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          Assessment of Left Ventricular Function in Coronary Artery Disease with Nuclear Techniques

          Closed for proposals

          Project Type

          Coordinated Research Project

          Project Code

          E13034

          CRP

          1425

          Approved Date

          6 March 2007

          Status

          Closed

          Start Date

          15 September 2007

          Expected End Date

          31 December 2011

          Completed Date

          8 February 2012

          Description

          Coronary Artery Disease (CAD) is the leading cause of death in many developing countries, and prevalence of the disease is increasing as economic conditions change. Early detection and prognosis using non-invasive, widely available procedures may have an impact in patient management and cast-effectiveness. The use of stress perfusion SPECT imaging represents an admitted powerful diagnostic and prognostic tool.
          Patients with ischemic cardiomyopathy and severe ventricular dysfunction have poor prognosis and their management is guided mainly by the presence of myocardial viability, which defines the referral to either revascularization or medical therapy. On the other hand, patients with normal LV function are risk-stratified mainly according to the result of the perfusion scan and the extension and severity of perfusion defects. The group of patients with mild-to-moderate LV dysfunction may potentially benefit from additional parameters for a correct stratification. The purpose of our study is to investigate the feasibility, reproducibility and accuracy of early acquisition of gated perfusion SPECT after stress as compared to the routine delayed acquisition in order to improve the detectability of transient myocardial dysfunction (stunning). An additional aim is to confirm the prognostic value of myocardial stunning in a population of patients with known or suspected CAD and with mild-to-moderate ventricular dysfunction. Secondary expected outcomes are the diffusion of the technique in developing countries, as well as the improvement of skills of interpreting physicians and the awareness of the utility of the test among referring cardiologists since CAD will remain still an emerging health problem in these regions and the method would contribute to improve patient management and cost-effectiveness of medical care.

          Objectives

          The main objective of this multi-centre, international study (sponsored by IAEA) was to evaluate whether early post-stress imaging increases the detection of myocardial stunning as compared to standard acquisition, without compromising the diagnostic quality of the images obtained from G-SPECT in patients with known or suspected CAD and intermediate-to-high risk exercise test results. An additional objective was to unify the protocols leading institutions in several member states, mainly from developing regions

          Specific objectives

          To assess the incremental prognostic value of transient LV dysfunction over other nuclear, clinical and exercise data

          To evaluate the feasibility, image quality and functional parameters obtained by early post-stress GSPECT acquisition and compare them to those obtained by the standard acquisition

          To improve the detection of transient ischemic-induced systolic dysfunction after exercise, by performing early GSPECT acquisition

          Impact

          It is projected that CAD mortality rates will double from 1990 to 2020, with approximately 82% of the increase attributable to the developing world. It is suggested that rapid socioeconomic growth in emerging countries increases exposure to risk factors for CAD. Thus, precise identification of high- risk patients may have an impact not only in survival rates but also in cost-savings, which represents a major issue in regions with low economic resources and limited availability of high-tech revascularization procedures

          Relevance

          The results of our investigation suggest that early post-exercise imaging retains most quality attributes and perfusion information compared to late acquisition, since perfusion scores were exactly the same in >95% of cases. Furthermore, early acquisition was able to detect a greater decrease in post-exercise LVEF in ischemic patients. Even though the average difference between ?-LVEF at Stress-1 and Stress-2 was moderate, LVEF significantly decreased in the ischemic patients

          CRP Publications

          Type

          Scientific Paper

          Year

          Dec 2014

          Description

          Detection of post-exercise stunning by early G-SPECT myocardial perfusion imaging: Results from the IAEA multi-centre study’ in the Journal of Nuclear Cardiology

          Country/Organization

          IAEA

          Type

          Scientific Paper

          Year

          Feb 2009

          Description

          Site of myocardial infarction and severity of perfusion abnormalities impact on post-stress left ventricular function in patients with single-vessel disease: gated single-photon emission computed tomography MIBI

          Country/Organization

          IAEA

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