2,258 results on '"Andreini Daniele"'
Search Results
2. The effectiveness of coronary computed tomography angiography and functional testing for the diagnosis of obstructive coronary artery disease: results from the individual patient data Collaborative Meta-Analysis of Cardiac CT (COME-CCT)
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Schlattmann, Peter, Wieske, Viktoria, Bressem, Keno K., Götz, Theresa, Schuetz, Georg M., Andreini, Daniele, Pontone, Gianluca, Alkadhi, Hatem, Hausleiter, Jörg, Zimmermann, Elke, Gerber, Bernhard, Shabestari, Abbas A., Meijs, Matthijs F. L., Sato, Akira, Øvrehus, Kristian A., Jenkins, Shona M. M., Knuuti, Juhani, Hamdan, Ashraf, Halvorsen, Bjørn A., Mendoza-Rodriguez, Vladimir, Rixe, Johannes, Wan, Yung-Liang, Langer, Christoph, Leschka, Sebastian, Martuscelli, Eugenio, Ghostine, Said, Tardif, Jean-Claude, Sánchez, Alejandra Rodríguez, Haase, Robert, and Dewey, Marc
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- 2024
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3. Symptomatic post COVID patients have impaired alveolar capillary membrane function and high VE/VCO2
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Agostoni, Piergiuseppe, Mapelli, Massimo, Salvioni, Elisabetta, Mattavelli, Irene, Banfi, Cristina, Bonomi, Alice, Biondi, Maria Luisa, Rovai, Sara, Tamborini, Gloria, Muratori, Manuela, Ghulam Ali, Sarah, Ghilardi, Stefania, De Martino, Fabiana, Vignati, Carlo, Palermo, Pietro, Gugliandolo, Paola, Elia, Davide, Moscucci, Federica, Cassandro, Roberto, Andreini, Daniele, Mancini, Elisabetta, and Harari, Sergio
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- 2024
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4. Prevalence and prognosis of structural heart disease among athletes with negative T waves and normal transthoracic echocardiography
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Conte, Edoardo, Pizzamiglio, Francesca, Dessanai, Maria Antonietta, Guarnieri, Gianluca, Ardizzone, Valentina, Schillaci, Matteo, Dello Russo, Antonio, Casella, Michela, Mushtaq, Saima, Melotti, Eleonora, Marchetti, Davide, Volpato, Valentina, Drago, Gabrile, Gigante, Carlo, Sforza, Chiarella, Bartorelli, Antonio L., Pepi, Mauro, Pontone, Gianluca, Tondo, Claudio, and Andreini, Daniele
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- 2024
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5. Evaluation of Image Quality for High Heart Rates for Coronary Computed Tomographic Angiography with Advancement in CT Technology: The CONVERGE Registry.
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Abdelkarim, Ayman, Roy, Sion, Kinninger, April, Salek, Azadeh, Baranski, Olivia, Andreini, Daniele, Pontone, Gianluca, Conte, Edoardo, ORourke, Rachael, Hamilton-Craig, Christian, and Budoff, Matthew
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computed tomography ,coronary artery disease ,motion artifact ,tachycardia - Abstract
OBJECTIVE: This study aims to evaluate image quality in patients with heart rates above or equal to 70 beats per minute (bpm), performed on a 16 cm scanner (256-slice General Electric Revolution) in comparison to a CT scanner with only 4 cm of coverage (64 slice Volume CT). BACKGROUND: Recent advancements in image acquisition, such as whole-heart coverage in a single rotation and post-processing methods in coronary computed tomographic angiography (CCTA), include motion-correction algorithms, such as SnapShot Freeze (SSF), which improve temporal resolution and allow for the assessment of coronary artery disease (CAD) with lower motion scores and better image qualities. Studies from the comprehensive evaluation of high temporal- and spatial-resolution cardiac CT using a wide coverage system (CONVERGE) registry (a multicenter registry at four centers) have shown the 16 cm CT scanner having a better image quality in comparison to the 4 cm scanner. However, these studies failed to include patients with undesirable or high heart rates due to well-documented poor image acquisition on prior generations of CCTA scanners. METHODS: A prospective, observational, multicenter cohort study comparing image quality, quantitively and qualitatively, on scans performed on a 16 cm CCTA in comparison to a cohort of images captured on a 4 cm CCTA at four centers. Participants were recruited based on broad inclusion criteria, and each patient in the 16 cm CCTA arm of the study received a CCTA scan using a 256-slice, whole-heart, single-beat scanner. These patients were then matched by age, gender, and heart rate to patients who underwent CCTA scans on a 4 cm CT scanner. Image quality was graded based on the signal-to-noise ratio, contrast-to-noise ratio, and on a Likert scale of 0-4: 0, very poor-4, excellent. RESULTS: 104 patients were evaluated for this study. The mean heart rate was 75 ± 7 in the 4 cm scanner and 75 ± 7 in the 16 cm one (p = 0.426). The signal-to-noise and contrast-to-noise ratios were higher in the 16 cm scanner (p = 0.0001). In addition, more scans were evaluated as having an excellent quality on the 16 cm scanner than on the 4 cm scanner (p < 0.0001) based on a 4-point Likert scale. CONCLUSIONS: The 16 cm scanner has a superior image quality for fast heart rates compared to the 4 cm scanner. This study shows that there is a significantly higher frequency of excellent and good studies showing better contrast-to-noise and signal-to-noise ratios with the 16 cm scanner compared to the 4 cm scanner.
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- 2023
6. Sex and age-specific interactions of coronary atherosclerotic plaque onset and prognosis from coronary computed tomography.
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van Rosendael, Sophie, Bax, A, Lin, Fay, Achenbach, Stephan, Andreini, Daniele, Cademartiri, Filippo, Callister, Tracy, Chinnaiyan, Kavitha, Chow, Benjamin, Cury, Ricardo, DeLago, Augustin, Feuchtner, Gudrun, Hadamitzky, Martin, Hausleiter, Joerg, Kaufmann, Philipp, Kim, Yong-Jin, Leipsic, Jonathon, Maffei, Erica, Marques, Hugo, de Araújo Gonçalves, Pedro, Pontone, Gianluca, Raff, Gilbert, Rubinshtein, Ronen, Villines, Todd, Chang, Hyuk-Jae, Berman, Daniel, Min, James, Bax, Jeroen, Shaw, Leslee, van Rosendael, Alexander, and Budoff, Matthew
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coronary artery disease ,coronary computed tomography angiography (CCTA) ,prognosis ,sex differences ,Humans ,Male ,Female ,Child ,Plaque ,Atherosclerotic ,Coronary Stenosis ,Coronary Angiography ,Coronary Artery Disease ,Tomography ,X-Ray Computed ,Prognosis ,Computed Tomography Angiography ,Age Factors ,Predictive Value of Tests - Abstract
AIMS: The totality of atherosclerotic plaque derived from coronary computed tomography angiography (CCTA) emerges as a comprehensive measure to assess the intensity of medical treatment that patients need. This study examines the differences in age onset and prognostic significance of atherosclerotic plaque burden between sexes. METHODS AND RESULTS: From a large multi-center CCTA registry the Leiden CCTA score was calculated in 24 950 individuals. A total of 11 678 women (58.5 ± 12.4 years) and 13 272 men (55.6 ± 12.5 years) were followed for 3.7 years for major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE) (death or myocardial infarction). The age where the median risk score was above zero was 12 years higher in women vs. men (64-68 years vs. 52-56 years, respectively, P < 0.001). The Leiden CCTA risk score was independently associated with MACE: score 6-20: HR 2.29 (1.69-3.10); score > 20: HR 6.71 (4.36-10.32) in women, and score 6-20: HR 1.64 (1.29-2.08); score > 20: HR 2.38 (1.73-3.29) in men. The risk was significantly higher for women within the highest score group (adjusted P-interaction = 0.003). In pre-menopausal women, the risk score was equally predictive and comparable with men. In post-menopausal women, the prognostic value was higher for women [score 6-20: HR 2.21 (1.57-3.11); score > 20: HR 6.11 (3.84-9.70) in women; score 6-20: HR 1.57 (1.19-2.09); score > 20: HR 2.25 (1.58-3.22) in men], with a significant interaction for the highest risk group (adjusted P-interaction = 0.004). CONCLUSION: Women developed coronary atherosclerosis approximately 12 years later than men. Post-menopausal women within the highest atherosclerotic burden group were at significantly higher risk for MACE than their male counterparts, which may have implications for the medical treatment intensity.
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- 2023
7. CAD-RADS scoring of coronary CT angiography with Multi-Axis Vision Transformer: a clinically-inspired deep learning pipeline
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Gerbasi, Alessia, Dagliati, Arianna, Albi, Giuseppe, Chiesa, Mattia, Andreini, Daniele, Baggiano, Andrea, Mushtaq, Saima, Pontone, Gianluca, Bellazzi, Riccardo, and Colombo, Gualtiero
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Electrical Engineering and Systems Science - Image and Video Processing ,Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition ,Computer Science - Machine Learning - Abstract
The standard non-invasive imaging technique used to assess the severity and extent of Coronary Artery Disease (CAD) is Coronary Computed Tomography Angiography (CCTA). However, manual grading of each patient's CCTA according to the CAD-Reporting and Data System (CAD-RADS) scoring is time-consuming and operator-dependent, especially in borderline cases. This work proposes a fully automated, and visually explainable, deep learning pipeline to be used as a decision support system for the CAD screening procedure. The pipeline performs two classification tasks: firstly, identifying patients who require further clinical investigations and secondly, classifying patients into subgroups based on the degree of stenosis, according to commonly used CAD-RADS thresholds. The pipeline pre-processes multiplanar projections of the coronary arteries, extracted from the original CCTAs, and classifies them using a fine-tuned Multi-Axis Vision Transformer architecture. With the aim of emulating the current clinical practice, the model is trained to assign a per-patient score by stacking the bi-dimensional longitudinal cross-sections of the three main coronary arteries along channel dimension. Furthermore, it generates visually interpretable maps to assess the reliability of the predictions. When run on a database of 1873 three-channel images of 253 patients collected at the Monzino Cardiology Center in Milan, the pipeline obtained an AUC of 0.87 and 0.93 for the two classification tasks, respectively. According to our knowledge, this is the first model trained to assign CAD-RADS scores learning solely from patient scores and not requiring finer imaging annotation steps that are not part of the clinical routine.
