annoni, Laura Fusini, Giuseppe Muscogiuri, Elisabetta Mancini, Guglielmo, M, Baggiano, A, Muscogiuri, G, Fusini, L, Andreini, D, Mushtaq, S, Conte, E, Annoni, A, Formenti, A, Maria Mancini, E, Gripari, P, Igoren Guaricci, A, Rabbat, M, Pepi, M, and Pontone, G
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medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Reproducibility of Result ,Predictive Value of Test ,Catheter ablation ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Multimodal Imaging ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,Pulmonary vein ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Heart Rate ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Internal medicine ,Atrial Fibrillation ,medicine ,Medical imaging ,Humans ,Atrial Appendage ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Sinus rhythm ,cardiovascular diseases ,Thrombus ,Cardiac imaging ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Reproducibility of Results ,Pulmonary Vein ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Atrial fibrillation ,medicine.disease ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Treatment Outcome ,Echocardiography ,Pulmonary Veins ,Catheter Ablation ,cardiovascular system ,Cardiology ,Atrial Function, Left ,Tomography, X-Ray Computed ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Human - Abstract
Atrial fibrillation (AF) is the most common arrhythmia worldwide associated with significant morbidity and mortality and represents a significant health care burden. Goals of AF treatment include prevention of cardioembolic stroke using anticoagulation and device therapy and restoration of sinus rhythm using antiarrhythmic drugs or catheter ablation techniques. A comprehensive assessment of cardiac chamber size and function is often started with echocardiography as a first line diagnostic imaging strategy. Recently, innovations in advanced imaging using cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) and cardiac computed tomography (CCT) provide a detailed characterization of atrial anatomy and have been shown to accurately exclude thrombus and guide left atrial appendage (LAA) closure or catheter ablation (CA) of atrial fibrillation. Compared to echocardiography, CCT offers an uncompromised spatial resolution and a fast dataset acquisition, with the disadvantages of the need of iodine contrast agent and radiation exposure. CMR, conversely, can rely on very high temporal resolution, the unique feature of tissue characterization and the absence of radiation exposure. However, the main drawbacks of this diagnostic tool are long scan times and low availability. This review will illustrate the vital role of multimodality cardiac imaging in the accurate identification of left atrial, pulmonary vein and LAA size and function, discuss advanced imaging techniques to rule out thrombus and highlight novel CMR and CCT techniques to guide catheter ablation of AF and LAA occlusion.
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- 2019
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38. Risk Reclassification With Coronary Computed Tomography Angiography-Visualized Nonobstructive Coronary Artery Disease According to 2018 American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association Cholesterol Guidelines (from the Coronary Computed Tomography Angiography Evaluation for Clinical Outcomes : An International Multicenter Registry [CONFIRM])
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Filippo Cademartiri, Fay Y. Lin, Yong Jin Kim, Mouaz H. Al-Mallah, Jonathon Leipsic, Hugo Marques, Philipp A. Kaufmann, Jessica M. Peña, Gianluca Pontone, Benjamin J.W. Chow, Yao Lu, Khalil Anchouche, Tracy Q. Callister, Donghee Han, Kavitha Chinnaiyan, Pedro de Araújo Gonçalves, James K. Min, Leslee J. Shaw, Ricardo C. Cury, Martin Hadamitzky, Patricia C. Dunham, Ji Hyun Lee, Stephan Achenbach, Gilbert L. Raff, Hyuk Jae Chang, Todd C. Villines, Jeroen J. Bax, Ronen Rubinshtein, Daniele Andreini, Gudrun Feuchtner, Ashley Beecy, Matthew J. Budoff, Heidi Gransar, Daniel S. Berman, Erica Maffei, Joerg Hausleiter, and Augustin Delago
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Statin ,Computed Tomography Angiography ,medicine.drug_class ,Coronary Artery Disease ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Coronary Angiography ,Global Health ,Risk Assessment ,Asymptomatic ,Coronary artery disease ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Risk Factors ,Cause of Death ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Registries ,cardiovascular diseases ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Myocardial infarction ,Societies, Medical ,Retrospective Studies ,business.industry ,Incidence ,Incidence (epidemiology) ,Retrospective cohort study ,American Heart Association ,Guideline ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Coronary Vessels ,United States ,Survival Rate ,Cholesterol ,Practice Guidelines as Topic ,Cardiology ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Biomarkers ,Mace - Abstract
