Applied Sciences (Feb 2021)

Non-Invasive Prediction of Site-Specific Coronary Atherosclerotic Plaque Progression using Lipidomics, Blood Flow, and LDL Transport Modeling

  • Antonis I. Sakellarios,
  • Panagiota Tsompou,
  • Vassiliki Kigka,
  • Panagiotis Siogkas,
  • Savvas Kyriakidis,
  • Nikolaos Tachos,
  • Georgia Karanasiou,
  • Arthur Scholte,
  • Alberto Clemente,
  • Danilo Neglia,
  • Oberdan Parodi,
  • Juhani Knuuti,
  • Lampros K. Michalis,
  • Gualtiero Pelosi,
  • Silvia Rocchiccioli,
  • Dimitrios I. Fotiadis

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/app11051976
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 5
p. 1976

Abstract

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Background: coronary computed tomography angiography (CCTA) is a first line non-invasive imaging modality for detection of coronary atherosclerosis. Computational modeling with lipidomics analysis can be used for prediction of coronary atherosclerotic plaque progression. Methods: 187 patients (480 vessels) with stable coronary artery disease (CAD) undergoing CCTA scan at baseline and after 6.2 ± 1.4 years were selected from the SMARTool clinical study cohort (Clinicaltrial.gov Identifiers NCT04448691) according to a computed tomography (CT) scan image quality suitable for three-dimensional (3D) reconstruction of coronary arteries and the absence of implanted coronary stents. Clinical and biohumoral data were collected, and plasma lipidomics analysis was performed. Blood flow and low-density lipoprotein (LDL) transport were modeled using patient-specific data to estimate endothelial shear stress (ESS) and LDL accumulation based on a previously developed methodology. Additionally, non-invasive Fractional Flow Reserve (FFR) was calculated (SmartFFR). Plaque progression was defined as significant change of at least two of the morphological metrics: lumen area, plaque area, plaque burden. Results: a multi-parametric predictive model, including traditional risk factors, plasma lipids, 3D imaging parameters, and computational data demonstrated 88% accuracy to predict site-specific plaque progression, outperforming current computational models. Conclusions: Low ESS and LDL accumulation, estimated by computational modeling of CCTA imaging, can be used to predict site-specific progression of coronary atherosclerotic plaques.

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