Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT00627172

Combined Use of Coronary MDCTA, Coronary Doppler Ultrasonography and PET Perfusion in Diagnosing Coronary Artery Disease

Combined Use of Coronary MDCTA, Coronary Doppler Ultrasonography and PET Perfusion in Diagnosis of Coronary Artery Disease

Status
Completed
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
107 (actual)
Sponsor
University of Turku · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
40 Years – 80 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Multislice CT angiography is a novel but already established and widely used in diagnosing coronary artery disease (CAD). It is very reliable in ruling out hemodynamically significant narrowings in coronary arteries (Negative predictive value). However, it may overestimate the severity of the stenoses in up to 30% of the coronary artery lesions (positive predictive value 70%). However, when coupled with a functional or flow-sensitive diagnostic test, such as PET perfusion or coronary doppler ultrasonography, one can assume that even the PPV may be as high as 95 %. Despite this assumption, there's no scientific evidence to support use of such hybrid multi-modality tests at present. The investigators hypothesis is that improving the diagnostic accuracy of non-invasive diagnosis of coronary artery disease will decrease the proportion of patients that need catheter angiographies. The avoidance of these unnecessary invasive procedures will improve patients´ quality of life and may even redirect health care resources in a more efficient way.

Detailed description

Coronary MDCTA (multi-detector CT angiography) is a novel but already established and widespread diagnostic method to diagnose coronary artery disease. When performed with a 64-detector (slice) CT, its strength is an excellent negative predictive value, NPV (98%). Specificity (86%) is good but the positive predictive value (PPV) is only moderate (70%). This is due to the ability of MDCTA to detect even minor vessel wall changes before they are functionally significant, and the tendency of CT to overestimate the volume of dense calcifications. However, when coupled with a functional or flow-sensitive diagnostic test, such as PET perfusion or coronary doppler ultrasonography, one can assume that even the PPV may be as high as 95 %. Despite this assumption, there's no scientific evidence to support use of such hybrid multi-modality tests at present. Our hypothesis is that improving the diagnostic accuracy of non-invasive diagnosis of coronary artery disease will decrease the proportion of patients that need catheter angiographies. The avoidance of these unnecessary invasive procedures will improve patients´ quality of life and may even redirect health care resources in a more efficient way.

Conditions

Timeline

Start date
2007-01-01
Completion
2008-08-01
First posted
2008-02-29
Last updated
2008-08-11

Locations

2 sites across 1 country: Finland

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT00627172. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.