Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT03026283
Other study ID # 16-765-LHH
Secondary ID
Status Completed
Phase
First received
Last updated
Start date January 2017
Est. completion date September 2018

Study information

Verified date May 2023
Source Northwell Health
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Observational

Clinical Trial Summary

Coronary Computed Tomography Angiogram (CCTA) is a non-invasive imaging modality that has high sensitivity and negative predictive value for the detection of coronary artery disease (CAD). The main limitations of CCTA are its poor specificity and positive predictive value, as well as its inherent lack of physiologically relevant data on hemodynamic significance of coronary stenosis, a data that is provided either by non-invasive stress tests such as myocardial perfusion imaging (MPI) or invasively by measurement of the Fractional Flow Reserve (FFR). Recent advances in computational fluid dynamic techniques applied to standard CCTA are now emerging as powerful tools for virtual measurement of FFR from CCTA imaging (CT-FFR). These techniques correlate well with invasively measured FFR [1-4]. The primary purpose of this study is to evaluate the incremental benefit CT-FFR as compared to CCTA in triaging chest pain patients in outpatient settings who are found to have obstructive CAD upon CCTA (> 30% and < 90% stenosis). Invasive FFR and short term clinical outcomes (90 days) will be correlated with each diagnostic modality in order to evaluate positive and negative predictive value of each when used incrementally with CCTA. This will be an observational trial in which patients will undergo a CCTA, as part of routine care. If the patient consents to participate in the study and is found to have coronary stenosis of 30% to 90%, based on the cardiologist's reading, the CCTA study will be sent to HeartFlow, a vendor that will provide a computerized FFR reading, based on the CCTA study. If the noninvasive FFR diagnosis indicates obstructive disease, the patient will be recommended to undergo cardiac catheterization with invasive FFR. As CCTA utilization increases, the need to train additional imaging specialists will increase. This study will assess the capability of FFR-CT to enhance performance on both negative and positive predictive value for less experienced readers by providing feedback based on CT-FFR evaluation. CCTA readers will be grouped in two categories: those with more than 10 years reading experience and those with less than 10 years reading experience. Each CCTA will be read by a less experienced and a more experienced reader. Results from each reader will be correlated with each other and with the CT-FFR and invasive FFR results.


Description:

