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Usefulness of noninvasive fractional flow reserve computed from coronary computed tomographic angiograms for intermediate stenoses confirmed by quantitative coronary angiography

  • James K. Min*
  • , Bon Kwon Koo
  • , Andrejs Erglis
  • , Joon Hyung Doh
  • , David V. Daniels
  • , Sanda Jegere
  • , Hyo Soo Kim
  • , Allison M. Dunning
  • , Tony Defrance
  • , Alexandra Lansky
  • , Jonathon Leipsic
  • *Corresponding author for this work
  • Cedars-Sinai Medical Center
  • Seoul National University
  • Paula Stradina Clinical University Hospital
  • Inje University
  • Stanford University
  • Cornell University
  • CVCTA
  • Yale University
  • University of British Columbia

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

89 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Coronary lesions of intermediate severity often cause ischemia, and fractional flow reserve (FFR)-guided revascularization for these coronary lesions is safe and effective. FFR derived from coronary computed tomography (FFRCT) is a noninvasive method for diagnosis of lesion-specific ischemia, but its performance for intermediate stenoses has not been examined to date. We examined the performance of FFRCT versus FFR at the time of invasive angiography in 66 vessels of 60 patients who were identified as having an intermediate stenosis, defined by quantitative coronary angiographic percent diameter stenosis 40% to 69%. Ischemia for FFRCT and FFR was defined as ≤0.80. Diagnostic performance of FFRCT was determined compared to an invasive FFR standard. Mean age of the study group was 63.5 ± 8.1 years (81% men). Thirty-one patients (47%) demonstrated ischemia with an FFR ≤0.80, with 2 of 16 (12.5%), 21 of 37 (56.8%), and 8 of 13 (61.5%) lesions of 40% to 49%, 50% to 59%, and 60% to 69% stenosis causal of ischemia, respectively. At an FFR ≤0.80 cutoff for lesion-specific ischemia, accuracy, sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value, and negative predictive value of FFRCT were 86.4%, 90.3%, 82.9%, 82.4%, and 90.6%, respectively, with an area under the receiver operator characteristics curve of 0.95 (p <0.001) and good correlation to FFR (0.60, p <0.0001). No biases between FFRCT and FFR were noted by Bland-Altman analysis (0.03 ± 0.12, p = 0.054). In conclusion, FFRCT is a novel noninvasive method for diagnosis of lesion-specific ischemia of coronary lesions of intermediate stenosis severity.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)971-976
Number of pages6
JournalAmerican Journal of Cardiology
Volume110
Issue number7
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Oct 2012
Externally publishedYes

UN SDGs

This output contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

  1. SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being
    SDG 3 Good Health and Well-being

OECD Field of Science

  • 3. Medical and Health Sciences

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