Diagnostics (Dec 2024)

Late Enhancement Computed Tomography for Left Atrial Fibrosis Imaging: A Pilot “Proof-of-Concept” Study

  • Pietro G. Lacaita,
  • Christoph Beyer,
  • Fabian Plank,
  • Markus Stühlinger,
  • Gudrun M. Feuchtner

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics14232753
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 23
p. 2753

Abstract

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Background/Objective: Left atrial (LA) fibrosis imaging improves the guidance of LA catheter ablation. Cardiac computed tomography (CT) may be a reasonable alternative to CMR. The aim was to evaluate late enhancement (LE) fibrosis mapping by CT, and to correlate the results with low-voltage areas on electroanatomical mapping (EAM). Methods: In patients with atrial fibrillation who underwent 128-slice dual-source CT angiography (CTA) prior to LA catheter ablation, an additional LE-CT scan was performed 7 min after CTA. (1) Left atrial wall thickness (LAWT) was measured at three sites along the LA ridge. (2) Late enhancement (LE) was quantified co-axially aligned to LAWT and compared with low-voltage areas (LVA) on EAM. Results: Of 137 patients (age: 59.8 years; 27.7% females), 108 were included. The prevalence of LE was higher in patients with LAWT > 2 mm compared with 1.5 mm, with 78 (91.7%) vs. 77 (80.2%) (p = 0.022). Of 78 patients with LE, 60 (77.1%) had focal, 13 (16.5%) had diffuse, and 5 (6.3%) had mixed LE patterns. The CT density of focal LE was not different from that of diffuse patterns (104.2 +/− 21 HU vs. 98.9 +/− 18 HU; p = 0.360). Increasing LAWT and LE-HU were weakly correlated (r = 0.229; p = 0.041). LA wall artifacts had higher CT density compared with LE (154.1 HU vs. 114.2 HU; p = 0.002). The effective radiation dose was 0.95 mSv (range, 0.52–1.2 mSv) for LE-CT. The agreement of LE-CT was 80% for LVA Conclusions: Left atrial fibrosis mapping by LE-CT is feasible. Late enhancement was found more frequently in LAWTs of more than 2 mm, and LE was correlated with increasing LA remodeling and low-voltage areas.

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