The 2018 American College of Cardiology (ACC)/American Heart Association (AHA) cholesterol management guideline recommends risk enhancers in the borderline-risk and statin recommended/intermediate-risk groups. We determined the risk reclassification by the presence and severity of coronary computed tomography angiography (CCTA)-visualized coronary artery disease (CAD) according to statin eligibility groups. Of 35,281 individuals who underwent CCTA, 1,303 asymptomatic patients (age 59, 65% male) were identified. Patients were categorized as low risk, borderline risk, statin recommended/intermediate risk or statin recommended/high risk according to the guideline. CCTA-visualized CAD was categorized as no CAD, nonobstructive, or obstructive. Major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE) were defined as a composite outcome of all-cause mortality, nonfatal myocardial infarction, and late coronary revascularization (>90 days). We tested a reclassification wherein no CAD reclassifies downward, and the presence of any CAD reclassifies upward. During a median follow-up of 2.9 years, 93 MACE events (7.1%) were observed. Among the borderline-risk and statin-recommended/intermediate-risk groups eligible for risk enhancers, the presence or absence of any CCTA-visualized CAD led to a net increase of 2.3% of cases and 22.4% of controls correctly classified (net reclassification index [NRI] 0.27, 95% CI 0.13 to 0.41, p = 0.0002). The NRI was not significant among low- or statin-recommended/high-risk patients (all p > 0.05). The presence or absence of CCTA-visualized CAD, including both obstructive and nonobstructive CAD, significantly improves reclassification in patients eligible for risk enhancers in 2018 ACC/AHA guidelines. Patients in low- and high-risk groups derive no significant improvement in risk reclassification from CCTA. (C) 2019 Published by Elsevier Inc.
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- 2019
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39. Stress Computed Tomography Perfusion Versus Fractional Flow Reserve CT Derived in Suspected Coronary Artery Disease
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Franco Fabbiocchi, Edoardo Conte, Paolo Ravagnani, Saima Mushtaq, Piero Montorsi, Daniele Andreini, Cristina Ferrari, Fabio Fazzari, Antonio L. Bartorelli, Gianluca Pontone, Daniela Trabattoni, Mark G. Rabbat, Laura Fusini, Andrea Igoren Guaricci, Andrea Baggiano, Alessandro Lualdi, Luca Grancini, Mauro Pepi, Giovanni Teruzzi, Giuseppe Muscogiuri, Stefano Galli, Marco Guglielmo, Giuseppe Calligaris, and Stefano De Martini
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Computed tomography perfusion ,business.industry ,Area under the curve ,Coronary computed tomography angiography ,Fractional flow reserve ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,medicine.disease ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,Invasive coronary angiography ,Coronary artery disease ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,Additional values ,medicine ,Cardiology ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Perfusion - Abstract
Objectives This study sought to compare the diagnostic accuracy of coronary computed tomography angiography (cCTA) with that of cCTA+fractional flow reserve derived from cCTA datasets (FFRCT) and that of cCTA+static stress-computed tomography perfusion (stress-CTP) in detecting functionally significant coronary artery lesions using invasive coronary angiography (ICA) plus invasive FFR as the reference standard. Background FFRCT and static stress-CTP are new techniques that combine anatomy and functional evaluation to improve assessment of coronary artery disease (CAD) using cCTA. Methods A total of 147 consecutive symptomatic patients scheduled for clinically indicated ICA+invasive FFR were evaluated with cCTA, FFRCT, and stress-CTP. Results Vessel-based and patient-based sensitivity, specificity, and negative predictive values, and positive predictive values, and accuracy rates of cCTA were 99%, 76%, 100%, 61%, 82%, and 95%, 54%, 94%, 63%, 73%, respectively. cCTA+FFRCT showed vessel-based and patient-based sensitivity, specificity, and negative predictive values, and positive predictive values and accuracy rates of 88%, 94%, 95%, 84%, 92%, and 90%, 85%, 92%, 83%, 87%, respectively. Finally, cCTA+stress-CTP showed vessel-based and patient-based sensitivity, specificity, and negative predictive values, and positive predictive values and accuracy rates of 92%, 95%, 97%, 87%, 94% and 98%, 87%, 99%, 86%, 92%, respectively. Both FFRCT and stress-CTP significantly improved specificity and positive predictive values compared to those of cCTA alone. The area under the curve to detect flow-limiting stenoses of cCTA, cCTA+FFRCT, and cCTA+CTP were 0.89, 0.93, 0.92, and 0.90, 0.94, and 0.93 in a vessel-based and patient-based model, respectively, with significant additional values for both cCTA+FFRCT and cCTA+CTP versus cCTA alone (p Conclusions FFRCT and stress-CTP in addition to cCTA are valid and comparable tools to evaluate the functional relevance of CAD.
