Coronary Artery Disease Clinical Trial
— COEOfficial title:
PUMCH Study Into Individualized Scanning for Coronary Artery Disease
Cardiac computed tomographic angiography (CCTA) is a non-invasive diagnostic imaging technique for visualization of the coronary arteries and thus, frequently used in the evaluation of coronary artery disease (CAD). CT technology is improving continuously, and various technological advances not only increase diagnostic accuracy, but also provide a substantial reduction in radiation dose and scan acquisition time. These modifications challenge optimal synchronization and timing of scan protocols in CM administration due to a shorter data acquisition window, hereby creating opportunities for injection strategies with a decrease in total amount of contrast media (CM). [4-6] Reducing the radiation dose of CT angiography and injected CM dose have become a routine need and trend in clinical practice. In addition to this, physical factors such as cardiac output and body weight are considered important factors with regard to variability in vascular enhancement. A standard 'one size fits all' protocol with a standard injected CM volume, independent of weight and length of the patient has proven to be outdated and precision medicine in the future should be based on individually tailored scan and CM injection protocols that are more scientific and involve various parameters such as individual tube voltage, patients weight and heart rate to benefit patients by reducing radiation exposure and CM dose while fulfilling the diagnostic purpose. Prospective studies focused on modifying both scan and injection parameters were completed in the Dutch (representing European) patient population with body weight varying between 40 and 130kg by Maastricht University Medical Center (MUMC) and have shown very promising results in Dutch population. In theory, these scan and injection protocols should be applicable to both average Dutch population (e.g. European population) and other heterogeneous patient populations, i.e. world-wide patient populations with any BMI category. However, so far, the effectiveness of this approach has not been deliberately discussed in the (on average) heavier North American population or the lighter Asian population. So, prior to promotion of the individually tailored CT scan protocols for global use, we need to obtain enough evidence in terms of the diagnostic confidence from those protocols in Chinese patients who could represent Asian population.
Status | Not yet recruiting |
Enrollment | 300 |
Est. completion date | June 30, 2024 |
Est. primary completion date | June 30, 2024 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years and older |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: - Age: Patient aged older than 18; - Deny previous cardiovascular history; - Atypical or typical complaints of angina and referred for CCTA to rule out CAD with Iopromide 370 mgI/ml by clinicians - Possibility of 'flash' mode scan: patient heart rate below 70 beats per minute and regular rhythm; - Patients or families are able to understand the study protocol and willing to participate in the study and provide written informed consent. Exclusion Criteria: - Any contraindications for prospective ECG gate-control CT coronary angiography, including: 1. Inability to perform a breath hold for at least the expected scan time; 2. Unstable angina; 3. Hemodynamic instability; 4. Pregnant or lactating women; 5. Renal insufficiency (defined as eGFR<30 ml/min/1.73m2); 6. Previous history of adverse reactions to iodinated contrast agents; 7. Confirmed or suspected hyperthyroidism or pheochromocytoma; 8. Atrial fibrillation or arrhythmia; severe congestive heart failure (class IV according to NYHA classification of cardiac function); - History of CAD - Patients undergoing PCI before coronary CTA examination, or patients with a previous history of heart bypass surgery - Insufficient cannula venous access (preferred 18G, minimal 20G cannula); - Patients who are participating other clinical studies? |
Country | Name | City | State |
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n/a |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
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Peking Union Medical College Hospital | Bayer |
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | The diagnostic quality produced by individualized scan and injection protocol. | When using an individualized scan and injection protocol, definition of diagnostic quality of the scan is the imaging result could satisfy the following two criteria:
Intravascular attenuation of the target coronary arteries should be over 325 Hounsfield Units (HU). Subjective overall image quality should be diagnostic (image quality > 2 of a 5-point Likert scale). |
48 hours post examination | |
Secondary | Objective evaluation on image quality | The images are transferred to the Siemens image processing workstation for post-processing. The post-vascular enhancement CT value of chambers of the heart, aorta and all branch vessels of coronary arteries is measured with standard deviation (SD) as image noise; the CT value of the inferior wall myocardium is measured with SD as background noise. Signal-To-Noise Ratio (SNR) is calculated as follows: SNR=enhanced CT value/SD. | 48 hours post examination | |
Secondary | Subjective evaluation on image quality | According to the 17-segment coronary artery segmentation standards of the American Heart Association, the images are scored by two radiologists who are blinded to protocol and have more than 5 years of work experience in CCTA with the 5-point Likert scale for scoring of coronary artery image quality: 5 points (excellent), images have fine anatomical details, sharp edges, and no obvious noise; 4 points (good), images have fine anatomical details and slightly increased noise; 3 points (fair), the visualization of most of anatomical results on the image satisfies diagnostic needs, with obvious but acceptable noise; 2 points (poor), images have blurred anatomical details that are difficult to distinguish and obvious noise; 1 point (very poor), images have extremely obvious noise that results in failed diagnosis. | 48 hours post examination | |
Secondary | contrast media dose in ml | injection parameters will be continuously monitored and automatically measured by a data acquisition program, Certegra™ Informatics Platform (Bayer Healthcare, Berlin, Germany). The contrast media dose could be recorded and read out directly in the system. | During Injection procedure | |
Secondary | contrast media flow rate in ml/s | injection parameters will be continuously monitored and automatically measured by a data acquisition program, Certegra™ Informatics Platform (Bayer Healthcare, Berlin, Germany). Contrast media flow rate could be recorded and read out from the system. | During Injection procedure | |
Secondary | contrast media peak flow rate [ml/s] | injection parameters will be continuously monitored and automatically measured by a data acquisition program, Certegra™ Informatics Platform (Bayer Healthcare, Berlin, Germany). The peak flow rate could be recorded and read out from the system | During Injection procedure | |
Secondary | Time-to-peak of contrast media [s] | injection parameters will be continuously monitored and automatically measured by a data acquisition program, Certegra™ Informatics Platform (Bayer Healthcare, Berlin, Germany). Time to peak of contrast media could be recorded and read out from the system | During Injection procedure | |
Secondary | iodine delivery rate (IDR) in mgI/s | IDR= concentration of contrast media (mgI/ml) administrated X flow rate(ml/s).injection parameters will be continuously monitored and automatically measured by a data acquisition program, Certegra™ Informatics Platform (Bayer Healthcare, Berlin, Germany). IDR of contrast media could be read out from the system. | During Injection procedure | |
Secondary | Patient radiation dose:volume CT dose index (CTDIvol) in mGy | Radiation parameters will be continuously monitored and automatically measured by a data acquisition programs Radimetrics Enterpise Platforms (Bayer Healthineers, Berlin, Germany). CTDIvol could be read out directly from the system. | 48 hours post examination | |
Secondary | Patient radiation dose: size-specific dose estimates (SSDEs) of chest in mGy | Radiation parameters will be continuously monitored and automatically measured by a data acquisition programs Radimetrics Enterpise Platforms (Bayer Healthineers, Berlin, Germany). SSDEs of chest could be read out directly from the system | 48 hours post examination | |
Secondary | Patient radiation dose: dose length product (DLP) in mGy*cm | Radiation parameters will be continuously monitored and automatically measured by a data acquisition programs Radimetrics Enterpise Platforms (Bayer Healthineers, Berlin, Germany). DLP could be read out from the system. | 48 hours post examination | |
Secondary | Patient radiation dose: effective dose (ED) in mSv | Radiation parameters will be continuously monitored and automatically measured by a data acquisition programs Radimetrics Enterpise Platforms (Bayer Healthineers, Berlin, Germany). ED could be read out from the system. | 48 hours post examination |
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