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Published in: Journal of Nuclear Cardiology 2/2012

Open Access 01-04-2012 | Original Article

Quantitative relationship between coronary artery calcium score and hyperemic myocardial blood flow as assessed by hybrid 15O-water PET/CT imaging in patients evaluated for coronary artery disease

Authors: Ibrahim Danad, MD, Pieter G. Raijmakers, MD, PhD, Yolande E. Appelman, MD, PhD, Hendrik J. Harms, MSc, Stefan de Haan, MD, Koen M. Marques, MD, PhD, Cornelis van Kuijk, MD, PhD, Cornelis P. Allaart, MD, PhD, Otto S. Hoekstra, MD, PhD, Adriaan A. Lammertsma, PhD, Mark Lubberink, PhD, Albert C. van Rossum, MD, PhD, Paul Knaapen, MD, PhD

Published in: Journal of Nuclear Cardiology | Issue 2/2012

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Abstract

Background

The incremental value of CAC over traditional risk factors to predict coronary vasodilator dysfunction and inherent myocardial blood flow (MBF) impairment is only scarcely documented (MBF). The aim of this study was therefore to evaluate the relationship between CAC content, hyperemic MBF, and coronary flow reserve (CFR) in patients undergoing hybrid 15O-water PET/CT imaging.

Methods

We evaluated 173 (mean age 56 ± 10, 78 men) patients with a low to intermediate likelihood for coronary artery disease (CAD), without a documented history of CAD, undergoing vasodilator stress 15O-water PET/CT and CAC scoring. Obstructive coronary artery disease was excluded by means of invasive (n = 44) or CT-based coronary angiography (n = 129).

Results

91 of 173 patients (52%) had a CAC score of zero. Of those with CAC, the CAC score was 0.1-99.9, 100-399.9, and ≥400 in 31%, 12%, and 5% of patients, respectively. Global CAC score showed significant inverse correlation with hyperemic MBF (r = −0.32, P < .001). With increasing CAC score, there was a decline in hyperemic MBF on a per-patient basis [3.70, 3.30, 2.68, and 2.53 mL · min−1 · g−1, with total CAC score of 0, 0.1-99.9, 100-399.9, and ≥400, respectively (P < .001)]. CFR showed a stepwise decline with increasing levels of CAC (3.70, 3.32, 2.94, and 2.93, P < .05). Multivariate analysis, including age, BMI, and CAD risk factors, revealed that only age, male gender, BMI, and hypercholesterolemia were associated with reduced stress perfusion. Furthermore, only diabetes and age were independently associated with CFR.

Conclusion

In patients without significant obstructive CAD, a greater CAC burden is associated with a decreased hyperemic MBF and CFR. However, this association disappeared after adjustment for traditional CAD risk factors. These results suggest that CAC does not add incremental value regarding hyperemic MBF and CFR over established CAD risk factors in patients without obstructive CAD.
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Metadata
Title
Quantitative relationship between coronary artery calcium score and hyperemic myocardial blood flow as assessed by hybrid 15O-water PET/CT imaging in patients evaluated for coronary artery disease
Authors
Ibrahim Danad, MD
Pieter G. Raijmakers, MD, PhD
Yolande E. Appelman, MD, PhD
Hendrik J. Harms, MSc
Stefan de Haan, MD
Koen M. Marques, MD, PhD
Cornelis van Kuijk, MD, PhD
Cornelis P. Allaart, MD, PhD
Otto S. Hoekstra, MD, PhD
Adriaan A. Lammertsma, PhD
Mark Lubberink, PhD
Albert C. van Rossum, MD, PhD
Paul Knaapen, MD, PhD
Publication date
01-04-2012
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Published in
Journal of Nuclear Cardiology / Issue 2/2012
Print ISSN: 1071-3581
Electronic ISSN: 1532-6551
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12350-011-9476-7

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