1,193 results on '"Samady, Habib"'
Search Results
2. 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
3. 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, Gonçalves, Pedro de Araújo, 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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Humans ,Cardiovascular Diseases ,Disease Progression ,Polyvinyl Chloride ,Coronary Angiography ,Risk Factors ,Blood Pressure ,Female ,Male ,Coronary Artery Disease ,Plaque ,Atherosclerotic ,Computed Tomography Angiography ,atherosclerosis ,coronary artery disease ,coronary computed tomography angiography ,systolic blood pressure ,Aging ,Clinical Research ,Cardiovascular ,Heart Disease ,Atherosclerosis ,Heart Disease - Coronary Heart Disease ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Cardiovascular System & Hematology - 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
4. Epicardial adipose tissue attenuation on computed tomography in women with coronary microvascular dysfunction: A pilot, hypothesis generating study
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Patel, Nidhi H., Dave, Esha K., Fatade, Yetunde A., De Cecco, Carlo N., Ko, Yi-An, Chen, Yunyun, Sharma, Ashish, Rashid, Fauzia, Vatsa, Nishant, Samady, Habib, Toleva, Olga, Quyyumi, Arshed, Mehta, Puja K., and Stillman, Arthur E.
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- 2024
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5. 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
6. Determining the Cause of Coronary Vasomotor Disorders in Patients With Ischemia and Nonobstructive Coronary Arteries: Design and Rationale of the DISCOVER INOCA Prospective, Multicenter Registry
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Shah, Samit M., Tremmel, Jennifer A., Henry, Timothy D., Smilowitz, Nathaniel R., Prasad, Megha, Kobayashi, Yuhei, Henry, Glen A., Samady, Habib, Samuels, Bruce A., Lerman, Amir, Moses, Jeffrey W., Pietras, Cody, Zhang, Zhiyuan, Tirziu, Daniela, Parise, Helen, Cristea, Ecaterina, Chamié, Daniel, Grubman, Daniel, Henrici, Kyna, Matmusaeva, Elzar, Latif, Nida, Cigarroa, Natasha, and Lansky, Alexandra J.
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- 2024
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7. Prediction of the development of new coronary atherosclerotic plaques with radiomics
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Lee, Sang-Eun, Hong, Youngtaek, Hong, Jongsoo, Jung, Juyeong, 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, Gonçalves, Pedro de Araújo, Pontone, Gianluca, Shin, Sanghoon, Stone, Peter H., Samady, Habib, Virmani, Renu, Narula, Jagat, Shaw, Leslee J., Bax, Jeroen J., Lin, Fay Y., Min, James K., and Chang, Hyuk-Jae
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- 2024
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8. 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
9. Optical Coherence Tomography–Based Functional Stenosis Assessment: FUSION—A Prospective Multicenter Trial
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Jeremias, Allen, Maehara, Akiko, Matsumura, Mitsuaki, Shlofmitz, Richard A., Maksoud, Aziz, Akasaka, Takashi, Bezerra, Hiram G., Fearon, William F., Samady, Habib, Samuels, Bruce, Rapkin, Joshua, Gopinath, Ajay, Teraphongphom, Nutte Tarn, Buccola, Jana, and Ali, Ziad A.
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- 2024
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10. Comparative Healthcare Resource Utilization of Percutaneous Mechanical Circulatory Support Using Impella Versus Intra-aortic Balloon Pump Use for Patients With Acute Coronary Syndrome and Cardiogenic Shock Undergoing Percutaneous Coronary Interventions: Insights From National Inpatient Sample
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Dodoo, Sheriff N., Kwapong, Yaa Adoma, Agyemang-Sarpong, Alicia, Amoran, Emmanuel, Egolum, Ugochukwu O., Ghasemzadeh, Nima, Ramadan, Ronnie, Henry, Glen, and Samady, Habib
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- 2024
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11. Stent underexpansion is associated with high wall shear stress: a biomechanical analysis of the shear stent study
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Kumar, Sonali, Molony, David, Khawaja, Sameer, Crawford, Kaylyn, Thompson, Elizabeth W., Hung, Olivia, Shah, Imran, Navas-Simbana, Jessica, Ho, Arlen, Kumar, Arnav, Ko, Yi-An, Hosseini, Hossein, Lefieux, Adrien, Lee, Joo Myung, Hahn, Joo-Yong, Chen, Shao-Liang, Otake, Hiromasa, Akasaka, Takashi, Shin, Eun-Seok, Koo, Bon-Kwon, Stankovic, Goran, Milasinovic, Dejan, Nam, Chang-Wook, Won, Ki-Bum, Escaned, Javier, Erglis, Andrejs, Murasato, Yoshinobu, Veneziani, Alessandro, and Samady, Habib
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- 2023
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12. Differential predictability for high-risk plaque characteristics between fractional flow reserve and instantaneous wave-free ratio
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Lee, Joo Myung, Shin, Doosup, Lee, Seung Hun, Choi, Ki Hong, Kim, Sung Mok, Chun, Eun Ju, Lee, Kwan Yong, Hwang, Doyeon, Ahn, Sung Gyun, Brown, Adam J., Mejía-Rentería, Hernán, Lefieux, Adrien, Molony, David, Chang, Kiyuk, Kakuta, Tsunekazu, Escaned, Javier, and Samady, Habib
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- 2023
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13. 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
14. Artificial Intelligence, Computational Simulations, and Extended Reality in Cardiovascular Interventions
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Samant, Saurabhi, Bakhos, Jules Joel, Wu, Wei, Zhao, Shijia, Kassab, Ghassan S., Khan, Behram, Panagopoulos, Anastasios, Makadia, Janaki, Oguz, Usama M., Banga, Akshat, Fayaz, Muhammad, Glass, William, Chiastra, Claudio, Burzotta, Francesco, LaDisa, John F., Jr., Iaizzo, Paul, Murasato, Yoshinobu, Dubini, Gabriele, Migliavacca, Francesco, Mickley, Timothy, Bicek, Andrew, Fontana, Jason, West, Nick E.J., Mortier, Peter, Boyers, Pamela J., Gold, Jeffrey P., Anderson, Daniel R., Tcheng, James E., Windle, John R., Samady, Habib, Jaffer, Farouc A., Desai, Nihar R., Lansky, Alexandra, Mena-Hurtado, Carlos, Abbott, Dawn, Brilakis, Emmanouil S., Lassen, Jens Flensted, Louvard, Yves, Stankovic, Goran, Serruys, Patrick W., Velazquez, Eric, Elias, Pierre, Bhatt, Deepak L., Dangas, George, and Chatzizisis, Yiannis S.