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- 2023
8. Impact of coronary CT image quality on the accuracy of the FFRCT Planner
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Andreini, Daniele, Belmonte, Marta, Penicka, Martin, Van Hoe, Lieven, Mileva, Niya, Paolisso, Pasquale, Nagumo, Sakura, Nørgaard, Bjarne L., Ko, Brian, Otake, Hiromasa, Koo, Bon-Kwon, Jensen, Jesper Møller, Mizukami, Takuya, Munhoz, Daniel, Updegrove, Adam, Taylor, Charles, Leipsic, Jonathon, Sonck, Jeroen, De Bruyne, Bernard, and Collet, Carlos
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- 2024
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9. Progression of non-obstructive coronary plaque: a practical CCTA-based risk score from the PARADIGM registry
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Pontone, Gianluca, Rossi, Alexia, Baggiano, Andrea, Andreini, Daniele, Conte, Edoardo, Fusini, Laura, Gebhard, Chaterine, Rabbat, Mark G., Guaricci, Andrea, Guglielmo, Marco, Muscogiuri, Giuseppe, Mushtaq, Saima, Al-Mallah, Mouaz H., Berman, Daniel S., Budoff, Matthew J., Cademartiri, Filippo, Chinnaiyan, Kavitha, Choi, Jung Hyun, Chun, Eun Ju, de Araújo Gonçalves, Pedro, Gottlieb, Ilan, Hadamitzky, Martin, Kim, Yong Jin, Lee, Byoung Kwon, Lee, Sang-Eun, Maffei, Erica, Marques, Hugo, Samady, Habib, Shin, Sanghoon, Sung, Ji Min, van Rosendael, Alexander, Virmani, Renu, Bax, Jeroen J., Leipsic, Jonathon A., Lin, Fay Y., Min, James K., Narula, Jagat, Shaw, Leslee J., and Chang, Hyuk-Jae
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- 2024
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10. Abstract 4144554: Revascularization of Patients with Low-Density Non-Calcified Plaque was Associated with Lower Occurrence of Acute Coronary Syndrome
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Malkasian, Shant, Hubbard, Logan, Nurmohamed, Nick, Chang, Hyuk-Jae, Choi, Andrew, Marques, Hugo, Van Rosendael, Alexander, Chow, Benjamin, Andreini, Daniele, Conte, Edoardo, Maffei, Erica, Plank, Fabian, Pontone, Gianluca, Feuchtner, Gudrun, Samady, Habib, Park, Hyung-Bok, Danad, Ibrahim, Cho, Iksung, Bax, Jeroen, Lee, Ji Hyun, Baskaran, Lohendran, Hadamitzky, Martin, Budoff, Matthew, Stone, Peter, Heo, Ran, Cury, Ricardo, Lee, Sang-Eun, AlʼAref, Subhi, Stuijfzand, Wijnand, lu, yao, Kim, Yong-Jin, Cademartiri, Filippo, Virmani, Renu, Narula, Jagat, Rizvi, Asim, Chinnaiyan, Kavitha, Villines, Todd, Leipsic, Jonathon, Shaw, Leslee, and Molloi, Sabee
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- 2024
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11. Computed tomographic angiography in coronary artery disease.
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Serruys, Patrick, Kotoku, Nozomi, Nørgaard, Bjarne, Garg, Scot, Nieman, Koen, Dweck, Marc, Bax, Jeroen, Knuuti, Juhani, Narula, Jagat, Perera, Divaka, Taylor, Charles, Leipsic, Jonathon, Nicol, Edward, Piazza, Nicolo, Schultz, Carl, Kitagawa, Kakuya, Bruyne, Bernard, Collet, Carlos, Tanaka, Kaoru, Mushtaq, Saima, Belmonte, Marta, Dudek, Darius, Zlahoda-Huzior, Adriana, Tu, Shengxian, Wijns, William, Sharif, Faisal, Mey, Johan, Andreini, Daniele, Onuma, Yoshinobu, and Budoff, Matthew
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Humans ,Coronary Artery Disease ,Fractional Flow Reserve ,Myocardial ,Coronary Angiography ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Tomography ,X-Ray Computed ,Computed Tomography Angiography ,Plaque ,Atherosclerotic ,Coronary Vessels ,Coronary Stenosis - Abstract
Coronary computed tomographic angiography (CCTA) is becoming the first-line investigation for establishing the presence of coronary artery disease and, with fractional flow reserve (FFRCT), its haemodynamic significance. In patients without significant epicardial obstruction, its role is either to rule out atherosclerosis or to detect subclinical plaque that should be monitored for plaque progression/regression following prevention therapy and provide risk classification. Ischaemic non-obstructive coronary arteries are also expected to be assessed by non-invasive imaging, including CCTA. In patients with significant epicardial obstruction, CCTA can assist in planning revascularisation by determining the disease complexity, vessel size, lesion length and tissue composition of the atherosclerotic plaque, as well as the best fluoroscopic viewing angle; it may also help in selecting adjunctive percutaneous devices (e.g., rotational atherectomy) and in determining the best landing zone for stents or bypass grafts.
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- 2023
12. Risk factors based vessel‐specific prediction for stages of coronary artery disease using Bayesian quantile regression machine learning method: Results from the PARADIGM registry
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Park, Hyung‐Bok, Lee, Jina, Hong, Yongtaek, Byungchang, So, Kim, Wonse, Lee, Byoung K, Lin, Fay Y, Hadamitzky, Martin, Kim, Yong‐Jin, Conte, Edoardo, Andreini, Daniele, Pontone, Gianluca, Budoff, Matthew J, Gottlieb, Ilan, Chun, Eun Ju, Cademartiri, Filippo, Maffei, Erica, Marques, Hugo, de A. Gonçalves, Pedro, Leipsic, Jonathon A, Shin, Sanghoon, Choi, Jung H, Virmani, Renu, Samady, Habib, Chinnaiyan, Kavitha, Stone, Peter H, Berman, Daniel S, Narula, Jagat, Shaw, Leslee J, Bax, Jeroen J, Min, James K, Kook, Woong, and Chang, Hyuk‐Jae
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Cardiovascular Medicine and Haematology ,Atherosclerosis ,Heart Disease - Coronary Heart Disease ,Prevention ,Cardiovascular ,Heart Disease ,Humans ,Angina Pectoris ,Bayes Theorem ,Coronary Angiography ,Coronary Artery Disease ,Coronary Vessels ,Machine Learning ,Registries ,Risk Factors ,cardiovascular risk factors ,coronary artery disease ,machine learning ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Cardiovascular System & Hematology ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology - Abstract
Background and hypothesisThe recently introduced Bayesian quantile regression (BQR) machine-learning method enables comprehensive analyzing the relationship among complex clinical variables. We analyzed the relationship between multiple cardiovascular (CV) risk factors and different stages of coronary artery disease (CAD) using the BQR model in a vessel-specific manner.MethodsFrom the data of 1,463 patients obtained from the PARADIGM (NCT02803411) registry, we analyzed the lumen diameter stenosis (DS) of the three vessels: left anterior descending (LAD), left circumflex (LCx), and right coronary artery (RCA). Two models for predicting DS and DS changes were developed. Baseline CV risk factors, symptoms, and laboratory test results were used as the inputs. The conditional 10%, 25%, 50%, 75%, and 90% quantile functions of the maximum DS and DS change of the three vessels were estimated using the BQR model.ResultsThe 90th percentiles of the DS of the three vessels and their maximum DS change were 41%-50% and 5.6%-7.3%, respectively. Typical anginal symptoms were associated with the highest quantile (90%) of DS in the LAD; diabetes with higher quantiles (75% and 90%) of DS in the LCx; dyslipidemia with the highest quantile (90%) of DS in the RCA; and shortness of breath showed some association with the LCx and RCA. Interestingly, High-density lipoprotein cholesterol showed a dynamic association along DS change in the per-patient analysis.ConclusionsThis study demonstrates the clinical utility of the BQR model for evaluating the comprehensive relationship between risk factors and baseline-grade CAD and its progression.