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- 2019
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40. Selective Referral Using CCTA Versus Direct Referral for Individuals Referred to Invasive Coronary Angiography for Suspected CAD
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Iksung Cho, Gianluca Pontone, Ae Young Her, So-Yeon Choi, Hae Young An, James K. Min, Leslee J. Shaw, Woong Kim, Hyung Bok Park, Ji Hyun Lee, David Leflang, Sang Wook Kim, Jung Hyun Choi, Dan Gebow, Cezary Kępka, Ji Min Sung, Hyuk Jae Chang, Donghee Han, Uma Valeti, Namsik Chung, Jin Won Kim, Jason H. Cole, Todd C. Villines, Andrea Baggiano, Ravi Bathina, Joon Hyung Doh, Rodrigo Cerci, Amit Kumar, Ran Heo, Yao Lu, Sang Eun Lee, Fay Y. Lin, Daniele Andreini, Sang Jin Ha, Virginia Beltrama, Ibrahim Danad, Jang Young Kim, Joseph Zullo, and Eui-Young Choi
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Referral ,business.industry ,Unstable angina ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Hazard ratio ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,medicine.disease ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,law.invention ,Coronary artery disease ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Clinical endpoint ,Cardiology ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Myocardial infarction ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Cardiac catheterization - Abstract
Objectives This study compared the safety and diagnostic yield of a selective referral strategy using coronary computed tomographic angiography (CCTA) compared with a direct referral strategy using invasive coronary angiography (ICA) as the index procedure. Background Among patients presenting with signs and symptoms suggestive of coronary artery disease (CAD), a sizeable proportion who are referred to ICA do not have a significant, obstructive stenosis. Methods In a multinational, randomized clinical trial of patients referred to ICA for nonemergent indications, a selective referral strategy was compared with a direct referral strategy. The primary endpoint was noninferiority with a multiplicative margin of 1.33 of composite major adverse cardiovascular events (blindly adjudicated death, myocardial infarction, unstable angina, stroke, urgent and/or emergent coronary revascularization or cardiac hospitalization) at a median follow-up of 1-year. Results At 22 sites, 823 subjects were randomized to a selective referral and 808 to a direct referral strategy. At 1 year, selective referral met the noninferiority margin of 1.33 (p = 0.026) with a similar event rate between the randomized arms of the trial (4.6% vs. 4.6%; hazard ratio: 0.99; 95% confidence interval: 0.66 to 1.47). Following CCTA, only 23% of the selective referral arm went on to ICA, which was a rate lower than that of the direct referral strategy. Coronary revascularization occurred less often in the selective referral group compared with the direct referral to ICA (13% vs. 18%; p Conclusions In stable patients with suspected CAD who are eligible for ICA, the comparable 1-year major adverse cardiovascular events rates following a selective referral and direct referral strategy suggests that both diagnostic approaches are similarly effective. In the selective referral strategy, the reduced use of ICA was associated with a greater diagnostic yield, which supported the usefulness of CCTA as an efficient and accurate method to guide decisions of ICA performance. (Coronary Computed Tomographic Angiography for Selective Cardiac Catheterization [CONSERVE]; NCT01810198)
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- 2019
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41. Association Between Haptoglobin Phenotype and Microvascular Obstruction in Patients With STEMI
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Elena Tremoli, Annalisa Pasquini, Fabio Fazzari, Marco Guglielmo, Giancarlo Marenzi, Giuseppe Muscogiuri, Andrea Baggiano, Claudio Berzovini, Nicola Cosentino, Edoardo Conte, Saima Mushtaq, Mauro Pepi, Daniele Andreini, Mark G. Rabbat, Cristina Banfi, Gianluca Pontone, Laura Fusini, Antonio L. Bartorelli, and Andrea Igoren Guaricci
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Ejection fraction ,biology ,business.industry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Haptoglobin ,Percutaneous coronary intervention ,Odds ratio ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,medicine.disease ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,Diabetes mellitus ,Troponin I ,medicine ,Cardiology ,biology.protein ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,cardiovascular diseases ,Myocardial infarction ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Body mass index - Abstract
Objectives This study aimed to evaluate the correlation between different haptoglobin (Hp) phenotypes and myocardial infarction characteristics as detected by cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) in consecutive patients after ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI). Background Hp is a plasma protein that prevents iron-mediated oxidative tissue damage. CMR has emerged as the gold standard technique to detect left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF), extent of scar with late gadolinium enhancement (LGE) technique, microvascular obstruction (MVO), and myocardial hemorrhage (MH) in patients with STEMI treated by primary percutaneous coronary intervention (pPCI). Methods A total of 145 consecutive STEMI patients (mean age 62.2 ± 10.3 years; 78% men) were prospectively enrolled and underwent Hp phenotyping and CMR assessment within 1 week after STEMI. Results CMR showed an area at risk (AAR) involving 26.6 ± 19.1% of left ventricular (LV) mass with a late LGE extent of 15.2 ± 13.1% of LV mass. MVO and MH occurred in 38 (26%) and 12 (8%) patients, respectively. Hp phenotypes 1-1, 2-1, 2-2 were observed in 15 (10%), 62 (43%), and 68 (47%), respectively. Multivariable analysis demonstrated that body mass index, Hp2-2, diabetes, and peak troponin I were independent predictors of MVO with Hp2-2 associated with the highest odds ratio (OR) (OR: 5.5 [95% confidence interval [CI]: 2.1 to 14.3; p Conclusions Hp phenotype is an independent predictor of MVO. Therefore, Hp phenotyping could be used for risk stratification and may be useful in assessing new therapies to reduce myocardial reperfusion injury in patients with STEMI.
