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Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT01946737

High Definition CT Coronary Angiography Accuracy Trial

Diagnostic Performance of 64 Slice High Definition Computed Tomographic Coronary Angiography in Patients With High Risk of Significant Coronary Artery Disease.

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
302 (actual)
Sponsor
University Hospital Plymouth NHS Trust · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
40 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

CT technology is evolving at a rapid pace, with introduction of multidetector row CT scanners (MDCT) and electrocardiographic (ECG) gating resulting in increasing numbers of heart scans CTCA (CT Coronary Angiography). CTCA provides a noninvasive alternative to conventional invasive coronary angiography (ICA), which is considered the gold standard in the investigation of coronary disease. There has been a gradual increase in the utilization of CTCA for primary assessment of low and intermediate risk patients. However concerns regarding radiation exposure and diagnostic accuracy, especially in the highrisk group, have prevented its widespread dissemination. To achieve best possible temporal resolution (minimize cardiac motion artifacts) and spatial resolution (provide diagnostic accuracy) relatively high radiation exposure is required, as a result of its inverse relationship with image noise and resolution. However radiation (X-ray) is associated with increased risk of cancer in exposed patients and it is therefore essential to continually devise strategies to reduce radiation exposure whilst maintaining image quality. A state-of-art CT scanner (Discovery CT750 HD, General Electric (GE) Healthcare), has been installed at Derriford hospital for further research on CTCA. It uses novel method of scanning, High Definition Computed Tomographic Coronary Angiography(HD-CTCA), analogous to high definition television) and image reconstruction (Adaptive Statistical Iterative Reconstruction ASIR)as opposed to conventional CT scanners using Filtered Back Projection (FBP)reconstruction. HD-CTCA enables acquisition of sharper images and ASIR offsets the resultant increase in radiation exposure. This is likely to result in images of higher diagnostic quality with an equivalent or slightly lower radiation exposure compared to present technology. Although initial results are encouraging, this needs further assessment before being applied to routine clinical practice. To assess this we have designed a study to perform HD-CTCA on 300 consecutive patients undergoing diagnostic ICA at Derriford hospital, directly comparing the accuracy of HD-CTCA to ICA (presently considered the gold standard). Hypotheses: There is no significant difference in the sensitivity and specificity of HD-CTCA for the detection of coronary artery stenosis of 50% or greater compared to conventional ICA.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
RADIATIONHD-CTCA with Adaptive statistical iterative reconstruction (ASIR)
RADIATIONActive Comparator: Invasive coronary angiography (ICA)

Timeline

Start date
2011-04-01
Primary completion
2012-08-01
Completion
2012-08-01
First posted
2013-09-20
Last updated
2013-09-20

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United Kingdom

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT01946737. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.