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- 2023
13. Low-Grade Inflammation in Long COVID Syndrome Sustains a Persistent Platelet Activation Associated With Lung Impairment
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Brambilla, Marta, Fumoso, Federica, Conti, Maria, Becchetti, Alessia, Bozzi, Silvia, Mencarini, Tatiana, Agostoni, Piergiuseppe, Mancini, Maria E., Cosentino, Nicola, Bonomi, Alice, Nallio, Kevin, Galotta, Arianna, Pengo, Martino, Tortorici, Elena, Bosco, Miriam, Cernigliaro, Franco, Pinna, Chistian, Andreini, Daniele, and Camera, Marina
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- 2025
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14. Role of advanced CMR features in identifying a positive genotype of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
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Mushtaq, Saima, Chiesa, Mattia, Novelli, Valeria, Sommariva, Elena, Biondi, Maria Luisa, Manzoni, Martina, Florio, Alessio, Lampus, Maria Luisa, Avallone, Carlo, Zocchi, Chiara, Ianniruberto, Monica, Zannoni, Jessica, Nudi, Alessandro, Arcudi, Alessandra, Annoni, Andrea, Baggiano, Andrea, Berna, Giovanni, Carerj, Maria Ludovica, Cannata, Francesco, Celeste, Fabrizio, Del Torto, Alberico, Fazzari, Fabio, Formenti, Alberto, Frappampina, Antonio, Fusini, Laura, Ali, Sarah Ghulam, Gripari, Paola, Pizzamiglio, Francesca, Ribatti, Valentina, Junod, Daniele, Maltagliati, Anna, Mancini, Maria Elisabetta, Mantegazza, Valentina, Maragna, Riccardo, Marchetti, Francesca, Muratori, Manuela, Sbordone, Francesco Paolo, Tassetti, Luigi, Volpe, Alessandra, Saba, Luca, Autore, Camillo, Olivotto, Iacopo, Guaricci, Andrea Igoren, Andreini, Daniele, and Pontone, Gianluca
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- 2024
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15. Multimodality Imaging in the Diagnostic Work-Up of Patients With Cardiac Masses: JACC: CardioOncology State-of-the-Art Review
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Angeli, Francesco, Bodega, Francesca, Bergamaschi, Luca, Armillotta, Matteo, Amicone, Sara, Canton, Lisa, Fedele, Damiano, Suma, Nicole, Cavallo, Daniele, Foà, Alberto, Belmonte, Marta, Russo, Vincenzo, Attinà, Domenico, Niro, Fabio, Bonfiglioli, Rachele, Fanti, Stefano, Pavon, Anna Giulia, Guglielmo, Marco, Mushtaq, Saima, Pantaleo, Maria Abbondanza, Andreini, Daniele, Lovato, Luigi, Pontone, Gianluca, Lopez-Mattei, Juan, Paolisso, Pasquale, and Pizzi, Carmine
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- 2024
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16. Preprocedural imaging with cardiac computed tomography for endo-epicardial ventricular tachycardia ablation
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Carbucicchio, Corrado, Guarracini, Fabrizio, Schiavone, Marco, Gasperetti, Alessio, Conte, Edoardo, Preda, Alberto, Cellucci, Selene, De Iuliis, Pasquale, Catto, Valentina, Mushtaq, Saima, Mancini, Maria Elisabetta, Marchetti, Francesca, Bianchini, Lorenzo, Tundo, Fabrizio, Moltrasio, Massimo, Andreini, Daniele, Pontone, Gianluca, and Tondo, Claudio
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- 2024
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17. Murray law-based quantitative flow ratio to assess left main bifurcation stenosis: selecting the angiographic projection matters
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Kotoku, Nozomi, Ninomiya, Kai, Ding, Daixin, O’Leary, Neil, Tobe, Akihiro, Miyashita, Kotaro, Masuda, Shinichiro, Kageyama, Shigetaka, Garg, Scot, Leipsic, Jonathon A., Mushtaq, Saima, Andreini, Daniele, Tanaka, Kaoru, de Mey, Johan, Wijns, William, Tu, Shengxian, Piazza, Nicolo, Onuma, Yoshinobu, and Serruys, Patrick W.
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- 2024
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18. CCTA-based CABG SYNTAX Score: a tool to evaluate completeness of coronary segment revascularization after bypass surgery
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Kotoku, Nozomi, Serruys, Patrick W., Kageyama, Shigetaka, Garg, Scot, Masuda, Shinichiro, Ninomiya, Kai, Grau, Juan B., Gupta, Himanshu, Agarwal, Vikram, Morel, Marie-Angèle, Doenst, Torsten, Schneider, Ulrich, Tanaka, Kaoru, LaMeir, Mark, Mushtaq, Saima, Gianluca, Pontone, Pompilio, Giulio, Teichgräber, Ulf, Puskas, John, Narula, Jagat, de Mey, Johan, Andreini, Daniele, and Onuma, Yoshinobu
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- 2023
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19. Inter- and intra-observer reproducibility of CT-Leaman score by an independent core lab
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Revaiah, Pruthvi C., Kageyama, Shigetaka, Masuda, Shinichiro, Ninomiya, Kai, Kotoku, Nozomi, Wang, Bo, He, Xingqiang, Tsai, Tsung-Ying, Garg, Scot, Mushtaq, Saima, Reiber, Johan H. C., Leaman, David M., Bax, Jeroen J., Budoff, Matthew J., Andreini, Daniele, Serruys, Patrick W., and Onuma, Yoshinobu
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- 2023
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20. Prognostic significance of plaque location in non-obstructive coronary artery disease: from the CONFIRM registry.
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Han, Donghee, Chen, Billy, Gransar, Heidi, Achenbach, Stephan, Al-Mallah, Mouaz H, Budoff, Matthew J, Cademartiri, Filippo, Maffei, Erica, Callister, Tracy Q, Chinnaiyan, Kavitha, Chow, Benjamin JW, DeLago, Augustin, Hadamitzky, Martin, Hausleiter, Joerg, Kaufmann, Philipp A, Villines, Todd C, Kim, Yong Jin, Leipsic, Jonathon, Feuchtner, Gudrun, Cury, Ricardo C, Pontone, Gianluca, Andreini, Daniele, Marques, Hugo, Rubinshtein, Ronen, Chang, Hyuk Jae, Lin, Fay Y, Shaw, Leslee J, Min, James K, and Berman, Daniel S
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Heart Disease - Coronary Heart Disease ,Prevention ,Clinical Research ,Heart Disease ,Atherosclerosis ,Biomedical Imaging ,Cardiovascular ,4.2 Evaluation of markers and technologies ,Detection ,screening and diagnosis ,Computed Tomography Angiography ,Coronary Angiography ,Coronary Artery Disease ,Humans ,Plaque ,Atherosclerotic ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Prognosis ,Registries ,Risk Assessment ,Risk Factors ,coronary artery disease ,non-obstructive ,plaque location ,prognosis ,computed tomography ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Cardiovascular System & Hematology - Abstract
AimObstructive coronary artery disease (CAD) in proximal coronary segments is associated with a poor prognosis. However, the relative importance of plaque location regarding the risk for major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE) in patients with non-obstructive CAD has not been well defined.Methods and resultsFrom the Coronary CT Angiography Evaluation for Clinical Outcomes: An International Multicenter (CONFIRM) registry, 4644 patients without obstructive CAD were included in this study. The degree of stenosis was classified as 0 (no) and 1-49% (non-obstructive). Proximal involvement was defined as any plaque present in the left main or the proximal segment of the left anterior descending artery, left circumflex artery, and right coronary artery. Extensive CAD was defined as segment involvement score of >4. During a median follow-up of 5.2 years (interquartile range 4.1-6.0), 340 (7.3%) MACE occurred. Within the non-obstructive CAD group (n = 2065), proximal involvement was observed in 1767 (85.6%) cases. When compared to non-obstructive CAD patients without proximal involvement, those with proximal involvement had an increased MACE risk (log-rank P = 0.033). Multivariate Cox analysis showed when compared to patients with no CAD, proximal non-obstructive CAD was associated with increased MACE risk [hazard ratio (HR) 1.90, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.47-2.45, P < 0.001] after adjusting for extensive CAD and conventional cardiovascular risk factors; however, non-proximal non-obstructive CAD did not increase MACE risk (HR 1.26, 95% CI 0.79-2.01, P = 0.339).ConclusionsIndependent of plaque extent, proximal coronary involvement was associated with increased MACE risk in patients with non-obstructive CAD. The plaque location information by coronary computed tomography angiography may provide additional risk prediction over CAD extent in patients with non-obstructive CAD.