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- 2023
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15. 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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16. 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
17. 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
18. Quantitative assessment of coronary plaque volume change related to triglyceride glucose index: The Progression of AtheRosclerotic PlAque DetermIned by Computed TomoGraphic Angiography IMaging (PARADIGM) registry
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Won, Ki-Bum, Lee, Byoung Kwon, Park, Hyung-Bok, Heo, Ran, Lee, Sang-Eun, Rizvi, Asim, Lin, Fay Y, Kumar, Amit, 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, Shin, Sanghoon, Choi, Jung Hyun, Virmani, Renu, Samady, Habib, Chinnaiyan, Kavitha, Raff, Gilbert L, Stone, Peter H, 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 ,Heart Disease - Coronary Heart Disease ,Clinical Research ,Biomedical Imaging ,Cardiovascular ,Aging ,Atherosclerosis ,Heart Disease ,Aged ,Biomarkers ,Blood Glucose ,Computed Tomography Angiography ,Coronary Angiography ,Coronary Artery Disease ,Coronary Vessels ,Disease Progression ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Multidetector Computed Tomography ,Plaque ,Atherosclerotic ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Registries ,Time Factors ,Triglycerides ,Triglyceride glucose index ,Coronary artery disease ,Coronary computed tomography angiography ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Cardiovascular System & Hematology ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology - Abstract
BackgroundThe association between triglyceride glucose (TyG) index and coronary atherosclerotic change remains unclear. We aimed to evaluate the association between TyG index and coronary plaque progression (PP) using serial coronary computed tomography angiography (CCTA).MethodsA total of 1143 subjects (aged 60.7 ± 9.3 years, 54.6% male) who underwent serial CCTA with available data on TyG index and diabetic status were analyzed from The Progression of AtheRosclerotic PlAque DetermIned by Computed TomoGraphic Angiography IMaging (PARADIGM) registry. PP was defined as plaque volume (PV) (mm3) at follow-up minus PV at index > 0. Annual change of PV (mm3/year) was defined as PV change divided by inter-scan period. Rapid PP was defined as the progression of percent atheroma volume (PV divided by vessel volume multiplied by 100) ≥ 1.0%/year.ResultsThe median inter-scan period was 3.2 (range 2.6-4.4) years. All participants were stratified into three groups based on TyG index tertiles. The overall incidence of PP was 77.3%. Baseline total PV (group I [lowest]: 30.8 (0.0-117.7), group II: 47.2 (6.2-160.4), and group III [highest]: 57.5 (8.4-154.3); P
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- 2020
19. A Boosted Ensemble Algorithm for Determination of Plaque Stability in High-Risk Patients on Coronary CTA
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Al'Aref, Subhi J, Singh, Gurpreet, Choi, Jeong W, Xu, Zhuoran, Maliakal, Gabriel, van Rosendael, Alexander R, Lee, Benjamin C, Fatima, Zahra, Andreini, Daniele, Bax, Jeroen J, Cademartiri, Filippo, Chinnaiyan, Kavitha, Chow, Benjamin JW, Conte, Edoardo, Cury, Ricardo C, Feuchtner, Gudruf, Hadamitzky, Martin, Kim, Yong-Jin, Lee, Sang-Eun, Leipsic, Jonathon A, Maffei, Erica, Marques, Hugo, Plank, Fabian, Pontone, Gianluca, Raff, Gilbert L, Villines, Todd C, Weirich, Harald G, Cho, Iksung, Danad, Ibrahim, Han, Donghee, Heo, Ran, Lee, Ji Hyun, Rizvi, Asim, Stuijfzand, Wijnand J, Gransar, Heidi, Lu, Yao, Sung, Ji Min, Park, Hyung-Bok, Berman, Daniel S, Budoff, Matthew J, Samady, Habib, Stone, Peter H, Virmani, Renu, Narula, Jagat, Chang, Hyuk-Jae, Lin, Fay Y, Baskaran, Lohendran, Shaw, Leslee J, and Min, James K
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Cardiovascular Medicine and Haematology ,Clinical Sciences ,Cardiovascular ,Clinical Research ,Heart Disease ,Heart Disease - Coronary Heart Disease ,Atherosclerosis ,Detection ,screening and diagnosis ,4.2 Evaluation of markers and technologies ,Algorithms ,Case-Control Studies ,Computed Tomography Angiography ,Coronary Angiography ,Coronary Artery Disease ,Coronary Stenosis ,Humans ,Plaque ,Atherosclerotic ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Severity of Illness Index ,acute coronary syndrome ,coronary computed tomography angiography ,diameter stenosis ,machine learning ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Cardiovascular System & Hematology ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
ObjectivesThis study sought to identify culprit lesion (CL) precursors among acute coronary syndrome (ACS) patients based on qualitative and quantitative computed tomography-based plaque characteristics.BackgroundCoronary computed tomography angiography (CTA) has been validated for patient-level prediction of ACS. However, the applicability of coronary CTA to CL assessment is not known.MethodsUtilizing the ICONIC (Incident COroNary Syndromes Identified by Computed Tomography) study, a nested case-control study of 468 patients with baseline coronary CTA, the study included ACS patients with invasive coronary angiography-adjudicated CLs that could be aligned to CL precursors on baseline coronary CTA. Separate blinded core laboratories adjudicated CLs and performed atherosclerotic plaque evaluation. Thereafter, the study used a boosted ensemble algorithm (XGBoost) to develop a predictive model of CLs. Data were randomly split into a training set (80%) and a test set (20%). The area under the receiver-operating characteristic curve of this model was compared with that of diameter stenosis (model 1), high-risk plaque features (model 2), and lesion-level features of CL precursors from the ICONIC study (model 3). Thereafter, the machine learning (ML) model was applied to 234 non-ACS patients with 864 lesions to determine model performance for CL exclusion.ResultsCL precursors were identified by both coronary angiography and baseline coronary CTA in 124 of 234 (53.0%) patients, with a total of 582 lesions (containing 124 CLs) included in the analysis. The ML model demonstrated significantly higher area under the receiver-operating characteristic curve for discriminating CL precursors (0.774; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.758 to 0.790) compared with model 1 (0.599; 95% CI: 0.599 to 0.599; p
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- 2020
20. Non-obstructive high-risk plaques increase the risk of future culprit lesions comparable to obstructive plaques without high-risk features: the ICONIC study
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Ferraro, Richard A, van Rosendael, Alexander R, Lu, Yao, Andreini, Daniele, Al-Mallah, Mouaz H, Cademartiri, Filippo, Chinnaiyan, Kavitha, Chow, Benjamin JW, Conte, Edoardo, Cury, Ricardo C, Feuchtner, Gudrun, de Araújo Gonçalves, Pedro, Hadamitzky, Martin, Kim, Yong-Jin, Leipsic, Jonathon, Maffei, Erica, Marques, Hugo, Plank, Fabian, Pontone, Gianluca, Raff, Gilbert L, Villines, Todd C, Lee, Sang-Eun, Al’Aref, Subhi J, Baskaran, Lohendran, Cho, Iksung, Danad, Ibrahim, Gransar, Heidi, Budoff, Matthew J, Samady, Habib, Stone, Peter H, Virmani, Renu, Narula, Jagat, Berman, Daniel S, Chang, Hyuk-Jae, Bax, Jeroen J, Min, James K, Shaw, Leslee J, and Lin, Fay Y
