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Clinical Use of CT-Derived Fractional Flow Reserve in the Emergency Department

Authors :
James R. Stewart
Elvis Cami
Abhay N. Bilolikar
Michael L. Gallagher
Kavitha M. Chinnaiyan
Robert D. Safian
Julie George
Mazen Shoukfeh
Gilbert Raff
Jason Crile
David Forst
Simon R. Dixon
Marc Brodsky
Steven Timmis
Amr E. Abbas
Source :
JACC. Cardiovascular imaging. 13(2 Pt 1)
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Objectives This study sought to examine the feasibility, safety, clinical outcomes, and costs associated with computed tomography–derived fractional flow reserve (FFRCT) in acute chest pain (ACP) patients in a coronary computed tomography angiography (CTA)–based triage program. Background FFRCT is useful in determining lesion-specific ischemia in patients with stable ischemic heart disease, but its utility in ACP has not been studied. Methods ACP patients with no known coronary artery disease undergoing coronary CTA and coronary CTA with FFRCT were studied. FFRCT ≤0.80 was considered positive for hemodynamically significant stenosis. Results Among 555 patients, 297 underwent coronary CTA and FFRCT (196 negative, 101 positive), whereas 258 had coronary CTA only. The rejection rate for FFRCT was 1.6%. At 90 days, there was no difference in major adverse cardiac events (including death, nonfatal myocardial infarction, and unexpected revascularization after the index visit) between the coronary CTA and FFRCT groups (4.3% vs. 2.7%; p = 0.310). Diagnostic failure, defined as discordance between the coronary CTA or FFRCT results with invasive findings, did not differ between the groups (1.9% vs. 1.68%; p = NS). No deaths or myocardial infarction occurred with negative FFRCT when revascularization was deferred. Negative FFRCT was associated with higher nonobstructive disease on invasive coronary angiography (56.5%) than positive FFRCT (8.0%) and coronary CTA (22.9%) (p Conclusions In ACP, FFRCT is feasible, with no difference in major adverse cardiac events and costs compared with coronary CTA alone. Deferral of revascularization is safe with negative FFRCT, which is associated with higher nonobstructive disease on invasive angiography.

Details

ISSN :
18767591
Volume :
13
Issue :
2 Pt 1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
JACC. Cardiovascular imaging
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4ab56ebbd42ba90d2c453aab4a507057