PLoS ONE (Jan 2020)

Comprehensive multimodality characterization of hemodynamically significant and non-significant coronary lesions using invasive and noninvasive measures.

  • Leif-Christopher Engel,
  • Ulf Landmesser,
  • Youssef S Abdelwahed,
  • Milosz Jaguszewski,
  • Kevin Gigengack,
  • Thomas-Heinrich Wurster,
  • Carsten Skurk,
  • Costantina Manes,
  • Andreas Schuster,
  • Michel Noutsias,
  • Bernd Hamm,
  • Rene M Botnar,
  • Marcus R Makowski,
  • Boris Bigalke

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0228292
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
p. e0228292

Abstract

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BackgroundThere is limited knowledge about morphological molecular-imaging-derived parameters to further characterize hemodynamically relevant coronary lesions.ObjectiveThe aim of this study was to describe and differentiate specific parameters between hemodynamically significant and non-significant coronary lesions using various invasive and non-invasive measures.MethodsThis clinical study analyzed patients with symptoms suggestive of coronary artery disease (CAD) who underwent native T1-weighted CMR and gadofosveset-enhanced CMR as well as invasive coronary angiography. OCT of the culprit vessel to determine the plaque type was performed in a subset of patients. Functional relevance of all lesions was examined using quantitative flow reserve (QFR-angiography). Hemodynamically significant lesions were defined as lesions with a QFR ResultsOverall 29 coronary segments from 14 patients were examined. Segments containing lesions with a QFR 0.8; n = 19) (5.32 (4.47-7.02) vs. 2.42 (1.04-5.11); p = 0.042). No differences in signal enhancement were seen on native T1-weighted CMR (2.2 (0.68-6.75) vs. 2.09 (0.91-6.57), p = 0.412). 66.7% (4 out of 6) of all vulnerable plaque and 33.3% (2 out of 6) of all non-vulnerable plaque (fibroatheroma) as assessed by OCT were hemodynamically significant lesions.ConclusionThe findings of this pilot study suggest that signal enhancement on albumin-binding probe-enhanced CMR but not on T1-weighted CMR is associated with hemodynamically relevant coronary lesions.