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  • Combined Cardiac CT and MRI for the Comprehensive Workup of Hemodynamically Relevant Coronary Stenoses

    AJR:194, April 2010

    Combined Cardiac CT and MRI for the Comprehensive Workup of Hemodynamically Relevant Coronary Stenoses


    Olivio F. Donati, Hans Scheffel, Paul Stolzmann1 Stephan Baumuller, Andre Plass, Sebastian Leschka, Hatem Alkadhi
     
    OBJECTIVE. The purpose of our study was to prospectively evaluate the accuracy of a comprehensive assessment of coronary artery disease (CAD) with prospectively ECG-gated coronary CT angiography (CTA) and perfusion-cardiac MRI for the detection of hemodynamically/relevant coronary stenoses.

    SUBJECTS AND METHODS. Forty-seven consecutive patients underwent k-space and time broad-use linear acquisition speed-up technique accelerated perfusion-cardiac MRI at 1.5 T and dual-source coronary CTA. Catheter coronary angiography (CA), coronary CTA, and perfusion-cardiac MRI were all performed within a median time interval of 7.5 days. Detection of hemodynamically relevant stenoses by the combination of coronary CTA plus perfusion-cardiac MRI was compared with the combination of CA plus perfusion-cardiac MRI, the latter serving as the standard of reference.

    RESULTS. CA identified stenoses in 75 of 141 coronary arteries (53.2%) in 33 of 47 patients (70.2%). Cardiac MRI revealed perfusion defects in 30 of 47 patients (63.8%). Image quality of coronary CTA was diagnostic in 635 of 638 segments (99.5%). Coronary CTA revealed stenoses greater than 50% in 76 of 141 coronary arteries (53.9%) of 33 of 47 patients (70.2%). Sensitivity, specificity, negative and positive predictive value, and accuracy of coronary CTA and perfusion-cardiac MRI versus CA and perfusion-cardiac MRI for the detection of hemodynamically relevant stenoses were 96.7%, 100%, 94.4%, 100%, and 97.9%, respectively.

    CONCLUSION. The combination of coronary CTA and perfusion-cardiac MRI shows diagnostic performance comparable to that of CA and perfusion-cardiac MRI. Preliminary data suggest that coronary CTA may replace CA in the diagnosis of hemodynamically relevant CAD.