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- 2022
21. Longitudinal quantitative assessment of coronary atherosclerosis related to normal systolic blood pressure maintenance in the absence of established cardiovascular disease
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Won, Ki‐Bum, Park, Hyung‐Bok, Heo, Ran, Lee, Byoung Kwon, Lin, Fay Y, Hadamitzky, Martin, Kim, Yong‐Jin, Sung, Ji Min, Conte, Edoardo, Andreini, Daniele, Pontone, Gianluca, Budoff, Matthew J, Gottlieb, Ilan, Chun, Eun Ju, Cademartiri, Filippo, Maffei, Erica, Marques, Hugo, de Araújo Gonçalves, Pedro, Leipsic, Jonathon A, Lee, Sang‐Eun, Shin, Sanghoon, Choi, Jung Hyun, Virmani, Renu, Samady, Habib, Chinnaiyan, Kavitha, Berman, Daniel S, Narula, Jagat, Bax, Jeroen J, Min, James K, and Chang, Hyuk‐Jae
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Atherosclerosis ,Heart Disease - Coronary Heart Disease ,Heart Disease ,Cardiovascular ,Aging ,Good Health and Well Being ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Blood Pressure ,Cardiovascular Diseases ,Computed Tomography Angiography ,Coronary Angiography ,Coronary Artery Disease ,Disease Progression ,Plaque ,Atherosclerotic ,Risk Factors ,atherosclerosis ,coronary artery disease ,coronary computed tomography angiography ,systolic blood pressure ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Cardiovascular System & Hematology ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology - Abstract
BackgroundAtherosclerosis-related adverse events are commonly observed even in conditions with low cardiovascular (CV) risk. Longitudinal data regarding the association of normal systolic blood pressure maintenance (SBPmaintain ) with coronary plaque volume changes (PVC) has been limited in adults without traditional CV disease.HypothesisNormal SBPmaintain is important to attenuate coronary atherosclerosis progression in adults without baseline CV disease.MethodsWe analyzed 95 adults (56.7 ± 8.5 years; 40.0% men) without baseline CV disease who underwent serial coronary computed tomographic angiography with mean 3.5 years of follow-up. All participants were divided into two groups of normal SBPmaintain (follow-up SBP
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- 2022
22. Artificial Intelligence–Enabled Quantitative Coronary Plaque and Hemodynamic Analysis for Predicting Acute Coronary Syndrome
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Koo, Bon-Kwon, Yang, Seokhun, Jung, Jae Wook, Zhang, Jinlong, Lee, Keehwan, Hwang, Doyeon, Lee, Kyu-Sun, Doh, Joon-Hyung, Nam, Chang-Wook, Kim, Tae Hyun, Shin, Eun-Seok, Chun, Eun Ju, Choi, Su-Yeon, Kim, Hyun Kuk, Hong, Young Joon, Park, Hun-Jun, Kim, Song-Yi, Husic, Mirza, Lambrechtsen, Jess, Jensen, Jesper M., Nørgaard, Bjarne L., Andreini, Daniele, Maurovich-Horvat, Pal, Merkely, Bela, Penicka, Martin, de Bruyne, Bernard, Ihdayhid, Abdul, Ko, Brian, Tzimas, Georgios, Leipsic, Jonathon, Sanz, Javier, Rabbat, Mark G., Katchi, Farhan, Shah, Moneal, Tanaka, Nobuhiro, Nakazato, Ryo, Asano, Taku, Terashima, Mitsuyasu, Takashima, Hiroaki, Amano, Tetsuya, Sobue, Yoshihiro, Matsuo, Hitoshi, Otake, Hiromasa, Kubo, Takashi, Takahata, Masahiro, Akasaka, Takashi, Kido, Teruhito, Mochizuki, Teruhito, Yokoi, Hiroyoshi, Okonogi, Taichi, Kawasaki, Tomohiro, Nakao, Koichi, Sakamoto, Tomohiro, Yonetsu, Taishi, Kakuta, Tsunekazu, Yamauchi, Yohei, Bax, Jeroen J., Shaw, Leslee J., Stone, Peter H., and Narula, Jagat
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- 2024
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23. Development and Validation of a Quantitative Coronary CT Angiography Model for Diagnosis of Vessel-Specific Coronary Ischemia
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Heo, Ran, Park, Hyung-Bok, Marques, Hugo, Stuijfzand, Wijnand J., Choi, Jung Hyun, Doh, Joon-Hyung, Her, Ae-Young, Koo, Bon-Kwon, Nam, Chang-Wook, Shin, Sang-Hoon, Cole, Jason, Gimelli, Alessia, Khan, Muhammad Akram, Lu, Bin, Gao, Yang, Nabi, Faisal, Al-Mallah, Mouaz H., Nakazato, Ryo, Schoepf, U. Joseph, Thompson, Randall C., Jang, James J., Ridner, Michael, Rowan, Chris, Avelar, Erick, Généreux, Philippe, de Waard, Guus A., Sprengers, Ralf W., Raijmakers, Pieter G., Nurmohamed, Nick S., Danad, Ibrahim, Jukema, Ruurt A., de Winter, Ruben W., de Groot, Robin J., Driessen, Roel S., Bom, Michiel J., van Diemen, Pepijn, Pontone, Gianluca, Andreini, Daniele, Chang, Hyuk-Jae, Katz, Richard J., Stroes, Erik S.G., Wang, Hao, Chan, Chung, Crabtree, Tami, Aquino, Melissa, Min, James K., Earls, James P., Bax, Jeroen J., Choi, Andrew D., Knaapen, Paul, and van Rosendael, Alexander R.
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- 2024
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24. Longitudinal Quantitative Assessment of Coronary Atherosclerotic Plaque Burden Related to Serum Hemoglobin Levels
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Won, Ki-Bum, Lee, Byoung Kwon, Heo, Ran, Park, Hyung-Bok, Lin, Fay Y, Hadamitzky, Martin, Kim, Yong-Jin, Sung, Ji Min, Conte, Edoardo, Andreini, Daniele, Pontone, Gianluca, Budoff, Matthew J, Gottlieb, Ilan, Chun, Eun Ju, Cademartiri, Filippo, Maffei, Erica, Marques, Hugo, de Araújo Gonçalves, Pedro, Leipsic, Jonathon A, Lee, Sang-Eun, Shin, Sanghoon, Choi, Jung Hyun, Virmani, Renu, Samady, Habib, Chinnaiyan, Kavitha, Berman, Daniel S, Narula, Jagat, Bax, Jeroen J, Min, James K, and Chang, Hyuk-Jae
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Heart Disease ,Clinical Research ,Cardiovascular ,Hematology ,Atherosclerosis ,Heart Disease - Coronary Heart Disease ,Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,6.1 Pharmaceuticals ,CCTA ,coronary computed tomographic angiography ,CV ,cardiovascular ,PVC ,plaque volume changes ,atherosclerosis ,coronary computed tomography angiography ,hemoglobin ,Δ hemoglobin ,hemoglobin level changes - Abstract
BackgroundDespite a potential role of hemoglobin in atherosclerosis, data on coronary plaque volume changes (PVC) related to serum hemoglobin levels are limited.ObjectivesThe authors sought to evaluate coronary atherosclerotic plaque burden changes related to serum hemoglobin levels using serial coronary computed tomographic angiography (CCTA).MethodsA 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.ResultsBaseline 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).ConclusionsSerial 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).
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- 2022
25. Dual left anterior descending coronary artery and anomalous origin of left circumflex artery: a novel coronary anomaly revealed by CCTA
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Ratti, Angelo, Belmonte, Marta, Paolisso, Pasquale, Shumkova, Monika, Botti, Giulia, Viscusi, Michele Mattia, Bertolone, Dario Tino, Gallinoro, Emanuele, Barbato, Emanuele, Andreini, Daniele, and Vanderheyden, Marc
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- 2023
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26. Treatment recommendation based on SYNTAX score 2020 derived from coronary computed tomography angiography and invasive coronary angiography
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Masuda, Shinichiro, Serruys, Patrick W., Kageyama, Shigetaka, Kotoku, Nozomi, Ninomiya, Kai, Garg, Scot, Soo, Alan, Morel, Marie-Angele, Puskas, John D., Narula, Jagat, Schneider, Ulrich, Doenst, Torsten, Tanaka, Kaoru, de Mey, Johan, La Meir, Mark, Bartorelli, Antonio L., Mushtaq, Saima, Pompilio, Giulio, Andreini, Daniele, and Onuma, Yoshinobu
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- 2023
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27. The prognostic role of right ventricular dysfunction in patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
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Mushtaq, Saima, Monti, Lorenzo, Rossi, Alexia, Pontone, Gianluca, Conte, Edoardo, Nicoli, Flavia, di Odoardo, Luca, Guglielmo, Marco, Indolfi, Eleonora, Bombace, Sara, Baggiano, Andrea, Gripari, Paola, Pepi, Mauro, Bartorelli, Antonio, Oliveira, Margarida, Santos, Ana, Francone, Marco, and Andreini, Daniele
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- 2023
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28. Predictors of adverse cardiac events of coronary myocardial bridging diagnosed with computed tomography angiography
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Andreini, Daniele, Conte, Edoardo, Monizzi, Giovanni, Prestini, Blanca, Ratti, Angelo, Belmonte, Marta, Melotti, Eleonora, Doldi, Marco, Marchetti, Davide, Schillaci, Matteo, Nicoli, Flavia, Mastrangelo, Angelo, Paolisso, Pasquale, Gigante, Carlo, Novembre, Maria Laura, Baggiano, Andrea, Mancini, Maria Elisabetta, Annoni, Andrea, Formenti, Alberto, Pizzamiglio, Francesca, Pontone, Gianluca, Zeppilli, Paolo, Bartorelli, Antonio L., and Mushtaq, Saima
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- 2024
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29. Post-cardiac injury syndrome and pericardial effusion recurrence after pericardial effusion drainage in chronic idiopathic pericardial effusion
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Conte, Edoardo, Tamanini, Silvia, Bizzi, Emanuele, Maestroni, Silvia, Cumetti, Davide, Novembre, Maria Laura, Lauri, Gianfranco, Agalbato, Cecilia, Cia, Alessia Dalla, Paolisso, Pasquale, Pontone, Gianluca, Pepi, Mauro, Andreini, Daniele, Imazio, Massimo, Lazaros, George, Benetti, Alberto, and Brucato, Antonio
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- 2024
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30. Aspirin and Statin Therapy for Nonobstructive Coronary Artery Disease: Five-year Outcomes from the CONFIRM Registry
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Indraratna, Praveen, Naoum, Christopher, Ben Zekry, Sagit, Gransar, Heidi, Blanke, Philipp, Sellers, Stephanie, Achenbach, Stephan, Al-Mallah, Mouaz H, Andreini, Daniele, Berman, Daniel S, Budoff, Matthew J, Cademartiri, Filippo, Callister, Tracy Q, Chang, Hyuk-Jae, Chinnaiyan, Kavitha, Chow, Benjamin JW, Cury, Ricardo C, DeLago, Augustin, Feuchtner, Gudrun, Hadamitzky, Martin, Hausleiter, Joerg, Kaufmann, Philipp A, Kim, Yong-Jin, Maffei, Erica, Marques, Hugo, Gonçalves, Pedro de Araújo, Pontone, Gianluca, Raff, Gilbert L, Rubinshtein, Ronen, Villines, Todd C, Lin, Fay Y, Shaw, Leslee J, Narula, Jagat, Bax, Jeroen J, and Leipsic, Jonathon A
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Epidemiology ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Health Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Cardiovascular ,Heart Disease - Coronary Heart Disease ,Heart Disease ,Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities ,Atherosclerosis ,4.2 Evaluation of markers and technologies ,Detection ,screening and diagnosis ,Good Health and Well Being ,Aspirin ,CT Angiography ,Coronary Artery Disease ,Nonobstructive Coronary Artery Disease ,Statin - Abstract
PurposeIn this cohort study, 5-year data from the Coronary CT Angiography Evaluation for Clinical Outcomes: An International Multicenter Registry (ie, CONFIRM) were examined to identify associations of baseline aspirin and statin use with mortality, major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE), and myocardial infarction (MI) in individuals without substantial (≥50%) stenosis.Materials and methodsIn this prospective cohort study, all participants in the registry underwent coronary CT angiography and were classified as having no detectable coronary plaque or having nonobstructive coronary artery disease (CAD) (1%-49% stenosis). Participants with obstructive (≥50%) stenosis were excluded from analysis. The study commenced in June 2003 and was completed in March 2016. All unadjusted and risk-adjusted analyses utilized the Cox proportional hazard model with hospital sites modeled using shared frailty.ResultsA total of 6386 participants with no detectable plaque or with nonobstructive CAD were included (mean age, 56.0 years ± 13.3 [SD], 52% men). The mean follow-up period was 5.66 years ± 1.10. Nonobstructive CAD (n = 2815, 44% of all participants included in the study) was associated with a greater risk of all-cause mortality (10.6% [298 of 2815] vs 4.8% [170 of 3571], P < .001) compared to those without CAD (n = 3571, 56%). Baseline aspirin and statin use was documented for 1415 and 1429 participants, respectively, with nonobstructive CAD, and for 1560 and 1565 participants without detectable plaque, respectively. In individuals with nonobstructive CAD, baseline aspirin use was not associated with a reduction in MACE (10.9% [102 of 936] vs 14.7% [52 of 355], P = .06), all-cause mortality (9.6% [95 of 991] vs 10.9% [46 of 424], P = .468), or MI (4.4% [41 of 936] vs 6.2% [22 of 355], P = .18). On multivariate risk-adjusted analysis, baseline statin use was associated with a lower rate of MACE (hazard ratio, 0.59; 95% CI: 0.40, 0.87; P = .007). Neither therapy improved clinical outcomes for participants with no detectable plaque.ConclusionIn participants with nonobstructive CAD, baseline use of statins, but not of aspirin, was associated with improved clinical outcomes. Neither therapy was associated with benefit in participants without plaque.Keywords: Aspirin, Statin, Coronary Artery Disease, CT Angiography, Nonobstructive Coronary Artery DiseaseClinical trial registration no. NCT01443637 Supplemental material is available for this article. © RSNA, 2022See also the commentary by Canan and Navar in this issue.