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- 2019
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42. TCT-358 Accuracy of the FFRCT Planner in Coronary Calcific Lesions: A Substudy of the Precise PCI Plan (P3) Study
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Jesper Møller Jensen, Bon-Kwon Koo, Jeroen Sonck, Carlos Collet, Bernard De Bruyne, Niya Mileva, Takuya Mizukami, Jonathon Leipsic, Daniele Andreini, Daniel B. Munhoz, Sakura Nagumo, Adam Updegrove, Brian Ko, Hiromasa Otake, Bjarne L. Nørgaard, Michael Maeng, and Amy Collinsworth
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Conventional PCI ,medicine ,Medical physics ,Plan (drawing) ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Planner ,business ,computer ,computer.programming_language - Published
- 2021
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43. Incremental Diagnostic Value of Stress Computed Tomography Myocardial Perfusion With Whole-Heart Coverage CT Scanner in Intermediate- to High-Risk Symptomatic Patients Suspected of Coronary Artery Disease
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Marco Guglielmo, Fabio Fazzari, Piero Montorsi, Gianluca Pontone, Andrea Igoren Guaricci, Daniela Trabattoni, Claudio Berzovini, Stefano De Martini, Daniele Andreini, Cristina Ferrari, Antonio L. Bartorelli, Franco Fabbiocchi, Giuseppe Muscogiuri, Alessandro Lualdi, Mauro Pepi, Luca Grancini, Stefano Galli, Andrea Baggiano, Mark G. Rabbat, Giovanni Teruzzi, Annalisa Pasquini, Giuseppe Calligaris, Edoardo Conte, Paolo Ravagnani, Saima Mushtaq, Pontone, G, Andreini, D, Guaricci, A, Baggiano, A, Fazzari, F, Guglielmo, M, Muscogiuri, G, Berzovini, C, Pasquini, A, Mushtaq, S, Conte, E, Calligaris, G, De Martini, S, Ferrari, C, Galli, S, Grancini, L, Ravagnani, P, Teruzzi, G, Trabattoni, D, Fabbiocchi, F, Lualdi, A, Montorsi, P, Rabbat, M, Bartorelli, A, and Pepi, M
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Male ,Tomography Scanners, X-Ray Computed ,Computed Tomography Angiography ,Computed tomography ,Coronary Artery Disease ,Fractional flow reserve ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Coronary Angiography ,Risk Assessment ,Effective dose (radiation) ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,Coronary artery disease ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Risk Factors ,medicine ,Humans ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Prospective Studies ,Single scan ,Aged ,accuracy ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,Myocardial Perfusion Imaging ,Coronary computed tomography angiography ,Reproducibility of Results ,computed tomography ,Equipment Design ,Middle Aged ,medicine.disease ,Coronary Vessels ,Fractional Flow Reserve, Myocardial ,Invasive coronary angiography ,Female ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,Nuclear medicine ,business ,Perfusion ,myocardial perfusion - Abstract
Objectives The goal of this study was to evaluate the diagnostic accuracy of stress computed tomography myocardial perfusion (CTP) for the detection of functionally significant coronary artery disease (CAD) by using invasive coronary angiography (ICA) plus invasive fractional flow reserve (FFR) as the reference standard in consecutive intermediate- to high-risk symptomatic patients. Background Stress CTP recently emerged as a potential strategy to combine the anatomic and functional evaluation of CAD in a single scan. Methods A total of 100 consecutive symptomatic patients scheduled for ICA were prospectively enrolled. All patients underwent rest coronary computed tomography angiography (CTA) followed by stress static CTP with a whole-heart coverage CT scanner (Revolution CT, GE Healthcare, Milwaukee, Wisconsin). Diagnostic accuracy and overall effective dose were assessed and compared versus those of ICA and invasive FFR. Results The prevalence of obstructive CAD and functionally significant CAD were 69% and 44%, respectively. Coronary CTA alone demonstrated a per-vessel and per-patient sensitivity, specificity, negative predictive value, positive predictive value, and accuracy of 98%, 76%, 99%, 63%, and 83% and of 98%, 54%, 96%, 68%, and 76%, respectively. Combining coronary CTA with stress CTP, per-vessel and per-patient sensitivity, specificity, negative predictive value, positive predictive value, and accuracy were 91%, 94%, 96%, 86%, and 93% and 98%, 83%, 98%, 86%, and 91%, with a significant improvement in specificity, positive predictive value, and accuracy in both models. The mean effective dose for coronary CTA and stress CTP were 2.8 ± 1.4 mSv and 2.5 ± 1.1 mSv. Conclusions The inclusion of stress CTP for the evaluation of patients with an intermediate to high risk for CAD is feasible and improved the diagnostic performance of coronary CTA for detecting functionally significant CAD.
