Background: The exercise treadmill test (ETT) and Tl201 single proton emission computed tomography (SPECT) are of short- to medium-term prognostic value in coronary heart disease. We assessed the long-term prognostic value of these tests in a large population of patients with low- to intermediate risk of cardiac events.
Methods and results: One thousand one hundred thirty-seven patients (857 men, age 55+/-9 years) referred for typical (62.1%) or atypical (22.4%) chest pain, or suspected silent ischemia (15.5%), were followed up for 72+/-18 months. Overall mortality was higher after strongly positive (ST depression >2 mm, or >1 mm for a workload </=75 W) (2. 36%/y) or nondiagnostic ETT (1.63%/y) than after normal (0.85%/y) or positive ETT (1.37%/y) (P=0.002), and after abnormal SPECT than after normal SPECT (1.60%/y versus 0.68%/y, P=0.001). The major cardiac event rate (cardiac death or myocardial infarction [MI]) was 0.88%, 1.59%, 2.10%, and 2.13%/y after negative, positive, strongly positive, and nondiagnostic ETT, respectively (P=0.003), and 0.56%, 1.43%, and 2.05%/y in patients with 0, 1 to 2, and >/=3 abnormal segments on SPECT, respectively (P<0.002). An abnormal SPECT was predictive of MI (P<0.001), whereas ETT was not. In multivariate analysis, SPECT was of incremental prognostic value over clinical and ETT data for predicting overall mortality and major cardiac events.
Conclusions: The incremental predictive value of SPECT is maintained over 6 years and is particularly relevant after positive, strongly positive, and nondiagnostic ETT.