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Jan.
14 - Study Finds CT Scans are Effective Tool in Detecting Coronary Artery
Disease The Coronary Artery Evaluation Using 64-Row Multidetector Computed Tomography Angiography (CORE-64) Trial - conducted by researchers at nine international centers, including Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center - studied 291 patients who were scheduled to undergo invasive coronary angiography for suspected or unknown coronary artery disease. The study found that 64-slice multidetector CT angiography was highly accurate in detecting blockages of greater than 50%, with a sensitivity of 85% and a specificity of 90%. The noninvasive exam was equal in accuracy to invasive angiography in its ability to identify patients to be referred for angioplasty or bypass surgery. "This study shows that patients with low to intermediate risk of coronary blockages are likely to benefit from a non-invasive scan," said Melvin Clouse, MD, a radiologist at BIDMC and one of two principal trial investigators. "The study suggests that that CT angiography may eventually replace other non-invasive tests that rely on reduction of blood flow to the heart to diagnose arterial blockage." "CT angiography may indeed replace cardiac catheterization and guide further interventions including risk factor modification/medical therapy, catheter-based, or surgical revascularization," said Roger Laham, MD, a BIDMC cardiologist and co-principal investigator. "This heralds a new and promising era in diagnostic cardiac imaging with cardiologists and radiologists working together to provide best care to our patients." A second trial, The Assessment by Coronary Computed Tomographic Angiography of Individuals UndeRgoing InvAsive Coronary AngiographY (ACCURACY) Trial compared 64-row coronary computed tomographic angiography (CCTA) to quantitative coronary angiography (QCA). The results demonstrated that CCTA is highly accurate in detecting coronary blockages in chest pain patients referred for invasive coronary angiography and is also an effective noninvasive method to exclude obstructive coronary blockages. Sixteen institutions performed CCTA on 232 patients with typical or atypical chest pain prior to invasive coronary angiography. Findings were then compared to those of QCA, the reference standard used to quantify the results of the invasive coronary angiography. A total of 82 blockages greater than 50% in 49 patients and 31 blockages greater than 70% were detected in 28 patients by QCA. Per-patient sensitivity and specificity of CCTA were 93% and 82%, respectively, for blockages greater than 50%, and 91% and 84% for blockages greater than 70%. In addition, negative predictive value was 97 to 99%. Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center
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