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- 2019
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44. Cardiac magnetic resonance for ischaemia and viability detection. Guiding patient selection to revascularization in coronary chronic total occlusions: The CARISMA_CTO study design
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Massimo Lombardi, Valentina Milani, Gabriele L. Gasparini, Silvia Pica, Gianluca Pontone, Luca Testa, Anna Maestroni, G. Di Giovine, Federico Ambrogi, Antonia Camporeale, Mario Bollati, Luca Grancini, Daniele Andreini, Gioel Gabrio Secco, Lorenzo Monti, and Francesco Bedogni
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Myocardial Ischemia ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Cine ,Infarction ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,Revascularization ,Angina ,03 medical and health sciences ,Percutaneous Coronary Intervention ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,Myocardial Revascularization ,Clinical endpoint ,Humans ,Medicine ,Prospective Studies ,cardiovascular diseases ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Ejection fraction ,business.industry ,Patient Selection ,Percutaneous coronary intervention ,medicine.disease ,Treatment Outcome ,Coronary Occlusion ,Chronic Disease ,Conventional PCI ,Cardiology ,Feasibility Studies ,Female ,Dobutamine ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Follow-Up Studies ,medicine.drug - Abstract
It is debated whether percutaneous revascularization (PCI) of total coronary chronic occlusion (CTO) is superior to optimal medical therapy (OMT) in improving symptoms, left ventricular (LV) function and major adverse cardiac/cerebrovascular events (MACCE). Furthermore, CTO-PCI is a challenging technique, with lower success rate than in other settings. A systematic analysis of baseline LV function, infarction extent and ischaemic burden to predict response to revascularization has never been performed.To establish a CMR protocol to identify patients (pts) who can benefit most from CTO-PCI. Myocardial viability/ischaemia retains high biological plausibility as predictors of response to revascularization. Therefore, baseline viability (necrotic tissue extent, response to inotropic stimulation) and ischaemia (perfusion defect, wall motion abnormality during stress) will be studied as potential predictors of mechanical LV segmental improvement and ischaemic burden reduction in CTO territory (primary endpoint), LV remodelling and global function, Seattle Angina Questionnaire, and MACCE improvement (secondary endpoints) in the follow-up.Pts with CTO suitable for PCI undergo stress-CMR for viability/ischaemia assessment. Pts with normal LV function undergo adenosine, those with moderately-reduced ejection fraction (EF) and wall motion abnormalities high-dose dobutamine, pts with EF35% low-dose dobutamine. All pts undergo late gadolinium enhancement and repeat the same scan at 12 ± 3 months, regardless of PCI success or decision for OMT.A multi-parameter CMR protocol tailored on pts characteristics to study viability/ischaemia could help in identifying responders in terms of LV function, ischaemic burden and clinical outcome among pts suitable for CTO-PCI, improving selection of best candidates to percutaneous revascularization.