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Cardiovascular Medicine and Haematology ,Clinical Research ,Heart Disease - Coronary Heart Disease ,Heart Disease ,Atherosclerosis ,Cardiovascular ,4.2 Evaluation of markers and technologies ,Detection ,screening and diagnosis ,Acute Coronary Syndrome ,Aged ,Case-Control Studies ,Coronary Angiography ,Coronary Artery Disease ,Coronary Vessels ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Plaque ,Atherosclerotic ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Retrospective Studies ,Risk Factors ,Coronary computed tomographic angiography ,coronary artery disease ,myocardial infarction ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology - Abstract
AimsHigh-risk plaque (HRP) and non-obstructive coronary artery disease independently predict adverse events, but their importance to future culprit lesions has not been resolved. We sought to determine in patients prior to confirmed acute coronary syndrome (ACS) the association between lesion percent diameter stenosis (%DS), and the absolute number and prevalence of HRP. The secondary objective was to examine the relative importance of non-obstructive HRP in future culprit lesions.Methods and resultsWithin the ICONIC study, a nested case-control study of patients undergoing coronary computed tomographic angiography (coronary CT), we included ACS cases with culprit lesions confirmed by invasive coronary angiography and coregistered to baseline coronary CT. Quantitative CT was used to evaluate obstructive (≥50%) and non-obstructive (
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- 2020
21. Coronary Computed Tomography Angiography From Clinical Uses to Emerging Technologies JACC State-of-the-Art Review
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Abdelrahman, Khaled M, Chen, Marcus Y, Dey, Amit K, Virmani, Renu, Finn, Aloke V, Khamis, Ramzi Y, Choi, Andrew D, Min, James K, Williams, Michelle C, Buckler, Andrew J, Taylor, Charles A, Rogers, Campbell, Samady, Habib, Antoniades, Charalambos, Shaw, Leslee J, Budoff, Matthew J, Hoffmann, Udo, Blankstein, Ron, Narula, Jagat, and Mehta, Nehal N
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Cardiovascular Medicine and Haematology ,Heart Disease ,Biomedical Imaging ,Cardiovascular ,Atherosclerosis ,Heart Disease - Coronary Heart Disease ,4.1 Discovery and preclinical testing of markers and technologies ,4.2 Evaluation of markers and technologies ,Detection ,screening and diagnosis ,Good Health and Well Being ,Biomedical Technology ,Chest Pain ,Computed Tomography Angiography ,Coronary Angiography ,Coronary Artery Disease ,Humans ,Review Literature as Topic ,Risk Assessment ,Vascular Calcification ,atherosclerosis ,coronary artery disease ,coronary computed tomography angiography ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Public Health and Health Services ,Cardiovascular System & Hematology ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology - Abstract
Evaluation of coronary artery disease (CAD) using coronary computed tomography angiography (CCTA) has seen a paradigm shift in the last decade. Evidence increasingly supports the clinical utility of CCTA across various stages of CAD, from the detection of early subclinical disease to the assessment of acute chest pain. Additionally, CCTA can be used to noninvasively quantify plaque burden and identify high-risk plaque, aiding in diagnosis, prognosis, and treatment. This is especially important in the evaluation of CAD in immune-driven conditions with increased cardiovascular disease prevalence. Emerging applications of CCTA based on hemodynamic indices and plaque characterization may provide personalized risk assessment, affect disease detection, and further guide therapy. This review provides an update on the evidence, clinical applications, and emerging technologies surrounding CCTA as highlighted at the 2019 National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute CCTA Summit.
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- 2020
22. Percent atheroma volume: Optimal variable to report whole-heart atherosclerotic plaque burden with coronary CTA, the PARADIGM study
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van Rosendael, Alexander R, Lin, Fay Y, Ma, Xiaoyue, van den Hoogen, Inge J, Gianni, Umberto, Al Hussein, Omar, Al'Aref, Subhi J, Peña, Jessica M, 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, Kim, Yong-Jin, Lee, Byoung Kwon, Chun, Eun Ju, Sung, Ji Min, Lee, Sang-Eun, Berman, Daniel S, 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 ,Cardiovascular ,Atherosclerosis ,Heart Disease - Coronary Heart Disease ,Aging ,Biomedical Imaging ,Clinical Research ,Heart Disease ,Aged ,Body Surface Area ,Computed Tomography Angiography ,Coronary Angiography ,Coronary Artery Disease ,Coronary Vessels ,Disease Progression ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Plaque ,Atherosclerotic ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Prospective Studies ,Registries ,Severity of Illness Index ,Sex Factors ,Time Factors ,Imaging ,Percent atheroma volume ,Coronary CTA ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Cardiovascular System & Hematology ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology ,Clinical sciences ,Applied computing - Abstract
BACKGROUND AND AIMS:Different methodologies to report whole-heart atherosclerotic plaque on coronary computed tomography angiography (CCTA) have been utilized. We examined which of the three commonly used plaque burden definitions was least affected by differences in body surface area (BSA) and sex. METHODS:The PARADIGM study includes symptomatic patients with suspected coronary atherosclerosis who underwent serial CCTA >2 years apart. Coronary lumen, vessel, and plaque were quantified from the coronary tree on a 0.5 mm cross-sectional basis by a core-lab, and summed to per-patient. Three quantitative methods of plaque burden were employed: (1) total plaque volume (PV) in mm3, (2) percent atheroma volume (PAV) in % [which equaled: PV/vessel volume * 100%], and (3) normalized total atheroma volume (TAVnorm) in mm3 [which equaled: PV/vessel length * mean population vessel length]. Only data from the baseline CCTA were used. PV, PAV, and TAVnorm were compared between patients in the top quartile of BSA vs the remaining, and between sexes. Associations between vessel volume, BSA, and the three plaque burden methodologies were assessed. RESULTS:The study population comprised 1479 patients (age 60.7 ± 9.3 years, 58.4% male) who underwent CCTA. A total of 17,649 coronary artery segments were evaluated with a median of 12 (IQR 11-13) segments per-patient (from a 16-segment coronary tree). Patients with a large BSA (top quartile), compared with the remaining patients, had a larger PV and TAVnorm, but similar PAV. The relation between larger BSA and larger absolute plaque volume (PV and TAVnorm) was mediated by the coronary vessel volume. Independent from the atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease risk (ASCVD) score, vessel volume correlated with PV (P
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- 2020
23. Machine Learning Framework to Identify Individuals at Risk of Rapid Progression of Coronary Atherosclerosis: From the PARADIGM Registry
