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UnknownNCT04707859

Danish Study of Non-Invasive Diagnostic Testing in Coronary Artery Disease 3

Status
Unknown
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
1,000 (estimated)
Sponsor
University of Aarhus · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
30 Years – 100 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

In a cohort of symptomatic patients referred to coronary computed tomography angiography (CCTA), the investigators aim is: 1. To investigate and compare the diagnostic precision of Rubidium Positron Emission Tomography (Rb PET) and 15O-water PET (15O-water PET) in patients where CCTA does not exclude obstructive coronary artery disease (CAD) using invasive coronary angiography with fractional flow reserve (ICA-FFR) as reference standard. 2. To study the diagnostic accuracy and prognostic value of computed tomography fractional flow reserve (CT-FFR) in patients where CCTA does not exclude obstructive CAD with ICA-FFR as reference standard. 3. To validated a pre-test probability model including genetic and circulating biomarkers. 4. To identify and characterize genetic risk variants and circulating biomarkers importance in developing CAD. 5. To evaluate the bone mineral density in the hip and spine and correlate this to the degree of vascular calcification.

Detailed description

CCTA has become the preferred diagnostic modality for symptomatic patients with low to intermediate risk of CAD. Of the patients examined, CCTA exclude cardiovascular disease in 70-80% with an excellent negative predictive value of more than 95%. Having a low positive predictive value, however, CCTA often overestimates the severity of CAD, especially in patients with moderate to severe coronary calcification. Following CCTA, patients are hence unnecessarily tested using golden standard ICA-FFR. These ICAs often show no obstructive coronary stenosis and are therefore not followed by revascularization. The issues outlined raises the question of whether it is possible (1) to make a more precise risk stratification and consequently better selection of patients prior to CCTA and (2) to reduce the number of patients referred for unnecessary ICAs following CCTA. In patients with suspicion of coronary stenosis detected by CCTA, current guidelines recommend verification of myocardial ischemia. Dan-NICAD 3 investigate the diagnostic accuracy of advanced non-invasive myocardial perfusion imaging tests; Rb PET and 15O-water PET. These examinations have shown a high diagnostic accuracy in symptomatic patients with high risk of ischemic heart disease. However, the diagnostic accuracy is not investigated in patients as follow-up after CCTA. In addition, microcirculation may impact the correlation between PET and ICA-FFR which this study will investigate further. An alternative way to increase the diagnostic accuracy of CCTA and thus avoid unnecessary downstream testing using ICA is to utilize the ability to extract physiological information from the anatomical CCTA images. CT-FFR has in previous studies shown promising results. In addition, calculated estimation of microcirculatiory function is under development and this study will validated these algorithms. Furthermore, the prognostic value of CT-FFR is unknown and will be tested in the pooled cohort of Dan-NICAD 1, 2 and 3. Obtained during ICA, quantitative flow ratio (QFR) is a novel wire-free approach for fast computation of FFR with potential to increase the global use of physiological lesion assessment. QFR is superior to traditional assessment of intermediate coronary lesions based on quantitative coronary analysis of ICA. However, disagreement between ICA-FFR and QFR has been identified in up to 20% of all measurements. QFR will be validated compared to PET and ICA-FFR.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DIAGNOSTIC_TESTHead to head comparison: Rubidium vs 15O-water PETHead to head comparison with invasive FFR as reference. Adjustment for abnormal microcirculation

Timeline

Start date
2021-01-05
Primary completion
2022-07-05
Completion
2023-01-05
First posted
2021-01-13
Last updated
2021-01-29

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Denmark

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04707859. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.