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- 2018
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45. Effects of Statins on Coronary Atherosclerotic Plaques
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Gianluca Pontone, Sang Eun Lee, Jeroen J. Bax, Daniele Andreini, Asim Rizvi, Kavitha Chinnaiyan, Eun Ju Chun, Hyung Bok Park, Jagat Narula, Jung Hyun Choi, Matthew J. Budoff, Yong Jin Kim, James K. Min, Leslee J. Shaw, Hyuk Jae Chang, Martin Hadamitzky, Jonathon Leipsic, Fay Y. Lin, Edoardo Conte, Habib Samady, Ran Heo, Hugo Marques, Ilan Gottlieb, Sanghoon Shin, Gilbert L. Raff, Renu Virmani, Peter Stone, Ji Min Sung, Filippo Cademartiri, Byoung Kwon Lee, Erica Maffei, Amit Kumar, and Daniel S. Berman
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Plaque composition ,Coronary computed tomography angiography ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,medicine.disease ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,Computed tomographic angiography ,Coronary artery disease ,03 medical and health sciences ,Stenosis ,0302 clinical medicine ,Atheroma ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Cardiology ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Coronary atherosclerosis ,Artery - Abstract
OBJECTIVES:This study sought to describe the impact of statins on individual coronary atherosclerotic plaques. BACKGROUND:Although statins reduce the risk of major adverse cardiovascular events, their long-term effects on coronary atherosclerosis remain unclear. METHODS:We performed a prospective, multinational study consisting of a registry of consecutive patients without history of coronary artery disease who underwent serial coronary computed tomography angiography at an interscan interval of ≥2 years. Atherosclerotic plaques were quantitatively analyzed for percent diameter stenosis (%DS), percent atheroma volume (PAV), plaque composition, and presence of high-risk plaque (HRP), defined by the presence of ≥2 features of low-attenuation plaque, positive arterial remodeling, or spotty calcifications. RESULTS:Among 1,255 patients (60 ± 9 years of age; 57% men), 1,079 coronary artery lesions were evaluated in statin-naive patients (n = 474), and 2,496 coronary artery lesions were evaluated in statin-taking patients (n = 781). Compared with lesions in statin-naive patients, those in statin-taking patients displayed a slower rate of overall PAV progression (1.76 ± 2.40% per year vs. 2.04 ± 2.37% per year, respectively; p = 0.002) but more rapid progression of calcified PAV (1.27 ± 1.54% per year vs. 0.98 ± 1.27% per year, respectively; p 50% DS were not different (1.0% vs. 1.4%, respectively; p > 0.05). Statins were associated with a 21% reduction in annualized total PAV progression above the median and 35% reduction in HRP development. CONCLUSIONS:Statins were associated with slower progression of overall coronary atherosclerosis volume, with increased plaque calcification and reduction of high-risk plaque features. Statins did not affect the progression of percentage of stenosis severity of coronary artery lesions but induced phenotypic plaque transformation. (Progression of AtheRosclerotic PlAque DetermIned by Computed TomoGraphic Angiography Imaging [PARADIGM]; NCT02803411).
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- 2018
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46. Natural History of Diabetic Coronary Atherosclerosis by Quantitative Measurement of Serial Coronary Computed Tomographic Angiography
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Eun Ju Chun, Michael Shao, Erica Maffei, Martin Hadamitzky, Filippo Cademartiri, Peter Stone, Matthew J. Budoff, Jonathon Leipsic, Renu Virmani, James K. Min, Leslee J. Shaw, Jeroen J. Bax, Gianluca Pontone, Hugo Marques, Jagat Narula, Daniele Andreini, Philipp Blanke, Edoardo Conte, Sanghoon Shin, Habib Samady, Byoung Kwon Lee, Yong Jin Kim, Jung Hyun Choi, Hyuk Jae Chang, Ilan Gottlieb, Daniel S. Berman, Ung Kim, and Stephanie L. Sellers
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Odds ratio ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,medicine.disease ,Confidence interval ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,Coronary artery disease ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,Diabetes mellitus ,Propensity score matching ,Clinical endpoint ,medicine ,Cardiology ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,Risk factor ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Coronary atherosclerosis - Abstract
Objectives This study aimed to determine the rate and extent of plaque progression (PP), changes in plaque features, and clinical predictors of PP in patients with diabetes mellitus (DM). Background The natural history of coronary PP in patients with DM is not well established. Methods A total of 1,602 patients (age 61.3 ± 9.0 years; 60.3% men; median scan interval 3.8 years) who underwent serial coronary computed tomography angiography over a period of at least 24 months were enrolled and analyzed from the PARADIGM (Progression of Atherosclerotic Plaque Determined by Computed Tomographic Angiography Imaging) trial. Study endpoints were changes in plaque features in diabetics with PP and risk factors for PP by serial coronary computed tomography angiography between patients with and without DM. PP was defined if plaque volume at follow-up minus plaque volume at baseline was >0. Results DM was an independent risk factor for PP (84.6%; 276 of 326 patients with PP) in multivariate analysis (odds ratio [OR]: 1.526; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.100 to 2.118; p = 0.011). Independent risk factors for PP in patients with DM were male sex (OR: 1.485; 95% CI: 1.003 to 2.199; p = 0.048) and mean plaque burden at baseline ≥75% (OR: 3.121; 95% CI: 1.701 to 5.725; p ≤0.001). After propensity matching, percent changes in overall plaque volume (30.3 ± 36.9% in patients without DM and 36.0 ± 29.7% in those with DM; p = 0.032) and necrotic core volume (−7.0 ± 35.8% in patients without DM and 21.5 ± 90.5% in those with DM; p = 0.007) were significantly greater in those with DM. The frequency of spotty calcification, positive remodeling, and burden of low-attenuation plaque were significantly greater in patients with DM. Conclusions People with DM experience greater PP, particularly significantly greater progression in adverse plaque, than those without DM. Male sex and mean plaque burden >75% at baseline were identified as independent risk factors for PP.
