Back to Search Start Over

1-Year Impact on Medical Practice and Clinical Outcomes of FFRCT

Authors :
Timothy A. Fairbairn
Jonathon Leipsic
Hitoshi Matsuo
Gianluca Pontone
Niels Peter Rønnow Sand
Bjarne L. Nørgaard
Tomohiro Kawasaki
Campbell Rogers
Manesh R. Patel
Michael Poon
Bernard De Bruyne
Jesper M. Jensen
Koen Nieman
Jeroen Sonck
Tetsuya Amano
Gilbert L. Raff
Lynne M. Hurwitz Koweek
Takashi Akasaka
Mark G. Rabbat
Jeroen J. Bax
Kristian A. Øvrehus
Daniel S. Berman
Sarah Mullen
Source :
JACC: Cardiovascular Imaging. 13:97-105
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2020.

Abstract

Objectives The 1-year data from the international ADVANCE (Assessing Diagnostic Value of Non-invasive FFRCT in Coronary Care) Registry of patients undergoing coronary computed tomography angiography (CTA) was used to evaluate the relationship of fractional flow reserve derived from coronary CTA (FFRCT) with downstream care and clinical outcomes. Background Guidelines for management of chest pain using noninvasive imaging pathways are based on short- to intermediate-term outcomes. Methods Patients (N = 5,083) evaluated for clinically suspected coronary artery disease and in whom atherosclerosis was identified by coronary CTA were prospectively enrolled at 38 international sites from July 15, 2015, to October 20, 2017. Demographics, symptom status, coronary CTA and FFRCT findings and resultant site-based treatment plans, and clinical outcomes through 1 year were recorded and adjudicated by a blinded core laboratory. Major adverse cardiac events (MACE), death, myocardial infarction (MI), and acute coronary syndrome leading to urgent revascularization were captured. Results At 1 year, 449 patients did not have follow-up data. Revascularization occurred in 1,208 (38.40%) patients with an FFRCT ≤0.80 and in 89 (5.60%) with an FFRCT >0.80 (relative risk [RR]: 6.87; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 5.59 to 8.45; p 0.80 (RR: 1.81; 95% CI: 0.96 to 3.43; p = 0.06). Time to first event (all-cause death or MI) occurred in 38 (1.20%) patients with an FFRCT ≤0.80 compared with 10 (0.60%) patients with an FFRCT >0.80 (RR: 1.92; 95% CI: 0.96 to 3.85; p = 0.06). Time to first event (cardiovascular death or MI) occurred cardiovascular death or MI occurred more in patients with an FFRCT ≤0.80 compared with patients with an FFRCT >0.80 (25 [0.80%] vs. 3 [0.20%]; RR: 4.22; 95% CI: 1.28 to 13.95; p = 0.01). Conclusions The 1-year outcomes from the ADVANCE FFRCT Registry show low rates of events in all patients, with less revascularization and a trend toward lower MACE and significantly lower cardiovascular death or MI in patients with a negative FFRCT compared with patients with abnormal FFRCT values. (Assessing Diagnostic Value of Non-invasive FFRCT in Coronary Wave [ADVANCE]; NCT02499679)

Details

ISSN :
1936878X
Volume :
13
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
JACC: Cardiovascular Imaging
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a180175de49b6db57b28af9b2d8e3b34