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Han, Donghee, Kolli, Kranthi K, Al'Aref, Subhi J, Baskaran, Lohendran, van Rosendael, Alexander R, Gransar, Heidi, Andreini, Daniele, 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, Sangshoon, Kim, Yong‐Jin, Lee, Byoung Kwon, Chun, Eun Ju, Sung, Ji Min, Lee, Sang‐Eun, Virmani, Renu, Samady, Habib, Stone, Peter, Narula, Jagat, Berman, Daniel S, Bax, Jeroen J, Shaw, Leslee J, Lin, Fay Y, Min, James K, and Chang, Hyuk‐Jae
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Cardiovascular Medicine and Haematology ,Atherosclerosis ,Heart Disease ,Aging ,Heart Disease - Coronary Heart Disease ,Cardiovascular ,Biomedical Imaging ,Clinical Research ,4.2 Evaluation of markers and technologies ,Detection ,screening and diagnosis ,Aged ,Computed Tomography Angiography ,Coronary Angiography ,Coronary Artery Disease ,Diagnosis ,Computer-Assisted ,Disease Progression ,Female ,Humans ,Machine Learning ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Multidetector Computed Tomography ,Plaque ,Atherosclerotic ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Prospective Studies ,Radiographic Image Interpretation ,Computer-Assisted ,Registries ,Time Factors ,coronary artery disease ,coronary computed tomography angiography ,machine learning ,plaque progression ,risk prediction ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology - Abstract
Background Rapid coronary plaque progression (RPP) is associated with incident cardiovascular events. To date, no method exists for the identification of individuals at risk of RPP at a single point in time. This study integrated coronary computed tomography angiography-determined qualitative and quantitative plaque features within a machine learning (ML) framework to determine its performance for predicting RPP. Methods and Results Qualitative and quantitative coronary computed tomography angiography plaque characterization was performed in 1083 patients who underwent serial coronary computed tomography angiography from the PARADIGM (Progression of Atherosclerotic Plaque Determined by Computed Tomographic Angiography Imaging) registry. RPP was defined as an annual progression of percentage atheroma volume ≥1.0%. We employed the following ML models: model 1, clinical variables; model 2, model 1 plus qualitative plaque features; model 3, model 2 plus quantitative plaque features. ML models were compared with the atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease risk score, Duke coronary artery disease score, and a logistic regression statistical model. 224 patients (21%) were identified as RPP. Feature selection in ML identifies that quantitative computed tomography variables were higher-ranking features, followed by qualitative computed tomography variables and clinical/laboratory variables. ML model 3 exhibited the highest discriminatory performance to identify individuals who would experience RPP when compared with atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease risk score, the other ML models, and the statistical model (area under the receiver operating characteristic curve in ML model 3, 0.83 [95% CI 0.78-0.89], versus atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease risk score, 0.60 [0.52-0.67]; Duke coronary artery disease score, 0.74 [0.68-0.79]; ML model 1, 0.62 [0.55-0.69]; ML model 2, 0.73 [0.67-0.80]; all P
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- 2020
24. Automatic segmentation of multiple cardiovascular structures from cardiac computed tomography angiography images using deep learning
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Baskaran, Lohendran, Al’Aref, Subhi J, Maliakal, Gabriel, Lee, Benjamin C, Xu, Zhuoran, Choi, Jeong W, Lee, Sang-Eun, Sung, Ji Min, Lin, Fay Y, Dunham, Simon, Mosadegh, Bobak, Kim, Yong-Jin, Gottlieb, Ilan, Lee, Byoung Kwon, Chun, Eun Ju, Cademartiri, Filippo, Maffei, Erica, Marques, Hugo, Shin, Sanghoon, Choi, Jung Hyun, Chinnaiyan, Kavitha, Hadamitzky, Martin, Conte, Edoardo, Andreini, Daniele, Pontone, Gianluca, Budoff, Matthew J, Leipsic, Jonathon A, Raff, Gilbert L, Virmani, Renu, Samady, Habib, Stone, Peter H, Berman, Daniel S, Narula, Jagat, Bax, Jeroen J, Chang, Hyuk-Jae, Min, James K, and Shaw, Leslee J
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Cardiovascular Medicine and Haematology ,Biomedical Imaging ,Heart Disease ,Cardiovascular ,Aged ,Computed Tomography Angiography ,Coronary Vessels ,Deep Learning ,Female ,Heart ,Heart Atria ,Heart Ventricles ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,General Science & Technology - Abstract
OBJECTIVES:To develop, demonstrate and evaluate an automated deep learning method for multiple cardiovascular structure segmentation. BACKGROUND:Segmentation of cardiovascular images is resource-intensive. We design an automated deep learning method for the segmentation of multiple structures from Coronary Computed Tomography Angiography (CCTA) images. METHODS:Images from a multicenter registry of patients that underwent clinically-indicated CCTA were used. The proximal ascending and descending aorta (PAA, DA), superior and inferior vena cavae (SVC, IVC), pulmonary artery (PA), coronary sinus (CS), right ventricular wall (RVW) and left atrial wall (LAW) were annotated as ground truth. The U-net-derived deep learning model was trained, validated and tested in a 70:20:10 split. RESULTS:The dataset comprised 206 patients, with 5.130 billion pixels. Mean age was 59.9 ± 9.4 yrs., and was 42.7% female. An overall median Dice score of 0.820 (0.782, 0.843) was achieved. Median Dice scores for PAA, DA, SVC, IVC, PA, CS, RVW and LAW were 0.969 (0.979, 0.988), 0.953 (0.955, 0.983), 0.937 (0.934, 0.965), 0.903 (0.897, 0.948), 0.775 (0.724, 0.925), 0.720 (0.642, 0.809), 0.685 (0.631, 0.761) and 0.625 (0.596, 0.749) respectively. Apart from the CS, there were no significant differences in performance between sexes or age groups. CONCLUSIONS:An automated deep learning model demonstrated segmentation of multiple cardiovascular structures from CCTA images with reasonable overall accuracy when evaluated on a pixel level.
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- 2020
25. Endothelial shear stress computed from coronary computed tomography angiography: A direct comparison to intravascular ultrasound
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Hakim, Diaa, Coskun, Ahmet U., Maynard, Charles, Pu, Zhongyue, Rupert, Deborah, Cefalo, Nicholas, Cormier, Michelle, Ahmed, Mona, Earls, James, Jennings, Rob, Croce, Kevin, Mushtaq, Saima, Andreini, Daniele, Conte, Edoardo, Molony, David, Samady, Habib, Min, James K., and Stone, Peter H.
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- 2023
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26. Clinical and Coronary Plaque Predictors of Atherosclerotic Nonresponse to Statin Therapy
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van Rosendael, Sophie E., van den Hoogen, Inge J., Lin, Fay Y., 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, Kim, Yong-Jin, Lee, Byoung Kwon, Chun, Eun Ju, Sung, Ji Min, Lee, Sang-Eun, Virmani, Renu, Samady, Habib, Stone, Peter H., Min, James K., Narula, Jagat, Shaw, Leslee J., Chang, Hyuk-Jae, van Rosendael, Alexander R., and Bax, Jeroen J.
