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Stress Computed Tomography Perfusion Versus Fractional Flow Reserve CT Derived in Suspected Coronary Artery Disease: The PERFECTION Study

Authors :
Pontone, G
Baggiano, A
Andreini, D
Guaricci, A
Guglielmo, M
Muscogiuri, G
Fusini, L
Fazzari, F
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
Pepi, M
Pontone G
Baggiano A
Andreini D
Guaricci AI
Guglielmo M
Muscogiuri G
Fusini L
Fazzari F
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 MG
Bartorelli AL
Pepi M
Pontone, G
Baggiano, A
Andreini, D
Guaricci, A
Guglielmo, M
Muscogiuri, G
Fusini, L
Fazzari, F
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
Pepi, M
Pontone G
Baggiano A
Andreini D
Guaricci AI
Guglielmo M
Muscogiuri G
Fusini L
Fazzari F
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 MG
Bartorelli AL
Pepi M
Publication Year :
2019

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 < 0.001) but no differences between cCTA+FFRCT versus cCTA+CTP. Conclusions: FFRCT and stress-CTP in addition to cCTA are valid and compara

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
STAMPA, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1320814197
Document Type :
Electronic Resource