JACC. Cardiovascular imaging
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JACC Cardiovasc Imaging · Apr 2017
ReviewSystematic CT Methodology for the Evaluation of Subclinical Leaflet Thrombosis.
Subclinical leaflet thrombosis was recently described in a randomized trial of transcatheter aortic valve replacement. It was subsequently demonstrated in a series of registries that this was a commonly observed imaging finding seen in all transcatheter and surgical bioprostheses. The phenomenon has aroused considerable interest due to the as-yet-undefined risk for later clinical events and the possibility of pharmacological intervention with anticoagulation. ⋯ This paper describes the systematic CT evaluation methodology that was devised during the Portico trial investigation and U. S. Food and Drug Administration submission; it also highlights the need for an ongoing discussion among experts to enable, with the help of the Valve Academic Research Consortium, standardization of reporting of this imaging finding to cater to the present and future needs of clinical trials.
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JACC Cardiovasc Imaging · Feb 2017
Multicenter Study Comparative StudyCAC Score Improves Coronary and CV Risk Assessment Above Statin Indication by ESC and AHA/ACC Primary Prevention Guidelines.
The aim of this study was to assess the difference in indication for statin therapy by European Society of Cardiology (ESC) versus American Heart Association/American College of Cardiology (AHA/ACC) guidelines and to quantify the potential additional role of coronary artery calcification (CAC) score over updated guidelines in a primary prevention cohort. ⋯ Current ESC and AHA/ACC guidelines lead to markedly different recommendation regarding statin therapy in a German primary prevention cohort. Quantification of CAC score in addition to the guidelines improves stratification between subjects at high versus low risk for coronary events, indicating that CAC scoring may help to match intensified risk factor modification to atherosclerotic plaque burden as well as actual risk while avoiding therapy in subjects with low coronary atherosclerosis that have low 10-year event rate.
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JACC Cardiovasc Imaging · Sep 2018
Randomized Controlled Trial Comparative StudyCoronary Computed Tomography Angiography Versus Stress Echocardiography in Acute Chest Pain: A Randomized Controlled Trial.
This study sought to compare early emergency department (ED) use of coronary computed tomography angiography (CTA) and stress echocardiography (SE) head-to-head. ⋯ The use of SE resulted in the hospitalization of a smaller proportion of patients with a shorter length of stay than coronary CTA and was safe. SE should be considered an appropriate option for ED chest pain triage (Stress Echocardiography and Heart Computed Tomography [CT] Scan in Emergency Department Patients With Chest Pain; NCT01384448).
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JACC Cardiovasc Imaging · Nov 2019
ReviewMyocardial Amyloidosis: The Exemplar Interstitial Disease.
Cardiac involvement drives prognosis and treatment choices in cardiac amyloidosis. Echocardiography is the first-line examination for patients presenting with heart failure, and it is the imaging modality that most often raises the suspicion of cardiac amyloidosis. Echocardiography can provide an assessment of the likelihood of cardiac amyloid infiltration versus other hypertrophic phenocopies and can assess the severity of cardiac involvement. ⋯ CMR structural and functional assessment combined with tissue characterization can redefine cardiac involvement by tracking different disease processes, ranging from amyloid infiltration, to the myocardial response associated with amyloid deposition, through the visualization and quantification of myocardial edema and myocyte response. Bone scintigraphy (paired with exclusion of serum free light chains) is emerging as the technique of choice for distinguishing ATTR from light chain cardiac amyloidosis and other cardiomyopathies; it has transformed the diagnostic pathway for ATTR, allowing noninvasive diagnosis of ATTR without the need for a tissue biopsy in the majority of patients. CMR with tissue characterization and bone scintigraphy are rewriting disease understanding, classification, and definition, and leading to a change in patient care.
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JACC Cardiovasc Imaging · May 2016
Multicenter Study Comparative StudyCT Angiography for the Prediction of Hemodynamic Significance in Intermediate and Severe Lesions: Head-to-Head Comparison With Quantitative Coronary Angiography Using Fractional Flow Reserve as the Reference Standard.
The goal of this study was to compare the diagnostic performance of coronary computed tomography angiography (CTA) versus quantitative coronary angiography (QCA) for the detection of lesion-specific ischemia using fractional flow reserve (FFR) as the gold standard. ⋯ CTA and ICA exhibited similar diagnostic performance for the detection and exclusion of lesion-specific ischemia. Using a true reference standard to determine appropriate revascularization targets, 3-dimensional coronary CTA performed as well as 2-dimensional ICA.