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- 2023
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27. Abstract 14675: The Role of Biomechanics in Diagnosis and Evaluation of Coronary Artery Disease
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Jalal, Sahar, Soriano, Lilia, Dornback, Alexander, Narula, Navneet, Molony, David, Samady, Habib, Lin, Fay, and Dunham, Simon
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- 2023
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28. Semi-Automatic Reconstruction of Patient-Specific Stented Coronaries based on Data Assimilation and Computer Aided Design
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Lefieux, Adrien, Bridio, Sara, Molony, David, Piccinelli, Marina, Chiastra, Claudio, Samady, Habib, Migliavacca, Francesco, and Veneziani, Alessandro
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- 2022
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29. Patient-Specific 3D Volumetric Reconstruction of Bioresorbable Stents: A Method to Generate 3D Geometries for Computational Analysis of Coronaries Treated with Bioresorbable Stents
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Yang, Boyi, Piccinelli, Marina, Esposito, Gaetano, Han, Tianli, Bouchi, Yasir, Gogas, Bill, Giddens, Don, Samady, Habib, and Veneziani, Alessandro
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Computer Science - Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition - Abstract
As experts continue to debate the optimal surgery practice for coronary disease - percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) or coronary aortic bypass graft (CABG) - computational tools may provide a quantitative assessment of each option. Computational fluid dynamics (CFD) has been used to assess the interplay between hemodynamics and stent struts; it is of particular interest in Bioresorbable Vascular Stents (BVS), since their thicker struts may result in impacted flow patterns and possible pathological consequences. Many proofs of concept are presented in the literature; however, a practical method for extracting patient-specific stented coronary artery geometries from images over a large number of patients remains an open problem. This work provides a possible pipeline for the reconstruction of the BVS. Using Optical Coherence Tomographies (OCT) and Invasive Coronary Angiographies (ICA), we can reconstruct the 3D geometry of deployed BVS in vivo. We illustrate the stent reconstruction process: (i) automatic strut detection, (ii) identification of stent components, (iii) 3D registration of stent curvature, and (iv) final stent volume reconstruction. The methodology is designed for use on clinical OCT images, as opposed to approaches that relied on a small number of virtually deployed stents. The proposed reconstruction process is validated with a virtual phantom stent, providing quantitative assessment of the methodology, and with selected clinical cases, confirming feasibility. Using multimodality image analysis, we obtain reliable reconstructions within a reasonable timeframe. This work is the first step toward a fully automated reconstruction and simulation procedure aiming at an extensive quantitative analysis of the impact of BVS struts on hemodynamics via CFD in clinical trials, going beyond the proof-of-concept stage., Comment: 26 pages, 12 figures
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- 2018
30. Differential association between the progression of coronary artery calcium score and coronary plaque volume progression according to statins: the Progression of AtheRosclerotic PlAque DetermIned by Computed TomoGraphic Angiography Imaging (PARADIGM) study
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Lee, Sang-Eun, Sung, Ji Min, Andreini, Daniele, Budoff, Matthew J, Cademartiri, Filippo, Chinnaiyan, Kavitha, Choi, Jung Hyun, Chun, Eun Ju, Conte, Edoardo, Gottlieb, Ilan, Hadamitzky, Martin, Kim, Yong Jin, Kumar, Amit, Lee, Byoung Kwon, Leipsic, Jonathon A, Maffei, Erica, Marques, Hugo, Pontone, Gianluca, Raff, Gilbert, Shin, Sanghoon, Stone, Peter H, Samady, Habib, Virmani, Renu, Narula, Jagat, Berman, Daniel S, Shaw, Leslee J, Bax, Jeroen J, Lin, Fay Y, Min, James K, and Chang, Hyuk-Jae
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Atherosclerosis ,Biomedical Imaging ,Cardiovascular ,Heart Disease ,Heart Disease - Coronary Heart Disease ,Clinical Research ,Computed Tomography Angiography ,Coronary Angiography ,Coronary Artery Disease ,Disease Progression ,Female ,Humans ,Hydroxymethylglutaryl-CoA Reductase Inhibitors ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Plaque ,Atherosclerotic ,Prospective Studies ,Registries ,Vascular Calcification ,coronary artery atherosclerosis ,statins ,coronary computed tomography angiography ,coronary artery calcium score ,coronary artery calcification ,Agatston score ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Cardiovascular System & Hematology - Abstract
AimsCoronary artery calcium score (CACS) is a strong predictor of major adverse cardiac events (MACE). Conversely, statins, which markedly reduce MACE risk, increase CACS. We explored whether CACS progression represents compositional plaque volume (PV) progression differently according to statin use.Methods and resultsFrom a prospective multinational registry of consecutive patients (n = 2252) who underwent serial coronary computed tomography angiography (CCTA) at a ≥ 2-year interval, 654 patients (61 ± 10 years, 56% men, inter-scan interval 3.9 ± 1.5 years) with information regarding the use of statins and having a serial CACS were included. Patients were divided into non-statin (n = 246) and statin-taking (n = 408) groups. Coronary PVs (total, calcified, and non-calcified; sum of fibrous, fibro-fatty, and lipid-rich) were quantitatively analysed, and CACS was measured from both CCTAs. Multivariate linear regression models were constructed for both statin-taking and non-statin group to assess the association between compositional PV change and change in CACS. In multivariate linear regression analysis, in the non-statin group, CACS increase was positively associated with both non-calcified (β = 0.369, P = 0.004) and calcified PV increase (β = 1.579, P
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- 2019
31. Longitudinal quantitative assessment of coronary plaque progression related to body mass index using serial coronary computed tomography angiography.
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Won, Ki-Bum, Lee, Sang-Eun, Lee, Byoung Kwon, Park, Hyung-Bok, Heo, Ran, Rizvi, Asim, 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, Leipsic, Jonathon A, Shin, Sanghoon, Choi, Jung Hyun, Virmani, Renu, Samady, Habib, Stone, Peter H, Berman, Daniel S, Narula, Jagat, Shaw, Leslee J, Bax, Jeroen J, Min, James K, and Chang, Hyuk-Jae
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Clinical Research ,Obesity ,Heart Disease - Coronary Heart Disease ,Nutrition ,Cardiovascular ,Biomedical Imaging ,Heart Disease ,Aged ,Body Mass Index ,Computed Tomography Angiography ,Coronary Angiography ,Coronary Artery Disease ,Disease Progression ,Female ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Plaque ,Atherosclerotic ,Prospective Studies ,Radiographic Image Interpretation ,Computer-Assisted ,Registries ,atherosclerosis ,coronary computed tomography angiography ,body mass index ,obesity ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Cardiovascular System & Hematology - Abstract
AimsThis study explored the coronary plaque volume change (PVC) according to the change of percent body mass index (BMI) and categorical BMI group using serial coronary computed tomography angiography (CCTA).Methods and resultsA total of 1568 subjects who underwent serial CCTA with available BMI at baseline (CCTA1) and follow-up (CCTA2) were included. Median inter-scan period was 3.3 (interquartile range: 2.6-4.6) years. Quantitative assessment of coronary plaque was performed at both scans. All participants were categorized into three BMI (kg/m2) groups: normal:
