Discordance between Invasive and Non-Invasive Coronary Angiography: An In-Depth Functional and Anatomical Analysis

Author:

Kageyama Shigetaka1ORCID,Tanaka Kaoru2ORCID,Masuda Shinichiro1,Kageyama Momoko1,Garg Scot3ORCID,Updegrove Adam4,De Mey Johan5,La Meir Mark6,Onuma Yoshinobu1,Serruys Patrick W.17

Affiliation:

1. Department of Cardiology, National University of Ireland Galway, H91 TK33 Galway, Ireland

2. Department of Radiology, University Hospital Brussels, 1090 Brussels, Belgium

3. Department of Cardiology, Royal Blackburn Hospital, Blackburn BB2 3HH, UK

4. HeartFlow, Inc., Mountain View, CA 94041, USA

5. Department of Radiology, Universitair Ziekenhuis Brussel, VUB, 1090 Brussels, Belgium

6. Department of Cardiac Surgery, Universitair Ziekenhuis Brussel, VUB, 1090 Brussels, Belgium

7. Imperial College London, London SW7 2BU, UK

Abstract

A 79-year-old male with chronic coronary syndrome with complex coronary artery disease was included in the first-in-man trial of surgical revascularization guided solely by coronary computed tomography angiography (CCTA) and fractional flow reserve derived from CCTA (FFRCT). In CCTA analysis, the patient had calcified three-vessel disease, with a global anatomical SYNTAX score of 27. In contrast, in the initial FFRCT, only the ramus intermediate stenosis was physiologically significant, with no other vessels having an FFRCT ≤ 0.80 (functional SYNTAX score of 2). Discordance between the results of the CCTA and FFRCT necessitated an in-depth analysis by using both invasive and non-invasive coronary angiography. Angiography-derived fractional flow reserve (FFR) confirmed that the stenosis in the proximal left anterior descending artery (LAD) was physiologically significant, while it remained functionally negative in the second assessment of FFRCT. Extensive calcification is the most plausible explanation for the underestimation of the stenosis of proximal LAD in CCTA-derived FFR technology.

Funder

Sinomedical Sciences Technology

SMT

Philips/Volcano

Xeltis

ITA

HeartFlow, Inc.

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,Medicine (miscellaneous)

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