Coronary CT angiography–derived plaque quantification with artificial intelligence CT fractional flow reserve for the identification of lesion-specific ischemia

European radiology(2018)

Cited 73|Views21
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Abstract
Objectives We sought to investigate the diagnostic performance of coronary CT angiography (cCTA)–derived plaque markers combined with deep machine learning–based fractional flow reserve (CT-FFR) to identify lesion-specific ischemia using invasive FFR as the reference standard. Methods Eighty-four patients (61 ± 10 years, 65% male) who had undergone cCTA followed by invasive FFR were included in this single-center retrospective, IRB-approved, HIPAA-compliant study. Various plaque markers were derived from cCTA using a semi-automatic software prototype and deep machine learning–based CT-FFR. The discriminatory value of plaque markers and CT-FFR to identify lesion-specific ischemia on a per-vessel basis was evaluated using invasive FFR as the reference standard. Results One hundred three lesion-containing vessels were investigated. 32/103 lesions were hemodynamically significant by invasive FFR. In a multivariate analysis (adjusted for Framingham risk score), the following markers showed predictive value for lesion-specific ischemia (odds ratio [OR]): lesion length (OR 1.15, p = 0.037), non-calcified plaque volume (OR 1.02, p = 0.007), napkin-ring sign (OR 5.97, p = 0.014), and CT-FFR (OR 0.81, p < 0.0001). A receiver operating characteristics analysis showed the benefit of identifying plaque markers over cCTA stenosis grading alone, with AUCs increasing from 0.61 with ≥ 50% stenosis to 0.83 with addition of plaque markers to detect lesion-specific ischemia. Further incremental benefit was realized with the addition of CT-FFR (AUC 0.93). Conclusion Coronary CTA–derived plaque markers portend predictive value to identify lesion-specific ischemia when compared to cCTA stenosis grading alone. The addition of CT-FFR to plaque markers shows incremental discriminatory power. Key Points • Coronary CT angiography (cCTA)–derived quantitative plaque markers of atherosclerosis portend high discriminatory power to identify lesion-specific ischemia. • Coronary CT angiography–derived fractional flow reserve (CT-FFR) shows superior diagnostic performance over cCTA alone in detecting lesion-specific ischemia. • A combination of plaque markers with CT-FFR provides incremental discriminatory value for detecting flow-limiting stenosis.
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Key words
Spiral computed tomography,Coronary artery disease,Angiography
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