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- 2018
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47. Long-Term Incremental Prognostic Value of Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance After ST-Segment Elevation Myocardial Infarction
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Andrea Igoren Guaricci, Laura De Luca, Iacopo Carbone, Jadwiga Nessler, Paolo Magistrelli, Piet Claus, Walter Desmet, Andrea Barison, Monika Durak, Valentina Lorenzoni, Juerg Schwitter, Marco Guglielmo, Jarosław Zalewski, Rolf Symons, Daniele Andreini, Luciano Agati, Gianluca Pontone, Juan F. Iglesias, Marco Francone, Olivier Muller, Giovanni Donato Aquaro, Sophie Degrauwe, Eric Eeckhout, Alfonso Lo Presti, Saima Mushtaq, Christian Roguelov, Pier Giorgio Masci, Pierre Vogt, Stefan Janssens, Jan Bogaert, and Giovanni Ferro
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medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Infarction ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Clinical endpoint ,ST segment ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,cardiovascular diseases ,Myocardial infarction ,business.industry ,Percutaneous coronary intervention ,medicine.disease ,Heart failure ,Predictive value of tests ,cardiovascular system ,Cardiology ,Radiology ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,human activities ,TIMI - Abstract
Objectives This study sought to investigate whether early post-infarction cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) parameters provide additional long-term prognostic value beyond traditional outcome predictors in ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) patients. Background Long-term prognostic significance of CMR in STEMI patients has not been assessed yet. Methods This was a longitudinal study from a multicenter registry that prospectively included STEMI patients undergoing CMR after infarction. Between May 2003 and August 2015, 810 revascularized STEMI patients were included. CMR was performed at a median of 4 days after STEMI. Infarct size, microvascular obstruction (MVO), and left ventricular (LV) volumes and function were measured. Primary endpoint was a composite of all death and decompensated heart failure (HF). Results During median follow-up of 5.5 years (range 1.0 to 13.1 years), primary endpoint occurred in 99 patients (39 deaths and 60 HF hospitalization). MVO was a strong predictor of the composite endpoint after correction for important clinical, CMR, and angiographic parameters, including age, LV systolic function, and infarct size. The independent prognostic value of MVO was confirmed in all multivariate models irrespective of whether it was included as a dichotomous (presence of MVO, hazard ratio [HR]: 1.985 to 1.995), continuous (MVO extent as % LV, HR: 1.095 to 1.097), or optimal cutoff value (MVO extent ≥2.6% of LV; HR: 3.185 to 3.199; p Conclusions Early post-infarction CMR-based MVO is a strong independent prognosticator in revascularized STEMI patients. Remarkably, MVO extent ≥2.6% of LV improved long-term risk stratification over traditional outcome predictors.