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- 2022
31. Radiation Doses in Patients Undergoing Computed Tomographic Coronary Artery Calcium Evaluation With a 64-Slice Scanner Versus a 256-Slice Scanner.
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Madaj, Paul, Li, Dong, Nakanishi, Rine, Andreini, Daniele, Pontone, Gianluca, Conte, Edoardo, O'Rourke, Rachael, Hamilton-Craig, Christian, Nimmagadda, Manojna, Kim, Nicholas, Fatima, Badiha, Dailing, Christopher, Shaikh, Kashif, Shekar, Chandana, Lee, Ju Hwan, and Budoff, Matthew J
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Prevention ,Heart Disease ,Biomedical Imaging ,Cardiovascular ,Calcium ,Coronary Angiography ,Coronary Artery Disease ,Coronary Vessels ,Early Detection of Cancer ,Female ,Humans ,Lung Neoplasms ,Male ,Radiation Dosage ,Coronary angiography/methods ,coronaryartery disease/diagnostic imaging ,multi-detector computed tomography/instrumentation ,predictive value of tests ,prospective studies ,radiation dosage ,radiation exposure/prevention & control ,risk factors ,vascular calcification/diagnostic imaging ,coronary artery disease/diagnostic imaging ,multidetector computed tomography/instrumentation ,Cardiovascular System & Hematology - Abstract
Computed tomographic coronary artery calcium scanning enables cardiovascular risk stratification; however, exposing patients to high radiation levels is an ongoing concern. New-generation computed tomographic systems use lower radiation doses than older systems do. To quantify comparative doses of radiation exposure, we prospectively acquired images from 220 patients with use of a 64-slice GE LightSpeed VCT scanner (control group, n=110) and a 256-slice GE Revolution scanner (study group, n=110). The groups were matched for age, sex, and body mass index; statistical analysis included t tests and linear regression. The mean dose-length product was 21% lower in the study group than in the control group (60.2 ± 27 vs 75.9 ± 22.6 mGy·cm; P
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- 2022
32. Associations between dyspnoea, coronary atherosclerosis, and cardiovascular outcomes: results from the long-term follow-up CONFIRM registry.
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van Rosendael, Alexander R, Bax, A Maxim, van den Hoogen, Inge J, Smit, Jeff M, Al'Aref, Subhi J, Achenbach, Stephan, Al-Mallah, Mouaz H, Andreini, Daniele, Berman, Daniel S, Budoff, Matthew J, Cademartiri, Filippo, Callister, Tracy Q, Chang, Hyuk-Jae, Chinnaiyan, Kavitha, Chow, Benjamin JW, Cury, Ricardo C, DeLago, Augustin, Feuchtner, Gudrun, Hadamitzky, Martin, Hausleiter, Joerg, Kaufmann, Philipp A, Kim, Yong-Jin, Leipsic, Jonathon A, Maffei, Erica, Marques, Hugo, de Araújo Gonçalves, Pedro, Pontone, Gianluca, Raff, Gilbert L, Rubinshtein, Ronen, Villines, Todd C, Gransar, Heidi, Lu, Yao, Peña, Jessica M, Lin, Fay Y, Shaw, Leslee J, Narula, Jagat, Min, James K, and Bax, Jeroen J
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Cardiovascular Medicine and Haematology ,Atherosclerosis ,Cardiovascular ,Clinical Research ,Biomedical Imaging ,Heart Disease ,Heart Disease - Coronary Heart Disease ,4.2 Evaluation of markers and technologies ,Detection ,screening and diagnosis ,Aged ,Coronary Angiography ,Coronary Artery Disease ,Dyspnea ,Follow-Up Studies ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Prognosis ,Prospective Studies ,Registries ,Risk Factors ,coronary artery disease ,coronary computed tomography angiography ,dyspnoea ,prognosis ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology - Abstract
AimsThe relationship between dyspnoea, coronary artery disease (CAD), and major cardiovascular events (MACE) is poorly understood. This study evaluated (i) the association of dyspnoea with the severity of anatomical CAD by coronary computed tomography angiography (CCTA) and (ii) to which extent CAD explains MACE in patients with dyspnoea.Methods and resultsFrom the international COronary CT Angiography EvaluatioN for Clinical Outcomes: An InteRnational Multicenter (CONFIRM) registry, 4425 patients (750 with dyspnoea) with suspected but without known CAD were included and prospectively followed for ≥5 years. First, the association of dyspnoea with CAD severity was assessed using logistic regression analysis. Second, the prognostic value of dyspnoea for MACE (myocardial infarction and death), and specifically, the interaction between dyspnoea and CAD severity was investigated using Cox proportional-hazard analysis. Mean patient age was 60.3 ± 11.9 years, 63% of patients were male and 592 MACE events occurred during a median follow-up duration of 5.4 (IQR 5.1-6.0) years. On uni- and multivariable analysis (adjusting for age, sex, body mass index, chest pain typicality, and risk factors), dyspnoea was associated with two- and three-vessel/left main (LM) obstructive CAD. The presence of dyspnoea increased the risk for MACE [hazard ratio (HR) 1.57, 95% confidence interval (CI): 1.29-1.90], which was modified after adjusting for clinical predictors and CAD severity (HR 1.26, 95% CI: 1.02-1.55). Conversely, when stratified by CAD severity, dyspnoea did not provide incremental prognostic value in one-, two-, or three-vessel/LM obstructive CAD, but dyspnoea did provide incremental prognostic value in non-obstructive CAD.ConclusionIn patients with suspected CAD, dyspnoea was independently associated with severe obstructive CAD on CCTA. The severity of obstructive CAD explained the elevated MACE rates in patients presenting with dyspnoea, but in patients with non-obstructive CAD, dyspnoea portended additional risk.
