• Coronary Artery Calcium Scoring Does Not Add Prognostic Value to Standard 64-Section CT Angiography Protocol in Low-Risk Patients Suspected of Having Coronary Artery Disease

    Radiology:Volume 259: Number 1-April 2011

    Sung Woo Kwon, MD Young Jin Kim, MD Jaemin Shim, MD Ji Min Sung, PhD Mi Eun Han, BS Dong Won Kang, BS Ji-Ye Kim Byoung Wook Choi, MD Hyuk-Jae Chang, MD


    Purpose:
    To evaluate the prognostic outcome of cardiac computed tomography (CT) for prediction of major adverse cardiac events (MACEs) in low-risk patients suspected of having coronary artery disease (CAD) and to explore the differ­ential prognostic values of coronary artery calcium (CAC) scoring and coronary CT angiography.

    Materials and Methods: Institutional review committee approval and informed consent were obtained. In 4338 patients who underwent 64-section CT for evaluation of suspected CAD, both CAC scoring and CT angiography were concurrently performed by us­ing standard scanning protocols. Follow-up clinical out­come data regarding composite MACEs were procured. Multivariable Cox proportional hazards models were de­veloped to predict MACEs. Risk-adjusted models incorpo­rated traditional risk factors for CAC scoring and coro­nary CT angiography.

    Results: During the mean follow-up of 828 days ± 380, there were 105 MACEs, for an event rate of 3%. The presence of ob­structive CAD at coronary CT angiography had indepen­dent prognostic value, which escalated according to the number of stenosed vessels (P < .001). In the receiver op­erating characteristic curve (ROC) analysis, the superiority of coronary CT angiography to CAC scoring was demon­strated by a significantly greater area under the ROC curve (AUC) (0.892 vs 0.810, P < .001), whereas no significant incremental value for the addition of CAC scoring to coro­nary CT angiography was established (AUC = 0.892 for coronary CT angiography alone vs 0.902 with addition of CAC scoring, P= .198).

    Conclusion: Coronary CT angiography is better than CAC scoring in predicting MACEs in low-risk patients suspected of hav­ing CAD. Furthermore, the current standard multisection CT protocol (coronary CT angiography combined with CAC scoring) has no incremental prognostic value compared with coronary CT angiography alone. Therefore, in terms of de­termining prognosis, CAC scoring may no longer need to be incorporated in the cardiac CT protocol in this population.