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- 2018
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48. Reply to: The spectrum of pericardial syndromes in patients with pectus excavatum
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Antonio Brucato, Chiara Carollo, Edoardo Conte, and Daniele Andreini
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medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Syndrome ,medicine.disease ,Pericardial effusion ,Pericardial Effusion ,Surgery ,Pectus excavatum ,Funnel Chest ,Humans ,Medicine ,In patient ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Pericardium - Published
- 2022
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49. The leukocyte-shed short form of plasma soluble CD31 identifies coronary artery disease in patients at low risk: Insights from the 'CAPIRE' study
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Giuseppina Caligiuri, Daniele Andreini, Marco Magnoni, and Aldo P. Maggioni
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CD31 ,medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,medicine.drug_class ,Disease ,medicine.disease ,Monoclonal antibody ,Gastroenterology ,Coronary artery disease ,Pathogenesis ,Internal medicine ,Diabetes mellitus ,medicine ,Risk factor ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Coronary atherosclerosis - Abstract
Background and Aims CD31 is cleaved at the surface of activated leukocytes, yielding a short soluble (s)CD31 form that circulates together with the long one, physiologically produced by endothelial cells. In pathologic vascular conditions, the decreased production of the long form may be in balance with the release of the leukocyte-shed short form, puzzling the biological significance of total sCD31 measures in plasma. In order to evaluate the independent putative role of activation-driven leukocyte CD31 shedding in the pathogenesis of Coronary Atherosclerosis Disease (CAD), we measured the two forms in the plasma of stable patients with a low risk factor burden (0 to 1 risk factor, excluded diabetes) and without previous diagnosis of CAD, enrolled in the study CAPIRE (Coronary Atherosclerosis in outlier subjects: Protective and novel Individual Risk factors Evaluation). Methods The long and short forms of sCD31 were measured using epitope-mapped monoclonal antibodies and a bead-based multicolor method, as described in doi: 10.4049/jimmunol.0902219. Patients were distributed in two groups, “CAD” (> 5 segments involvement detected by coronary computed tomography angiography, n = 234) and “noCAD” (no plaque detected, n = 88). Data were adjusted for inflammatory covariates (plasma hsCRP and IL-6 levels) prior to statistical analysis. Results The relative fraction of leukocyte-shed short sCD31 form was significantly augmented in CAD patients (P Fig. 1 ) whereas total (short + long form) sCD31 plasma levels were similar in all patients (32 ± 27 vs. 31 ± 43 ng/ml, NS, not shown). Conclusions Leukocyte activation, revealed by the increased proportion of the short sCD31, is significantly increased in patients affected by CAD in wpite of a very low “classical” risk burden, suggesting a pcausal role in the pathogenesis of human atherosclerosis.
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- 2021
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50. The Coronary Artery Disease–Reporting and Data System (CAD-RADS)
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Gudrun Feuchtner, Joerg Hausleiter, Niree Hindoyan, Benjamin J.W. Chow, Philipp A. Kaufmann, Todd C. Villines, Tracy Q. Callister, Martin Hadamitzky, Daniele Andreini, Matthew J. Budoff, Ronen Rubinshtein, Mouaz H. Al-Mallah, Stephan Achenbach, Jonathon Leipsic, Augustin Delago, Fay Y. Lin, James K. Min, Millie Gomez, Erica C. Jones, Joe X. Xie, Bríain ó Hartaigh, Daniel S. Berman, Gilbert L. Raff, Matthew T Crim, Heidi Gransar, Allison Dunning, Hugo Marques, Erica Maffei, Leslee J. Shaw, Gianluca Pontone, Kavitha Chinnaiyan, Ricardo C. Cury, Filippo Cademartiri, and Yong Jin Kim
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Proportional hazards model ,business.industry ,030204 cardiovascular system & hematology ,medicine.disease ,Asymptomatic ,Clinical decision support system ,030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging ,Coronary artery disease ,03 medical and health sciences ,Stenosis ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Cardiology ,Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and imaging ,cardiovascular diseases ,Myocardial infarction ,medicine.symptom ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Adverse effect ,Artery - Abstract
Objectives This study sought to assess clinical outcomes associated with the novel Coronary Artery Disease–Reporting and Data System (CAD-RADS) scores used to standardize coronary computed tomography angiography (CTA) reporting and their potential utility in guiding post-coronary CTA care. Background Clinical decision support is a major focus of health care policies aimed at improving guideline-directed care. Recently, CAD-RADS was developed to standardize coronary CTA reporting and includes clinical recommendations to facilitate patient management after coronary CTA. Methods In the multinational CONFIRM (COronary CT Angiography EvaluatioN For Clinical Outcomes: An InteRnational Multicenter) registry, 5,039 patients without known coronary artery disease (CAD) underwent coronary CTA and were stratified by CAD-RADS scores, which rank CAD stenosis severity as 0 (0%), 1 (1% to 24%), 2 (25% to 49%), 3 (50% to 69%), 4A (70% to 99% in 1 to 2 vessels), 4B (70% to 99% in 3 vessels or ≥50% left main), or 5 (100%). Kaplan-Meier and multivariable Cox models were used to estimate all-cause mortality or myocardial infarction (MI). Receiver-operating characteristic (ROC) curves were used to compare CAD-RADS to the Duke CAD Index and traditional CAD classification. Referrals to invasive coronary angiography (ICA) after coronary CTA were also assessed. Results Cumulative 5-year event-free survival ranged from 95.2% to 69.3% for CAD-RADS 0 to 5 (p Conclusions CAD-RADS effectively identified patients at risk for adverse events. Frequent ICA use was observed among patients without severe CAD, many of whom were asymptomatic or not taking antianginal drugs. Incorporating CAD-RADS into coronary CTA reports may provide a novel opportunity to promote evidence-based care post-coronary CTA.
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- 2018
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