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- 2022
33. Glycemic control is independently associated with rapid progression of coronary atherosclerosis in the absence of a baseline coronary plaque burden: a retrospective case–control study from the PARADIGM registry
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Won, Ki-Bum, Lee, Byoung Kwon, Lin, Fay Y, Hadamitzky, Martin, Kim, Yong-Jin, Sung, Ji Min, Conte, Edoardo, Andreini, Daniele, Pontone, Gianluca, Budoff, Matthew J, Gottlieb, Ilan, Chun, Eun Ju, Cademartiri, Filippo, Maffei, Erica, Marques, Hugo, de Araújo Gonçalves, Pedro, Leipsic, Jonathon A, Lee, Sang-Eun, Shin, Sanghoon, Choi, Jung Hyun, Virmani, Renu, Samady, Habib, Chinnaiyan, Kavitha, Berman, Daniel S, Narula, Jagat, Shaw, Leslee J, Bax, Jeroen J, Min, James K, and Chang, Hyuk-Jae
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Aging ,Heart Disease - Coronary Heart Disease ,Atherosclerosis ,Cardiovascular ,Heart Disease ,Biomedical Imaging ,Clinical Research ,Prevention ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Aged ,Female ,Plaque ,Atherosclerotic ,Coronary Artery Disease ,Retrospective Studies ,Coronary Angiography ,Case-Control Studies ,Glycemic Control ,Glycated Hemoglobin ,Prospective Studies ,Disease Progression ,Computed Tomography Angiography ,Coronary Vessels ,Registries ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Hemoglobin A1c ,Coronary artery disease ,Progression ,Coronary computed tomography angiography ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Cardiovascular System & Hematology ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology - Abstract
The baseline coronary plaque burden is the most important factor for rapid plaque progression (RPP) in the coronary artery. However, data on the independent predictors of RPP in the absence of a baseline coronary plaque burden are limited. Thus, this study aimed to investigate the predictors for RPP in patients without coronary plaques on baseline coronary computed tomography angiography (CCTA) images. A total of 402 patients (mean age: 57.6 ± 10.0 years, 49.3% men) without coronary plaques at baseline who underwent serial coronary CCTA were identified from the Progression of Atherosclerotic Plaque Determined by Computed Tomographic Angiography Imaging (PARADIGM) registry and included in this retrospective study. RPP was defined as an annual change of ≥ 1.0%/year in the percentage atheroma volume (PAV). During a median inter-scan period of 3.6 years (interquartile range: 2.7-5.0 years), newly developed coronary plaques and RPP were observed in 35.6% and 4.2% of the patients, respectively. The baseline traditional risk factors, i.e., advanced age (≥ 60 years), male sex, hypertension, diabetes mellitus, hyperlipidemia, obesity, and current smoking status, were not significantly associated with the risk of RPP. Multivariate linear regression analysis showed that the serum hemoglobin A1c level (per 1% increase) measured at follow-up CCTA was independently associated with the annual change in the PAV (β: 0.098, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.048-0.149; P
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- 2022
34. Influence of intracoronary hemodynamic forces on atherosclerotic plaque phenotypes
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Candreva, Alessandro, Gallo, Diego, Munhoz, Daniel, Rizzini, Maurizio Lodi, Mizukami, Takuya, Seki, Ruiko, Sakai, Koshiro, Sonck, Jeroen, Mazzi, Valentina, Ko, Brian, Nørgaard, Bjarne Linde, Jensen, Jesper Møller, Maeng, Michael, Otake, Hiromasa, Koo, Bon-Kwon, Shinke, Toshiro, Aben, Jean-Paul, Andreini, Daniele, Gallinoro, Emanuele, Stähli, Barbara E., Templin, Christian, Chiastra, Claudio, De Bruyne, Bernard, Morbiducci, Umberto, and Collet, Carlos
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- 2024
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35. CAD-RADS scoring of coronary CT angiography with Multi-Axis Vision Transformer: A clinically-inspired deep learning pipeline
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Gerbasi, Alessia, Dagliati, Arianna, Albi, Giuseppe, Chiesa, Mattia, Andreini, Daniele, Baggiano, Andrea, Mushtaq, Saima, Pontone, Gianluca, Bellazzi, Riccardo, and Colombo, Gualtiero
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- 2024
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36. Individual patient data meta-analysis for the clinical assessment of coronary computed tomography angiography: protocol of the Collaborative Meta-Analysis of Cardiac CT (CoMe-CCT)
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Schuetz Georg M, Schlattmann Peter, Achenbach Stephan, Budoff Matthew, Garcia Mario J, Roehle Robert, Pontone Gianluca, Meijboom Willem Bob, Andreini Daniele, Alkadhi Hatem, Honoris Lily, Bettencourt Nuno, Hausleiter Jörg, Leschka Sebastian, Gerber Bernhard L, Meijs Matthijs FL, Shabestari Abbas Arjmand, Sato Akira, Zimmermann Elke, Schoepf Uwe J, Diederichsen Axel, Halon David A, Mendoza-Rodriguez Vladimir, Hamdan Ashraf, Nørgaard Bjarne L, Brodoefel Harald, Øvrehus Kristian A, Jenkins Shona MM, Halvorsen Bjørn A, Rixe Johannes, Sheikh Mehraj, Langer Christoph, Martuscelli Eugenio, Romagnoli Andrea, Scholte Arthur JHA, Marcus Roy P, Ulimoen Geir R, Nieman Koen, Mickley Hans, Nikolaou Konstantin, Tardif Jean-Claude, Johnson Thorsten RC, Muraglia Simone, Chow Benjamin JW, Maintz David, Laule Michael, and Dewey Marc
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Collaborative meta-analysis on cardiac CT ,CoMe-CCT ,Coronary CT angiography ,Individual patient data meta-analysis ,IPD ,Positive and negative predictive value ,Pretest likelihood ,Sensitivity and specificity ,Study protocol ,Medicine - Abstract
Abstract Background Coronary computed tomography angiography has become the foremost noninvasive imaging modality of the coronary arteries and is used as an alternative to the reference standard, conventional coronary angiography, for direct visualization and detection of coronary artery stenoses in patients with suspected coronary artery disease. Nevertheless, there is considerable debate regarding the optimal target population to maximize clinical performance and patient benefit. The most obvious indication for noninvasive coronary computed tomography angiography in patients with suspected coronary artery disease would be to reliably exclude significant stenosis and, thus, avoid unnecessary invasive conventional coronary angiography. To do this, a test should have, at clinically appropriate pretest likelihoods, minimal false-negative outcomes resulting in a high negative predictive value. However, little is known about the influence of patient characteristics on the clinical predictive values of coronary computed tomography angiography. Previous regular systematic reviews and meta-analyses had to rely on limited summary patient cohort data offered by primary studies. Performing an individual patient data meta-analysis will enable a much more detailed and powerful analysis and thus increase representativeness and generalizability of the results. The individual patient data meta-analysis is registered with the PROSPERO database (CoMe-CCT, CRD42012002780). Methods/Design The analysis will include individual patient data from published and unpublished prospective diagnostic accuracy studies comparing coronary computed tomography angiography with conventional coronary angiography. These studies will be identified performing a systematic search in several electronic databases. Corresponding authors will be contacted and asked to provide obligatory and additional data. Risk factors, previous test results and symptoms of individual patients will be used to estimate the pretest likelihood of coronary artery disease. A bivariate random-effects model will be used to calculate pooled mean negative and positive predictive values as well as sensitivity and specificity. The primary outcome of interest will be positive and negative predictive values of coronary computed tomography angiography for the presence of coronary artery disease as a function of pretest likelihood of coronary artery disease, analyzed by meta-regression. As a secondary endpoint, factors that may influence the diagnostic performance and clinical value of computed tomography, such as heart rate and body mass index of patients, number of detector rows, and administration of beta blockade and nitroglycerin, will be investigated by integrating them as further covariates into the bivariate random-effects model. Discussion This collaborative individual patient data meta-analysis should provide answers to the pivotal question of which patients benefit most from noninvasive coronary computed tomography angiography and thus help to adequately select the right patients for this test.
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- 2013
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37. Differential progression of coronary atherosclerosis according to plaque composition: a cluster analysis of PARADIGM registry data.
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Yoon, Yeonyee E, Baskaran, Lohendran, Lee, Benjamin C, Pandey, Mohit Kumar, Goebel, Benjamin, Lee, Sang-Eun, Sung, Ji Min, Andreini, Daniele, Al-Mallah, Mouaz H, Budoff, Matthew J, Cademartiri, Filippo, Chinnaiyan, Kavitha, Choi, Jung Hyun, Chun, Eun Ju, Conte, Edoardo, Gottlieb, Ilan, Hadamitzky, Martin, Kim, Yong Jin, Lee, Byoung Kwon, Leipsic, Jonathon A, Maffei, Erica, Marques, Hugo, de Araújo Gonçalves, Pedro, Pontone, Gianluca, Shin, Sanghoon, Narula, Jagat, Bax, Jeroen J, Lin, Fay Yu-Huei, Shaw, Leslee, and Chang, Hyuk-Jae
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Heart Disease - Coronary Heart Disease ,Cardiovascular ,Heart Disease ,Biomedical Imaging ,Aging ,Atherosclerosis ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors - Abstract
Patient-specific phenotyping of coronary atherosclerosis would facilitate personalized risk assessment and preventive treatment. We explored whether unsupervised cluster analysis can categorize patients with coronary atherosclerosis according to their plaque composition, and determined how these differing plaque composition profiles impact plaque progression. Patients with coronary atherosclerotic plaque (n = 947; median age, 62 years; 59% male) were enrolled from a prospective multi-national registry of consecutive patients who underwent serial coronary computed tomography angiography (median inter-scan duration, 3.3 years). K-means clustering applied to the percent volume of each plaque component and identified 4 clusters of patients with distinct plaque composition. Cluster 1 (n = 52), which comprised mainly fibro-fatty plaque with a significant necrotic core (median, 55.7% and 16.0% of the total plaque volume, respectively), showed the least total plaque volume (PV) progression (+ 23.3 mm3), with necrotic core and fibro-fatty PV regression (- 5.7 mm3 and - 5.6 mm3, respectively). Cluster 2 (n = 219), which contained largely fibro-fatty (39.2%) and fibrous plaque (46.8%), showed fibro-fatty PV regression (- 2.4 mm3). Cluster 3 (n = 376), which comprised mostly fibrous (62.7%) and calcified plaque (23.6%), showed increasingly prominent calcified PV progression (+ 21.4 mm3). Cluster 4 (n = 300), which comprised mostly calcified plaque (58.7%), demonstrated the greatest total PV increase (+ 50.7mm3), predominantly increasing in calcified PV (+ 35.9 mm3). Multivariable analysis showed higher risk for plaque progression in Clusters 3 and 4, and higher risk for adverse cardiac events in Clusters 2, 3, and 4 compared to that in Cluster 1. Unsupervised clustering algorithms may uniquely characterize patient phenotypes with varied atherosclerotic plaque profiles, yielding distinct patterns of progressive disease and outcome.
