Background: Coronary CT angiography (CCTA) has become an important modality to evaluate the presence of coronary artery disease. Coronary artery stenosis of intermediate severity remains a therapeutic dilemma. Measurement of fractional flow reserve (FFR) during coronary angiography is the most established technique to determine the hemodynamic severity of a coronary artery lesion. The aim of this study was to compare CCTA with FFR.
Methods: In 56 coronary artery stenoses (42 patients) we performed CCTA, quantitative coronary angiography and FFR. CCTA measurements included diameter stenosis (DS, %), area stenosis (AS, %), minimal lumen diameter (MLD, mm), minimal lumen area (MLA, mm(2)), lesion length (LL, mm), plaque volume (mm(3)) and burden (%).
Results: FFR averaged 0.81±0.14, and 10 lesions had an abnormal FFR (<0.75). We found significant correlations between FFR and DS (r=-0.67, p<0.001), AS (r=-0.68, p<0.001), MLD (r=0.58, p<0.001), MLA (r=0.53, p<0.001), LL (r=-0.36, p=0.02), plaque volume (r=-0.36, p=0.02) and plaque burden (r=-0.59, p<0.001). By multivariate regression analysis AS and LL were the strongest determinants of an abnormal FFR. The optimal cut-off value for AS was >73% (sensitivity 90%, specificity 80%, negative predictive value 97%, and positive predictive value 50%) and for LL >10 mm (sensitivity 60% and specificity 49%).
Conclusion: This study demonstrates that quantitative CCTA is correlated to FFR. Using our CCTA criteria of abnormality, significant coronary artery stenoses can be ruled out with a high negative predictive value.
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