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- 2019
32. Clinical Events After Deferral of LAD Revascularization Following Physiological Coronary Assessment
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Sen, Sayan, Ahmad, Yousif, Dehbi, Hakim-Moulay, Howard, James P, Iglesias, Juan F, Al-Lamee, Rasha, Petraco, Ricardo, Nijjer, Sukhjinder, Bhindi, Ravinay, Lehman, Sam, Walters, Darren, Sapontis, James, Janssens, Luc, Vrints, Christiaan J, Khashaba, Ahmed, Laine, Mika, Van Belle, Eric, Krackhardt, Florian, Bojara, Waldemar, Going, Olaf, Härle, Tobias, Indolfi, Ciro, Niccoli, Giampaolo, Ribichini, Flavio, Tanaka, Nobuhiro, Yokoi, Hiroyoshi, Takashima, Hiroaki, Kikuta, Yuetsu, Erglis, Andrejs, Vinhas, Hugo, Silva, Pedro Canas, Baptista, Sérgio B, Alghamdi, Ali, Hellig, Farrel, Koo, Bon-Kwon, Nam, Chang-Wook, Shin, Eun-Seok, Doh, Joon-Hyung, Brugaletta, Salvatore, Alegria-Barrero, Eduardo, Meuwissen, Martijin, Piek, Jan J, van Royen, Niels, Sezer, Murat, Di Mario, Carlo, Gerber, Robert T, Malik, Iqbal S, Sharp, Andrew SP, Talwar, Suneel, Tang, Kare, Samady, Habib, Altman, John, Seto, Arnold H, Singh, Jasvindar, Jeremias, Allen, Matsuo, Hitoshi, Kharbanda, Rajesh K, Patel, Manesh R, Serruys, Patrick, Escaned, Javier, and Davies, Justin E
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Heart Disease - Coronary Heart Disease ,Heart Disease ,Clinical Research ,Cardiovascular ,Good Health and Well Being ,Aged ,Coronary Angiography ,Coronary Stenosis ,Coronary Vessels ,Female ,Fractional Flow Reserve ,Myocardial ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Myocardial Revascularization ,coronary stenosis ,fractional flow reserve ,instantaneous wave-free ratio ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Public Health and Health Services ,Cardiovascular System & Hematology ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology - Abstract
BackgroundPhysicians are not always comfortable deferring treatment of a stenosis in the left anterior descending (LAD) artery because of the perception that there is a high risk of major adverse cardiac events (MACE). The authors describe, using the DEFINE-FLAIR (Functional Lesion Assessment of Intermediate Stenosis to Guide Revascularisation) trial, MACE rates when LAD lesions are deferred, guided by physiological assessment using fractional flow reserve (FFR) or the instantaneous wave-free ratio (iFR).ObjectivesThe purpose of this study was to establish the safety of deferring treatment in the LAD using FFR or iFR within the DEFINE-FLAIR trial.MethodsMACE rates at 1 year were compared between groups (iFR and FFR) in patients whose physiological assessment led to LAD lesions being deferred. MACE was defined as a composite of cardiovascular death, myocardial infarction (MI), and unplanned revascularization at 1 year. Patients, and staff performing follow-up, were blinded to whether the decision was made with FFR or iFR. Outcomes were adjusted for age and sex.ResultsA total of 872 patients had lesions deferred in the LAD (421 guided by FFR, 451 guided by iFR). The event rate with iFR was significantly lower than with FFR (2.44% vs. 5.26%; adjusted HR: 0.46; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.22 to 0.95; p = 0.04). This was driven by significantly lower unplanned revascularization with iFR and numerically lower MI (unplanned revascularization: 2.22% iFR vs. 4.99% FFR; adjusted HR: 0.44; 95% CI: 0.21 to 0.93; p = 0.03; MI: 0.44% iFR vs. 2.14% FFR; adjusted HR: 0.23; 95% CI: 0.05 to 1.07; p = 0.06).ConclusionsiFR-guided deferral appears to be safe for patients with LAD lesions. Patients in whom iFR-guided deferral was performed had statistically significantly lower event rates than those with FFR-guided deferral.
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- 2019
33. Age related compositional plaque burden by CT in patients with future ACS
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van Rosendael, Alexander R., van den Hoogen, Inge J., Lin, Fay Y., Gianni, Umberto, Lu, Yao, Andreini, Daniele, Al-Mallah, Mouaz H., Cademartiri, Filippo, Chinnaiyan, Kavitha, Chow, Benjamin J.W., Conte, Edoardo, Cury, Ricardo C., Feuchtner, Gudrun, de Araújo Gonçalves, Pedro, Hadamitzky, Martin, Kim, Yong-Jin, Leipsic, Jonathon A., Maffei, Erica, Marques, Hugo, Plank, Fabian, Pontone, Gianluca, Raff, Gilbert L., Villines, Todd C., Lee, Sang-Eun, Al’Aref, Subhi J., Baskaran, Lohendran, Cho, Iksung, Danad, Ibrahim, Gransar, Heidi, Budoff, Matthew J., Samady, Habib, Virmani, Renu, Min, James K., Narula, Jagat, Berman, Daniel S., Chang, Hyuk-Jae, Shaw, Leslee J., and Bax, Jeroen J.
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- 2022
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34. Association Between Changes in Perivascular Adipose Tissue Density and Plaque Progression
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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, Kitslaar, Pieter H., Reiber, Johan H.C., Stone, Peter H., Samady, Habib, Virmani, Renu, Narula, Jagat, Berman, Daniel S., Shaw, Leslee J., Bax, Jeroen J., Lin, Fay Y., Min, James K., and Chang, Hyuk-Jae
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- 2022
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35. Image-based biomechanical modeling for coronary atherosclerotic plaque progression and vulnerability prediction
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Lv, Rui, Wang, Liang, Maehara, Akiko, Guo, Xiaoya, Zheng, Jie, Samady, Habib, Giddens, Don P., Mintz, Gary S., Stone, Gregg W., and Tang, Dalin
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- 2022
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36. Natural History of Diabetic Coronary Atherosclerosis by Quantitative Measurement of Serial Coronary Computed Tomographic Angiography Results of the PARADIGM Study
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Kim, Ung, Leipsic, Jonathon A, Sellers, Stephanie L, Shao, Michael, Blanke, Philipp, 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, Shin, Sanghoon, Choi, Jung Hyun, Virmani, Renu, Samady, Habib, Stone, Peter H, 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 ,Biomedical Imaging ,Cardiovascular ,Atherosclerosis ,Prevention ,Clinical Research ,Heart Disease ,Diabetes ,Heart Disease - Coronary Heart Disease ,Detection ,screening and diagnosis ,4.2 Evaluation of markers and technologies ,Aged ,Computed Tomography Angiography ,Coronary Angiography ,Coronary Artery Disease ,Diabetic Angiopathies ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Plaque ,Atherosclerotic ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Prognosis ,Registries ,Retrospective Studies ,Risk Assessment ,Risk Factors ,Sex Factors ,Time Factors ,computed tomography ,coronary artery disease ,diabetes mellitus ,plaque ,progression ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Cardiovascular System & Hematology ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
ObjectivesThis 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).BackgroundThe natural history of coronary PP in patients with DM is not well established.MethodsA 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.ResultsDM 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.ConclusionsPeople 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
37. Effects of Statins on Coronary Atherosclerotic Plaques The PARADIGM Study
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Lee, Sang-Eun, Chang, Hyuk-Jae, Sung, Ji Min, Park, Hyung-Bok, Heo, Ran, Rizvi, Asim, Lin, Fay Y, Kumar, Amit, 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, Leipsic, Jonathon A, Shin, Sanghoon, Choi, Jung Hyun, Chinnaiyan, Kavitha, Raff, Gilbert, Virmani, Renu, Samady, Habib, Stone, Peter H, Berman, Daniel S, Narula, Jagat, Shaw, Leslee J, Bax, Jeroen J, and Min, James K