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- 2021
38. Crypts, Diverticula, and Left Ventricular Noncompaction
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Andreini, Daniele, Conte, Edoardo, Garinei, Francesca, Cardona, Andrea, Barison, Andrea, editor, Dellegrottaglie, Santo, editor, Pontone, Gianluca, editor, and Indolfi, Ciro, editor
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- 2023
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39. Predictors for Vulnerable Plaque in Functionally Significant Lesions
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Yang, Seokhun, Hwang, Doyeon, Sakai, Koshiro, Mizukami, Takuya, Leipsic, Jonathon, Belmonte, Marta, Sonck, Jeroen, Nørgaard, Bjarne L., Otake, Hiromasa, Ko, Brian, Maeng, Michael, Møller Jensen, Jesper, Buytaert, Dimitri, Munhoz, Daniel, Andreini, Daniele, Ohashi, Hirofumi, Shinke, Toshiro, Taylor, Charles A., Barbato, Emanuele, De Bruyne, Bernard, Collet, Carlos, and Koo, Bon-Kwon
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- 2024
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40. Topological Data Analysis of Coronary Plaques Demonstrates the Natural History of Coronary Atherosclerosis
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Hwang, Doyeon, Kim, Haneol J, Lee, Seung-Pyo, Lim, Seonhee, Koo, Bon-Kwon, Kim, Yong-Jin, Kook, Woong, Andreini, Daniele, Al-Mallah, Mouaz H, Budoff, Matthew J, Cademartiri, Filippo, Chinnaiyan, Kavitha, Choi, Jung Hyun, Conte, Edoardo, Marques, Hugo, de Araújo Gonçalves, Pedro, Gottlieb, Ilan, Hadamitzky, Martin, Leipsic, Jonathon A, Maffei, Erica, Pontone, Gianluca, Raff, Gilbert L, Shin, Sanghoon, Lee, Byoung Kwon, Chun, Eun Ju, Sung, Ji Min, Lee, Sang-Eun, Berman, Daniel S, Lin, Fay Y, Virmani, Renu, Samady, Habib, Stone, Peter H, Narula, Jagat, Bax, Jeroen J, Shaw, Leslee J, Min, James K, and Chang, Hyuk-Jae
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Cardiovascular Medicine and Haematology ,Clinical Sciences ,Atherosclerosis ,Cardiovascular ,Heart Disease ,Biomedical Imaging ,Heart Disease - Coronary Heart Disease ,Clinical Research ,Coronary Artery Disease ,Data Analysis ,Exercise ,Humans ,Predictive Value of Tests ,coronary computed tomography angiography ,coronary plaque ,topological data analysis ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Cardiovascular System & Hematology ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
ObjectivesThis study sought to identify distinct patient groups and their association with outcome based on the patient similarity network using quantitative coronary plaque characteristics from coronary computed tomography angiography (CTA).BackgroundCoronary CTA can noninvasively assess coronary plaques quantitatively.MethodsPatients who underwent 2 coronary CTAs at a minimum of 24 months' interval were analyzed (n = 1,264). A similarity Mapper network of patients was built by topological data analysis (TDA) based on the whole-heart quantitative coronary plaque analysis on coronary CTA to identify distinct patient groups and their association with outcome.ResultsThree distinct patient groups were identified by TDA, and the patient similarity network by TDA showed a closed loop, demonstrating a continuous trend of coronary plaque progression. Group A had the least coronary plaque amount (median 12.4 mm3 [interquartile range (IQR): 0.0 to 39.6 mm3]) in the entire coronary tree. Group B had a moderate coronary plaque amount (31.7 mm3 [IQR: 0.0 to 127.4 mm3]) with relative enrichment of fibrofatty and necrotic core (32.6% [IQR: 16.7% to 46.2%] and 2.7% [IQR: 0.1% to 6.9%] of the total plaque, respectively) components. Group C had the largest coronary plaque amount (187.0 mm3 [IQR: 96.7 to 306.4 mm3]) and was enriched for dense calcium component (46.8% [IQR: 32.0% to 63.7%] of the total plaque). At follow-up, total plaque volume, fibrous, and dense calcium volumes increased in all groups, but the proportion of fibrofatty component decreased in groups B and C, whereas the necrotic core portion decreased in only group B (all p
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- 2021
41. Comparison of the diagnostic performance of 64-slice computed tomography coronary angiography in diabetic and non-diabetic patients with suspected coronary artery disease
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Annoni Andrea, Canestrari Mauro, Cortinovis Sarah, Antonioli Laura, Mushtaq Saima, Agostoni Piergiuseppe, Bartorelli Antonio L, Pontone Gianluca, Andreini Daniele, Ballerini Giovanni, Fiorentini Cesare, and Pepi Mauro
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Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Abstract
Abstract Background Diabetics have high prevalence of subclinical coronary artery disease (CAD) with typical characteristics (diffuse disease, large calcifications). Although 64-slice multidetector computed tomography (MDCT) coronary angiography has high diagnostic accuracy to detect CAD, its diagnostic performance in diabetics with suspected CAD is unknown. To compare the diagnostic performance of 64-slice MDCT between diabetics and non-diabetics with suspected CAD scheduled for invasive coronary angiography (ICA). Methods We enrolled one hundred and five diabetic patients (92 men, age 65 +/- 9 years, Group 1) and 105 non-diabetic patients (63 men, age 63+/-5 years, Group 2) with indication to ICA for suspected CAD undergoing coronary 64-slice MDCT before ICA. Results In Group 1, the overall feasibility of coronary artery visualization was 93.8%. The most frequent artifact was blooming due to large coronary calcifications (54 artifacts, 67%). In Group 2, the overall feasibility was significantly higher vs. Group 1 (97%, p < 0.0001). In Group 1, the segment-based analysis showed a MDCT sensibility, specificity, positive predictive value, negative predictive value and accuracy for the detection of ≥50% luminal narrowing of 77%, 90%, 70%, 93% and 87%, respectively. In Group 2, all these parameters were significantly higher vs. Group 1. In the patient-based analysis, specificity, negative predictive value and accuracy were significantly lower in Group 1 vs. Group 2. Conclusions Although MDCT has high sensitivity for early identification of significant CAD in diabetics, its diagnostic performance is significantly reduced in these patients as compared to non-diabetics with similar clinical characteristics.
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- 2010
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42. Cardiac Magnetic Resonance to Predict Cardiac Mass Malignancy: The CMR Mass Score
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Paolisso, Pasquale, Bergamaschi, Luca, Angeli, Francesco, Belmonte, Marta, Foà, Alberto, Canton, Lisa, Fedele, Damiano, Armillotta, Matteo, Sansonetti, Angelo, Bodega, Francesca, Amicone, Sara, Suma, Nicole, Gallinoro, Emanuele, Attinà, Domenico, Niro, Fabio, Rucci, Paola, Gherbesi, Elisa, Carugo, Stefano, Musthaq, Saima, Baggiano, Andrea, Pavon, Anna Giulia, Guglielmo, Marco, Conte, Edoardo, Andreini, Daniele, Pontone, Gianluca, Lovato, Luigi, and Pizzi, Carmine
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- 2024
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43. Interpretation and management of premature ventricular beats in athletes: An expert opinion document of the Italian Society of Sports Cardiology (SICSPORT)
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Zorzi, Alessandro, D'Ascenzi, Flavio, Andreini, Daniele, Castelletti, Silvia, Casella, Michela, Cavarretta, Elena, Cipriani, Alberto, Compagnucci, Paolo, Delise, Pietro, Dello Russo, Antonio, Graziano, Francesca, Palamà, Zefferino, Pelliccia, Antonio, Sarto, Patrizio, Corrado, Domenico, and Sciarra, Luigi
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- 2023
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44. Coronary Atherosclerosis Phenotypes in Focal and Diffuse Disease
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Sakai, Koshiro, Mizukami, Takuya, Leipsic, Jonathon, Belmonte, Marta, Sonck, Jeroen, Nørgaard, Bjarne L., Otake, Hiromasa, Ko, Brian, Koo, Bon-kwon, Maeng, Michael, Jensen, Jesper Møller, Buytaert, Dimitri, Munhoz, Daniel, Andreini, Daniele, Ohashi, Hirofumi, Shinke, Toshiro, Taylor, Charles A., Barbato, Emanuele, Johnson, Nils P., De Bruyne, Bernard, and Collet, Carlos
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- 2023
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45. Use of Advanced CT Technology to Evaluate Left Atrial Indices in Patients with a High Heart Rate or with Heart Rate Variability: The Converge Registry.
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Cherukuri, Lavanya, Birudaraju, Divya, Kinninger, April, Chaganti, Bhanu T, Pidikiti, Sivakrishna, Pozon, Ryan G, Pozon, Anne Concepcion G, Lakshmanan, Suvasini, Dahal, Suraj, Hamal, Sajad, Flores, Ferdinand, Christopher, Dialing, Andreini, Daniele, Pontone, Gianluca, Conte, Edoardo, Nakanishi, Rine, O'Rourke, Rachael, Hamilton-Craig, Christian, Nasir, Khurram, Roy, Sion K, Mao, Song Shou, and Budoff, Matthew J
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Biomedical Imaging ,Clinical Research ,Cardiovascular ,Heart Disease ,Aged ,Computed Tomography Angiography ,Heart Atria ,Heart Rate ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Prospective Studies ,Registries ,Technology ,left atrial volume ,heart rate variability ,high heart rate ,arrhythmia ,motion artifacts ,Nuclear Medicine & Medical Imaging ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
We intended to assess the ability of current-generation 256-slice coronary CT angiography (CCTA) to measure left atrial volume (LAV), comparing patients with a high heart rate (HiHR) of at least 70 bpm and patients with heart rate variability such as atrial fibrillation (AFib). Methods: Using the prospective Converge Registry of patients undergoing 256-detector CCTA on a Revolution scanner, we enrolled 121 HiHR patients (74 men; mean age, 62.7 ± 12.5 y) and 102 AFib patients (72 men; mean age, 60.5 ± 11.0 y) after obtaining informed consent. Quantitative data analysis of LAV was performed using automated methods, and end-systolic phases were chosen for measurements from CCTA. A Student t test, Wilcoxon rank-sum test, or χ2 test assessed baseline parameters. Univariate and multivariate linear regression analysis was used to assess LAV and LAV index (LAVI) while adjusting potentially confounding variables. Results: Mean LAV was significantly higher in AFib subjects (148.6 ± 57.2 mL) than in HiHR subjects (102.1 ± 36.5 mL) (P < 0.0001). Similarly, mean LAVI was significantly higher in AFib subjects (72.4 ± 28.1 mL/m2) than in HiHR subjects (51.5 ± 19.0 mL/m2) (P < 0.0001). After adjusting for age, body mass index, sex, diabetes, hypertension, hyperlipidemia, and smoking, subjects with AFib had, on average, LAV measures higher by 41.2 ± 6.7 mL and LAVI values higher by 23.1 ± 3.4 mL/m2 (P < 0.0001). Conclusion: Misalignment and motion artifacts in CCTA images affect diagnostic CT performance, especially in patients with elevated heart rates or profound arrhythmia. However, the new-generation Revolution CCTA provides detailed information on left-atrium-complex morphology and function, in addition to coronary anatomy, in HiHR and AFib patients without additional radiation, scanning, or contrast requirements.
