Number of inflamed coronary vessels in prediction of cardiac death and MACE among patients undergoing routine CCTA: the Oxford Risk Factors And Non-Invasive Imaging (ORFAN) Study

Abstract Background Coronary inflammation can be assessed by the changes in perivascular adipose tissue on routine coronary CT angiograms (CCTA). Fat attenuation index score (FAI Score) quantifies the degree of inflammation in each epicardial coronary artery, and adjusts for age, sex, scan technical...

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Veröffentlicht in:European heart journal 2024-10, Vol.45 (Supplement_1)
Hauptverfasser: Chan, K, Wahome, E, Nicol, E, Mittal, T K, Adlam, D, Rodrigues, J, Greenwood, J, Desai, M, Patel, P, Tomlins, P, Neubauer, S, Channon, K M, Blankstein, R, Deanfield, J, Antoniades, C
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Abstract Background Coronary inflammation can be assessed by the changes in perivascular adipose tissue on routine coronary CT angiograms (CCTA). Fat attenuation index score (FAI Score) quantifies the degree of inflammation in each epicardial coronary artery, and adjusts for age, sex, scan technical parameters, biological and anatomical factors. Coronary inflammation assessment in a single coronary artery was previously shown to be predictive of cardiac events in the CRISP-CT study. However, the impact of inflammation in multiple coronary arteries on clinical outcome remains unclear. Purpose To evaluate the prognostic value of the number of inflamed coronary arteries with high inflammation in the risk of cardiac death, and major adverse cardiac events (MACE). Methods In a nested cohort within the Oxford Risk Factors And Non-invasive imaging (ORFAN) study, consecutive patients (n=3,393) who underwent routine clinical CCTA were followed up over a median(IQR) 7.7(6.4-9.1) years for cardiac mortality, and MACE (including myocardial infarction, new onset heart failure, cardiac mortality). FAI Score was calculated for each of the 3 epicardial coronary arteries. Results The number of inflamed arteries (FAI Score >75th centile) showed an additive impact on cardiac mortality compared with no inflamed arteries (all vessels FAI Score
ISSN:0195-668X
1522-9645
DOI:10.1093/eurheartj/ehae666.1370