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Cardiovascular Medicine and Haematology ,Clinical Sciences ,Heart Disease ,Clinical Research ,Atherosclerosis ,Cardiovascular ,Aging ,Heart Disease - Coronary Heart Disease ,6.1 Pharmaceuticals ,2.1 Biological and endogenous factors ,Aetiology ,Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions ,4.2 Evaluation of markers and technologies ,Detection ,screening and diagnosis ,Aged ,Brazil ,Computed Tomography Angiography ,Coronary Angiography ,Coronary Artery Disease ,Coronary Stenosis ,Coronary Vessels ,Disease Progression ,Europe ,Female ,Humans ,Hydroxymethylglutaryl-CoA Reductase Inhibitors ,Male ,Middle Aged ,North America ,Plaque ,Atherosclerotic ,Prospective Studies ,Registries ,Republic of Korea ,Severity of Illness Index ,Time Factors ,Treatment Outcome ,Vascular Calcification ,coronary artery atherosclerosis ,coronary artery disease ,coronary computed tomography angiography ,statins ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Cardiovascular System & Hematology ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
ObjectivesThis study sought to describe the impact of statins on individual coronary atherosclerotic plaques.BackgroundAlthough statins reduce the risk of major adverse cardiovascular events, their long-term effects on coronary atherosclerosis remain unclear.MethodsWe 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.ResultsAmong 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 < 0.001). Progression of noncalcified PAV and annual incidence of new HRP features were lower in lesions in statin-taking patients (0.49 ± 2.39% per year vs. 1.06 ± 2.42% per year and 0.9% per year vs. 1.6% per year, respectively; all p < 0.001). The rates of progression to >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.ConclusionsStatins 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
38. Quantification of Coronary Atherosclerosis in the Assessment of Coronary Artery Disease
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Lee, Sang-Eun, Sung, Ji Min, Rizvi, Asim, Lin, Fay Y, Kumar, Amit, 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, Leipsic, Jonathon A, Shin, Sanghoon, Choi, Jung Hyun, Chinnaiyan, Kavitha, Raff, Gilbert, Virmani, Renu, Samady, Habib, Stone, Peter H, 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 ,Cardiovascular Medicine and Haematology ,Clinical Research ,Heart Disease - Coronary Heart Disease ,Atherosclerosis ,Heart Disease ,Biomedical Imaging ,Cardiovascular ,4.2 Evaluation of markers and technologies ,Detection ,screening and diagnosis ,Aged ,Brazil ,Computed Tomography Angiography ,Coronary Angiography ,Coronary Artery Disease ,Coronary Stenosis ,Coronary Vessels ,Disease Progression ,Europe ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Multidetector Computed Tomography ,Myocardial Infarction ,Myocardial Revascularization ,North America ,Plaque ,Atherosclerotic ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Prognosis ,Prospective Studies ,Registries ,Republic of Korea ,Risk Assessment ,Risk Factors ,Severity of Illness Index ,angiography ,atherosclerosis ,coronary artery disease ,myocardial infarction ,risk factors ,Clinical Sciences ,Cardiovascular System & Hematology ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology ,Clinical sciences - Abstract
BackgroundDiagnosis of coronary artery disease and management strategies have relied solely on the presence of diameter stenosis ≥50%. We assessed whether direct quantification of plaque burden (PB) and plaque characteristics assessed by coronary computed tomography angiography could provide additional value in terms of predicting rapid plaque progression.Methods and resultsFrom a 13-center, 7-country prospective observational registry, 1345 patients (60.4±9.4 years old; 57.1% male) who underwent repeated coronary computed tomography angiography >2 years apart were enrolled. For conventional angiographic analysis, the presence of stenosis ≥50%, number of vessel involved, segment involvement score, and the presence of high-risk plaque feature were determined. For quantitative analyses, PB and annual change in PB (△PB/y) in the entire coronary tree were assessed. Clinical outcomes (cardiac death, nonfatal myocardial infarction, and coronary revascularization) were recorded. Rapid progressors, defined as a patient with ≥median value of △PB/y (0.33%/y), were older, more frequently male, and had more clinical risk factors than nonrapid progressors (all P
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- 2018
39. Coronary Atherosclerotic Precursors of Acute Coronary Syndromes
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Chang, Hyuk-Jae, Lin, Fay Y, Lee, Sang-Eun, Andreini, Daniele, Bax, Jeroen, Cademartiri, Filippo, Chinnaiyan, Kavitha, Chow, Benjamin JW, Conte, Edoardo, Cury, Ricardo C, Feuchtner, Gudrun, Hadamitzky, Martin, Kim, Yong-Jin, Leipsic, Jonathon, Maffei, Erica, Marques, Hugo, Plank, Fabian, Pontone, Gianluca, 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, Rivzi, Asim, Stuijfzand, Wijnand J, Gransar, Heidi, Lu, Yao, Sung, Ji Min, Park, Hyung-Bok, Berman, Daniel S, Budoff, Matthew J, Samady, Habib, Shaw, Leslee J, Stone, Peter H, Virmani, Renu, Narula, Jagat, and Min, James K
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Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Cardiovascular Medicine and Haematology ,Heart Disease ,Atherosclerosis ,Cardiovascular ,Heart Disease - Coronary Heart Disease ,4.2 Evaluation of markers and technologies ,Detection ,screening and diagnosis ,Acute Coronary Syndrome ,Aged ,Case-Control Studies ,Cohort Studies ,Coronary Artery Disease ,Female ,Follow-Up Studies ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,Male ,Middle Aged ,acute coronary syndrome ,atherosclerosis ,clinical outcome ,coronary artery disease ,coronary computed tomography angiography ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology ,Public Health and Health Services ,Cardiovascular System & Hematology ,Cardiovascular medicine and haematology - Abstract
BackgroundThe association of atherosclerotic features with first acute coronary syndromes (ACS) has not accounted for plaque burden.ObjectivesThe purpose of this study was to identify atherosclerotic features associated with precursors of ACS.MethodsWe performed a nested case-control study within a cohort of 25,251 patients undergoing coronary computed tomographic angiography (CTA) with follow-up over 3.4 ± 2.1 years. Patients with ACS and nonevent patients with no prior coronary artery disease (CAD) were propensity matched 1:1 for risk factors and coronary CTA-evaluated obstructive (≥50%) CAD. Separate core laboratories performed blinded adjudication of ACS and culprit lesions and quantification of baseline coronary CTA for percent diameter stenosis (%DS), percent cross-sectional plaque burden (PB), plaque volumes (PVs) by composition (calcified, fibrous, fibrofatty, and necrotic core), and presence of high-risk plaques (HRPs).ResultsWe identified 234 ACS and control pairs (age 62 years, 63% male). More than 65% of patients with ACS had nonobstructive CAD at baseline, and 52% had HRP. The %DS, cross-sectional PB, fibrofatty and necrotic core volume, and HRP increased the adjusted hazard ratio (HR) of ACS (1.010 per %DS, 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.005 to 1.015; 1.008 per percent cross-sectional PB, 95% CI: 1.003 to 1.013; 1.002 per mm3 fibrofatty plaque, 95% CI: 1.000 to 1.003; 1.593 per mm3 necrotic core, 95% CI: 1.219 to 2.082; all p < 0.05). Of the 129 culprit lesion precursors identified by coronary CTA, three-fourths exhibited
