Applied Sciences (Sep 2023)

Epicardial Adipose Tissue Changes during Statin Administration in Relation to the Body Mass Index: A Longitudinal Cardiac CT Study

  • Patrizia Toia,
  • Ludovico La Grutta,
  • Salvatore Vitabile,
  • Bruna Punzo,
  • Carlo Cavaliere,
  • Carmelo Militello,
  • Leonardo Rundo,
  • Domenica Matranga,
  • Clarissa Filorizzo,
  • Erica Maffei,
  • Massimo Galia,
  • Massimo Midiri,
  • Roberto Lagalla,
  • Luca Saba,
  • Eduardo Bossone,
  • Filippo Cademartiri

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/app131910709
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 19
p. 10709

Abstract

Read online

The epicardial adipose tissue (EAT) is the visceral fat located between the myocardium and the pericardium. We aimed to perform a longitudinal evaluation of the epicardial adipose tissue using an advanced computer-assisted approach in a population of patients undergoing Cardiac CT (CCT) during statin administration, in relation to their body mass index (BMI). We retrospectively enrolled 95 patients [mean age 62 ± 10 years; 68 males (72%) and 27 females (28%)] undergoing CCT for suspected coronary artery disease during statin administration. CCT was performed at two subsequent time points. At the second CCT, EAT showed a mean density increase (−75.59 ± 7.0 HU vs. −78.18 ± 5.3 HU, p 3 vs.142.79 ± 56.9 cm3, p p = 0.001) and interventricular artery (8.22 ± 3.7 mm vs. 9.13 ± 3.9 mm, p = 0.001). The quartile (Q) attenuation percentage (%) distribution of EAT changed at the second CCT. The EAT % distribution changed by the BMI in Q1 (p = 0.015), Q3 (p = 0.001) and Q4 (p = 0.043) at the second CCT, but the normal-BMI and overweight/obese patients showed a similar response to statin therapy in terms of quartile distribution changes. In conclusion, statins may determine significant changes in EAT quantitative and qualitative characteristics detected by CCT; the BMI influences the EAT composition, but statins determine a similar response in quartile distribution’s variation, irrespective of the BMI.

Keywords