Relationship of Stress Test Findings to Anatomic or Functional Extent of Coronary Artery Disease Assessed by Coronary Computed Tomography Angiography-Derived Fractional Flow Reserve
Author(s) -
Demetrios Doukas,
Sorcha Allen,
Amy Wozniak,
Siri Kunchakarra,
Rina Verma,
Jessica Marot,
John J. López,
Koen Nieman,
Gianluca Pontone,
Jonathon Leipsic,
Jeroen J. Bax,
Mark Rabbat
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
biomed research international
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.772
H-Index - 126
eISSN - 2314-6141
pISSN - 2314-6133
DOI - 10.1155/2021/6674144
Subject(s) - medicine , fractional flow reserve , coronary artery disease , chest pain , cardiology , stenosis , computed tomography angiography , stress testing (software) , radiology , coronary arteries , stress echocardiography , coronary angiography , angiography , artery , myocardial infarction , computer science , programming language
Background In the United States, functional stress testing is the primary imaging modality for patients with stable symptoms suspected to represent coronary artery disease (CAD). Coronary computed tomography angiography (CTA) is excellent at identifying anatomic coronary artery disease (CAD). The application of computational fluid dynamics to coronary CTA allows fractional flow reserve (FFR) to be calculated noninvasively (FFR CT ). The relationship of noninvasive stress testing to coronary CTA and FFR CT in real-world clinical practice has not been studied.Methods We evaluated 206 consecutive patients at Loyola University Chicago with suspected CAD who underwent noninvasive stress testing followed by coronary CTA and FFR CT when indicated. Patients were categorized by stress test results (positive, negative, indeterminate, and equivocal). Duke treadmill score (DTS), METS, exercise duration, and chest pain with exercise were analyzed. Lesions ≥ 50%stenosis were considered positive by coronary CTA. FFR CT < 0.80 was considered diagnostic of ischemia.Results Two hundred and six patients had paired noninvasive stress test and coronary CTA/FFR CT results. The median time from stress test to coronary CTA was 49 days. Average patient age was 60.3 years, and 42% were male. Of the 206 stress tests, 75% were exercise (70% echocardiographic, 26% nuclear, and 4% EKG). There were no associations of stress test results with CAD > 50% or FFR CT < 0.80 ( p = 0.927 and p = 0.910, respectively). Of those with a positive stress test, only 30% (3/10) had CAD > 50% and only 50% (5/10) had FFR CT < 0.80. Chest pain with exercise did not correlate with CAD > 50% or FFR CT < 0.80 ( p = 0.66 and p = 0.12, respectively). There were no significant correlations between METS, DTS, or exercise duration and FFR CT ( r = 0.093, p = 0.274; r = 0.012, p = 0.883; and r = 0.034, p = 0.680; respectively).Conclusion Noninvasive stress testing, functional capacity, chest pain with exercise, and DTS are not associated with anatomic or functional CAD using a diagnostic strategy of coronary CTA and FFR CT .
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