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- 2018
40. Impact of Non-obstructive left main disease on the progression of coronary artery disease: A PARADIGM substudy.
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Weir-McCall, Jonathan R, Blanke, Philipp, Sellers, Stephanie L, Ahmadi, Amir A, Andreini, Daniele, 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, Lee, Sang-Eun, Maffei, Erica, Marques, Hugo, Pontone, Gianluca, Raff, Gilbert L, Shin, Sanghoon, Sung, Ji Min, Stone, Peter, Samady, Habib, Virmani, Renu, Narula, Jagat, Berman, Daniel S, Shaw, Leslee J, Bax, Jeroen J, Lin, Fay Y, Min, James K, Chang, Hyuk-Jae, and Leipsic, Jonathon A
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Coronary Vessels ,Humans ,Coronary Stenosis ,Disease Progression ,Fibrosis ,Necrosis ,Coronary Angiography ,Severity of Illness Index ,Registries ,Prevalence ,Multivariate Analysis ,Linear Models ,Risk Assessment ,Risk Factors ,Chi-Square Distribution ,Predictive Value of Tests ,Time Factors ,Aged ,Middle Aged ,Female ,Male ,Coronary Artery Disease ,Plaque ,Atherosclerotic ,Vascular Calcification ,Computed Tomography Angiography ,Coronary computed tomography angiography ,Left main coronary artery disease ,Natural history ,Cardiovascular System & Hematology ,Clinical Sciences ,Cardiorespiratory Medicine and Haematology - Abstract
BACKGROUND:The aim of the study is examine the impact of non-obstructive (
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- 2018
41. Association of Tube Voltage With Plaque Composition on Coronary CT Angiography: Results From PARADIGM Registry
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Takagi, Hidenobu, Leipsic, Jonathon A., Indraratna, Praveen, Gulsin, Gaurav, Khasanova, Elina, Tzimas, Georgios, 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., and Chang, Hyuk-Jae
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- 2021
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42. Impacto de la adherencia a un algoritmo híbrido para la selección de la estrategia inicial de cruce en la intervención coronaria percutánea de oclusiones crónicas
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Xenogiannis, Iosif, Alaswad, Khaldoon, Krestyaninov, Oleg, Khelimskii, Dmitrii, Khatri, Jaikirshan J., Choi, James W., Jaffer, Farouc A., Patel, Mitul, Mahmud, Ehtisham, Doing, Anthony H., Dattilo, Phil, Koutouzis, Michalis, Tsiafoutis, Ioannis, Uretsky, Barry, Jefferson, Brian K., Patel, Taral, Jaber, Wissam, Samady, Habib, Sheikh, Abdul M., Yeh, Robert W., Tamez, Hector, Elbarouni, Basem, Love, Michael P., Abi Rafeh, Nidal, Maalouf, Assaad, Fadi, Abou Jaoudeh, Toma, Catalin, Shah, Alpesh R., Chandwaney, Raj H., Omer, Mohamed, Megaly, Michael S., Vemmou, Evangelia, Nikolakopoulos, Ilias, Rangan, Bavana V., Garcia, Santiago, Abdullah, Shuaib, Banerjee, Subhash, Burke, M. Nicholas, Karmpaliotis, Dimitri, and Brilakis, Emmanouil S.
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- 2021
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43. Association Between Thrombogenicity Indices and Coronary Microvascular Dysfunction in Patients With Acute Myocardial Infarction
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Kang, Min Gyu, Koo, Bon-Kwon, Tantry, Udaya S., Kim, Kyehwan, Ahn, Jong-Hwa, Park, Hyun Woong, Park, Jeong Rang, Hwang, Seok-Jae, Hwang, Jin-Yong, Gurbel, Paul A., Samady, Habib, Koh, Jin-Sin, and Jeong, Young-Hoon
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- 2021
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44. Progression of whole-heart Atherosclerosis by coronary CT and major adverse cardiovascular events
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van Rosendael, Alexander R., Lin, Fay Y., van den Hoogen, Inge J., Ma, Xiaoyue, Gianni, Umberto, Al Hussein Alawamlh, Omar, Al’Aref, Subhi J., Peña, Jessica M., Andreini, Daniele, Budoff, Matthew J., Cademartiri, Filippo, Chinnaiyan, Kavitha, Choi, Jung Hyun, Conte, Edoardo, Marques, Hugo, de Araújo Gonçalves, Pedro, Gottlieb, Ilan, Hadamitzky, Martin, Leipsic, Jonathon, Maffei, Erica, Pontone, Gianluca, Raff, Gilbert L., Shin, Sanghoon, Kim, Yong-Jin, Lee, Byoung Kwon, Chun, Eun Ju, Sung, Ji Min, Lee, Sang-Eun, Han, Donghee, Berman, Daniel S., Virmani, Renu, Samady, Habib, Stone, Peter, Narula, Jagat, Bax, Jeroen J., Shaw, Leslee J., Min, James K., and Chang, Hyuk-Jae
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- 2021
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45. Impact of Chronic Kidney Disease on Revascularization and Outcomes in Patients with ST-Elevation Myocardial Infarction
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Panchal, Hemang B., Zheng, Shimin, Devani, Kalpit, White, Christopher J, Leinaar, Edward F, Mukherjee, Debabrata, Mamas, Mamas, Banerjee, Subhash, Bhatt, Deepak L, Jneid, Hani, Samady, Habib, Mehran, Roxana, Gharacholou, Shahyar M, and Paul, Timir K
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- 2021
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46. Physiology-Based Revascularization: A New Approach to Plan and Optimize Percutaneous Coronary Intervention
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Lee, Joo Myung, Lee, Seung Hun, Shin, Doosup, Choi, Ki Hong, van de Hoef, Tim P., Kim, Hyun Kuk, Samady, Habib, Kakuta, Tsunekazu, Matsuo, Hitoshi, Koo, Bon-Kwon, Fearon, William F., and Escaned, Javier
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- 2021
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47. Impact of age on coronary artery plaque progression and clinical outcome: A PARADIGM substudy
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Kim, Minkwan, Lee, Seung-Pyo, Kwak, Soongu, Yang, Seokhun, Kim, Yong-Jin, 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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- 2021
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48. Atherogenic index of plasma and the risk of rapid progression of coronary atherosclerosis beyond traditional risk factors
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Won, Ki-Bum, Heo, Ran, Park, Hyung-Bok, 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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- 2021
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49. Multi-patient study for coronary vulnerable plaque model comparisons: 2D/3D and fluid–structure interaction simulations
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Wang, Qingyu, Tang, Dalin, Wang, Liang, Meahara, Akiko, Molony, David, Samady, Habib, Zheng, Jie, Mintz, Gary S., Stone, Gregg W., and Giddens, Don P.
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- 2021
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50. Comparison of Coronary Atherosclerotic Plaque Progression in East Asians and Caucasians by Serial Coronary Computed Tomographic Angiography:A PARADIGM Substudy
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Ben Zekry, Sagit, Sreedharan, Subhashaan, Han, Donghee, Sellers, Stephanie, Ahmadi, Amir A., Blanke, Philipp, 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, Shin, Sanghoon, Choi, Jung Hyun, Virmani, Renu, Samady, Habib, Stone, Peter H., Berman, Daniel S., Narula, Jagat, Shaw, Leslee J., Bax, Jeroen J., Leipsic, Jonathon, and Chang, Hyuk-Jae
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- 2021
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