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Differential progression of coronary atherosclerosis according to plaque composition: a cluster analysis of PARADIGM registry data.

Authors :
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.
Source :
Scientific Reports. 8/24/2021, Vol. 11 Issue 1, p1-11. 11p.
Publication Year :
2021

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. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20452322
Volume :
11
Issue :
1
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Scientific Reports
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
152058240
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-96616-w