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- 2021
46. The Relationship Between Coronary Calcification and the Natural History of Coronary Artery Disease
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Jin, Han-Young, Weir-McCall, Jonathan R, Leipsic, Jonathon A, Son, Jang-Won, Sellers, Stephanie L, Shao, Michael, Blanke, Philipp, Ahmadi, Amir, Hadamitzky, Martin, Kim, Yong-Jin, Conte, Edoardo, Andreini, Daniele, Pontone, Gianluca, Budoff, Matthew J, Gottlieb, Ilan, Lee, Byoung Kwon, Chun, Eun Ju, Cademartiri, Filippo, Maffei, Erica, Marques, Hugo, de Araujo Goncalves, Pedio, Shin, Sanghoon, Choi, Jung Hyun, Virmani, Renu, Samady, Habib, Stone, Peter H, Berman, Daniel S, Narula, Jagat, Shaw, Leslee J, Bax, Jeroen J, Chinnaiyan, Kavitha, Raff, Gilbert, Al-Mallah, Mouaz H, Lin, Fay Y, Min, James K, Sung, Ji Min, Lee, Sang-Eun, and Chang, Hyuk-Jae
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Cardiovascular Medicine and Haematology ,Clinical Sciences ,Biomedical Imaging ,Heart Disease ,Cardiovascular ,Heart Disease - Coronary Heart Disease ,Atherosclerosis ,Clinical Research ,Aetiology ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Computed Tomography Angiography ,Coronary Angiography ,Coronary Artery Disease ,Coronary Vessels ,Disease Progression ,Humans ,Plaque ,Atherosclerotic ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Risk Factors ,Vascular Calcification ,atherosclerosis ,coronary artery calcium ,coronary artery disease ,coronary computed tomography angiography ,statins ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Cardiovascular System & Hematology ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
ObjectivesThe aim of the current study was to explore the impact of plaque calcification in terms of absolute calcified plaque volume (CPV) and in the context of its percentage of the total plaque volume at a lesion and patient level on the progression of coronary artery disease.BackgroundCoronary artery calcification is an established marker of risk of future cardiovascular events. Despite this, plaque calcification is also considered a marker of plaque stability, and it increases in response to medical therapy.MethodsThis analysis included 925 patients with 2,568 lesions from the PARADIGM (Progression of Atherosclerotic Plaque Determined by Computed Tomographic Angiography Imaging) registry, in which patients underwent clinically indicated serial coronary computed tomography angiography. Plaque calcification was examined by using CPV and percent CPV (PCPV), calculated as (CPV/plaque volume) × 100 at a per-plaque and per-patient level (summation of all individual plaques).ResultsCPV was strongly correlated with plaque volume (r = 0.780; p
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- 2021
47. Age- and sex-related features of atherosclerosis from coronary computed tomography angiography in patients prior to acute coronary syndrome: results from the ICONIC study
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Conte, Edoardo, Dwivedi, Aeshita, Mushtaq, Saima, Pontone, Gianluca, Lin, Fay Y, Hollenberg, Emma J, Lee, Sang-Eun, Bax, Jeroen, Cademartiri, Filippo, Chinnaiyan, Kavitha, Chow, Benjamin JW, Cury, Ricardo C, Feuchtner, Gudrun, Hadamitzky, Martin, Kim, Yong-Jin, Baggiano, Andrea, Leipsic, Jonathon, Maffei, Erica, Marques, Hugo, Plank, Fabian, Raff, Gilbert L, van Rosendael, Alexander R, Villines, Todd C, Weirich, Harald G, Al’Aref, Subhi J, Baskaran, Lohendran, Cho, Iksung, Danad, Ibrahim, Han, Donghee, Heo, Ran, Lee, Ji Hyun, Stuijfzand, Wijnand J, Gransar, Heidi, Lu, Yao, Sung, Ji Min, Park, Hyung-Bok, Al-Mallah, Mouaz H, de Araújo Gonçalves, Pedro, Berman, Daniel S, Budoff, Matthew J, Samady, Habib, Shaw, Leslee J, Stone, Peter H, Virmani, Renu, Narula, Jagat, Min, James K, Chang, Hyuk-Jae, and Andreini, Daniele
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Heart Disease ,Atherosclerosis ,Biomedical Imaging ,Aging ,Clinical Research ,Heart Disease - Coronary Heart Disease ,Cardiovascular ,Acute Coronary Syndrome ,Aged ,Computed Tomography Angiography ,Coronary Angiography ,Coronary Artery Disease ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Plaque ,Atherosclerotic ,atherosclerosis ,gender medicine ,cardiac CT ,high-risk plaque features ,CCTA ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology - Abstract
AimsAlthough there is increasing evidence supporting coronary atherosclerosis evaluation by coronary computed tomography angiography (CCTA), no data are available on age and sex differences for quantitative plaque features. The aim of this study was to investigate sex and age differences in both qualitative and quantitative atherosclerotic features from CCTA prior to acute coronary syndrome (ACS).Methods and resultsWithin the ICONIC study, in which 234 patients with subsequent ACS were propensity matched 1:1 with 234 non-event controls, our current subanalysis included only the ACS cases. Both qualitative and quantitative advance plaque analysis by CCTA were performed by a core laboratory. In 129 cases, culprit lesions identified by invasive coronary angiography at the time of ACS were co-registered to baseline CCTA precursor lesions. The study population was then divided into subgroups according to sex and age (
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- 2021
48. Effects of renin-angiotensin-aldosterone-system inhibitors on coronary atherosclerotic plaques: The PARADIGM registry
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Williams, Curtis, Han, Donghee, Takagi, Hidenobu, Fordyce, Christopher B., Sellers, Stephanie, Blanke, Philipp, Lin, Fay Y., Shaw, Leslee J., Lee, Sang-Eun, Andreini, Daniele, Al-Mallah, Mouaz H., Budoff, Matthew J., Cademartiri, Filippo, Chinnaiyan, Kavitha, Choi, Jung Hyun, Conte, Edoardo, Marques, Hugo, de Araújo Gonçalves, Pedro, Gottlieb, Ilan, Hadamitzky, Martin, Maffei, Erica, Pontone, Gianluca, Shin, Sanghoon, Kim, Yong-Jin, Lee, Byoung Kwon, Chun, Eun Ju, Sung, Ji Min, Virmani, Renu, Samady, Habib, Stone, Peter H., Berman, Daniel S., Narula, Jagat, Bax, Jeroen J., Leipsic, Jonathon A., and Chang, Hyuk-Jae
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- 2023
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49. Relation of Gender to Atherosclerotic Plaque Characteristics by Differing Angiographic Stenosis Severity
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Jonas, Rebecca, Patel, Toral, Crabtree, Tami R., Jennings, Robert S., Heo, Ran, Park, Hyung-Bok, Marques, Hugo, Chang, Hyuk-Jae, Stuijfzand, Wijnand J., van Rosendael, Alexander R., Choi, Jung Hyun, Doh, Joon-Hyung, Her, Ae-Young, Koo, Bon-Kwon, Nam, Chang-Wook, Shin, Sang-Hoon, Cole, Jason, Gimelli, Alessia, Khan, Muhammad Akram, Lu, Bin, Gao, Yang, Nabi, Faisal, Al-Mallah, Mouaz H., Nakazato, Ryo, Schoepf, U. Joseph, Driessen, Roel S., Bom, Michiel J., Thompson, Randall C., Jang, James J., Ridner, Michael, Rowan, Chris, Avelar, Erick, Généreux, Philippe, Knaapen, Paul, de Waard, Guus A., Pontone, Gianluca, Andreini, Daniele, Bax, Jeroen J., Choi, Andrew D., Earls, James P., Hoffmann, Udo, Min, James K., and Villines, Todd C.
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- 2023
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50. The Contemporary Role of Cardiac Computed Tomography and Cardiac Magnetic Resonance Imaging in the Diagnosis and Management of Pericardial Diseases
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Conte, Edoardo, Agalbato, Cecilia, Melotti, Eleonora, Marchetti, Davide, Schillaci, Matteo, Ratti, Angelo, Ippolito, Sonia, Pancrazi, Massimo, Perone, Francesco, Dalla Cia, Alessia, Pepi, Mauro, Pontone, Gianluca, Imazio, Massimo, Brucato, Antonio, Chetrit, Michael, Klein, Allan, and Andreini, Daniele
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- 2023
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