CCTA is increasingly becoming a preferred non-invasive imaging modality because of its high sensitivity and negative predictive value for the detection of CAD. It has been shown to be a robust imaging modality for evaluation of chest pain, and is associated with decreased unnecessary hospital admission, length of stay, major adverse cardiovascular event rates, recidivism rates, and downstream resource utilization compared to standard evaluation [5]. While findings so far are highly suggestive of CCTA's significance as a gatekeeper for Invasive Coronary Angiography (ICA) by ruling out obstructive CAD, fewer than half of obstructive stenosis identified by CCTA are ischemia-causing, signifying its poor positive predictive value and inherent lack of physiological information [6-8]. Consequently, utilization of CCTA has not entirely averted need for downstream testing for functional assessment of CCTA-detected obstructive lesions either by stress testing or ICA. Recently a major treatment modality, associated with the use of CCTA, has become available that offers promise for improving positive predictive value and physiological relevant hemodynamic data. Advances in computational fluid dynamic techniques applied to standard CCTA are now emerging as a powerful tool for virtual measurement of FFR from CCTA imaging (CT-FFR). This techniques correlate well with invasively measured FFR [1-4]. CT-FFR is not an investigational agent, having been approved by FDA in November, 2014. However, more work is necessary to delineate the patient population that could derive maximal benefit from this new technology. While few publications regarding the use of CT-FFR specifically address the cost of diagnostic work-up for obstructive disease, it is clear that the cost structure resulting from changes in diagnostic testing will also change. Deferral or avoidance of cardiac catheterization and nuclear stress testing will likely yield significant reductions in the cost of the diagnostic testing. From 1/1/2009 to 3/31/2015 our team introduced and operated a CCTA Chest Pain triage program for low to intermediate risk patients at Stony Brook University Hospital ED and non-emergency outpatient services, the only tertiary care hospital in Suffolk County. Concurrently, we established a registry to monitor patient outcomes for all patients receiving CCTA at Stony Brook Medicine. Our registry contained nearly 15,000 patient CCTA procedures. Our major registry study established the effectiveness of CCTA as an imaging modality for evaluating Emergency Department chest pain in a cost efficient manner with a false negative rate less than 1% [5]. However, our registry reflects the poorer positive predictive values documented by other industry studies [6-8]. False positive workup results in the necessity of performing cardiac catheterization on patients at risk for obstructive disease based on assessment with current standard of care (combined screening with CCTA and stress MPI). Reduction in the rate of false positive testing would lead to reduction in risk from invasive procedures and radiation exposure to patients and reduced cost to the health care system. Several medical institutions currently use HeartFlow CT-FFR as standard of care for evaluating obstructive disease. Generally, the standard of care at these institutions is to refer patients who are 30 to 90 percent obstructed by CCTA and who have reduction of flow <= to 0.8 that is deemed to be medical significant by the attending cardiologist to Invasive FFR. HeartFlow has reported to us confidentially that this routine use of CT-FFR has resulted in a 54% reduction in false positive rate as compared to use of CCTA alone. The purpose of this study is to evaluate the incremental benefit of Fractional Flow Reserve derived from CCTA (FFR-CT) compared invasive FFR as the gold standard for patients with obstructive disease (> 30% and < 90% stenosis). This study will also assess the capability of CT-FFR to enhance performance on both negative and positive predictive value for less experienced readers by providing feedback based on CT-FFR evaluation. This will be a prospective observational clinical trial designed to evaluate the incremental benefit of virtual FFR measured from CCTA, compared to invasive FFR and CCTA for the detection of flow-limiting coronary stenosis, as defined by invasive FFR <0.8 and vessel diameter of >=2mm. 572 consecutive patients who present to Lenox Hill Hospital Outpatient Clinics for CCTA due to chest pain or stable angina over a ten month period and meeting the study inclusion criteria are eligible for the study (Figure 1). Our team will employ CCTA-appropriateness criteria to ensure proper selection of patients, derived from the Appropriate Use Criteria for Cardiac Computed Tomography published in 2010 and jointly authored by multiple societies including American College of Cardiology Foundation (ACCF), Society for Cardiovascular Computed Tomography (SCCT), and American College of Radiology (ACR) [10]. FFR-CT measurements will be performed by a core laboratory in a blinded fashion. All eligible patients will undergo 64-slice or greater multi detector CCTA and CT-FFR measurements. The severity of the stenosis will be determined on site by level III CCTA readers. Patients with obstructive lesions of (30% to 90% stenosis) will be referred for Stress-MPI, per SOC protocol, and CT-FFR. Patients with positive Stress-Myocardial Perfusion Imaging (MPI) and CCTA (50% - 70%%) or positive CCTA (71% to 90%) will be referred for undergo ICA with invasive FFR measurement in accordance to accepted guidelines and established practice standard. They will also received CT-FFR. Those patients with invasively measured FFR<0.8 and with vessel diameter of >= 2mm, or those who require revascularizations based on invasively estimated stenosis severity will be considered to have flow-limiting obstructive CAD, while the rest will be considered to have non-flow limiting obstructive CAD (if also >50% stenosis on ICA). If stenosis severity turns out to be < 50% after ICA (the gold standard), we will conclude that these patients have non-obstructive CAD. (Figure 1). Patients with 30% to 49% obstructive disease, according to CCTA, will be referred to optimal follow up care only. Any in this group who have positive CT-FFR will return for ICA with invasive FFR measurement, and follow the protocol for those with 50% to 90% obstruction. Defining an event as performance of ICA when no intervention is necessary, we expect to compare event rates for patients treated with CCTA and FFR-CT, using t-tests and a multivariate, risk adjusted 90 day hazard model with 95% confidence interval. Our null hypothesis is that outcomes will not vary regardless of which testing is used to assess obstructive disease. Our alternative hypothesis is that evaluation with FFR-CT as oppose to CTTA will change the event rate. We will also correlate noninvasive and invasive FFR studies. We will assess inter-observer reliability of the two reader cohorts' (> 10 years experience and less than 10 years experience) readings for CCTA and CT-FFR.. We will also assess the nondiagnostic rate for CT-FFR exams as compared to independent quality ratings of CCTA scans by the scan reader. Scans will be rated as excellent, good, adequate, or non-diagnostic. Non-diagnostic exams will not be sent to CT-FFR. For those sent to CT-FFR we will compare the percentage of non-diagnostic exams to the percentage of non-diagnostic for CT-FFR, and we will also correlate exam results by level of obstruction.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 586
Est. completion date September 2018
Est. primary completion date June 2018
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender All
Age group 18 Years and older
Eligibility 1. Inclusion Criteria: 2. Capable of giving informed consent. 3. Able to cooperate with the technician performing the procedure. 4. Patient must have Body Mass Index (BMI) <= 50. 5. Patients must have non-ST Elevation Myocardial Infarction (STEMI) Electrocardiogram (EKG) without acute changes. 6. Patients must present to Research Institution with medically necessary appointment for CCTA for the purpose of evaluation of coronary stenosis for the provisional diagnoses of chest pain or angina or angina equivalent. 7. Patients must be able to take nitroglycerin and beta blockers. - 8. Patients must be 18 years of age or older. Exclusion Criteria: 1. Patients must not have a history of coronary stenting or coronary artery bypass graft. 2. Patients must not have severe or end stage renal disease as diagnosed as estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR)<50. 3. Patients must not have a BMI>50. -

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Device:
HeartFLow CT-FFR
Patients receiving CCTA to diagnose stable chest pain or stable angina will receive CT-FFR to estimate rate of flow through the coronary arteries. The rate of flow will be compared to the rate found on Invasive FFR (the gold standard) if the subject receives invasive FFR.

Locations

Country Name City State
n/a

Sponsors (2)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
Northwell Health HeartFlow, Inc.

References & Publications (10)

Budoff MJ, Dowe D, Jollis JG, Gitter M, Sutherland J, Halamert E, Scherer M, Bellinger R, Martin A, Benton R, Delago A, Min JK. Diagnostic performance of 64-multidetector row coronary computed tomographic angiography for evaluation of coronary artery stenosis in individuals without known coronary artery disease: results from the prospective multicenter ACCURACY (Assessment by Coronary Computed Tomographic Angiography of Individuals Undergoing Invasive Coronary Angiography) trial. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2008 Nov 18;52(21):1724-32. doi: 10.1016/j.jacc.2008.07.031. — View Citation

Koo BK, Erglis A, Doh JH, Daniels DV, Jegere S, Kim HS, Dunning A, DeFrance T, Lansky A, Leipsic J, Min JK. Diagnosis of ischemia-causing coronary stenoses by noninvasive fractional flow reserve computed from coronary computed tomographic angiograms. Results from the prospective multicenter DISCOVER-FLOW (Diagnosis of Ischemia-Causing Stenoses Obtained Via Noninvasive Fractional Flow Reserve) study. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2011 Nov 1;58(19):1989-97. doi: 10.1016/j.jacc.2011.06.066. — View Citation

Liu HY, Chen JR, Hung HC, Hsiao SY, Huang ST, Chen HS. Urinary fluoride concentration in children with disabilities following long-term fluoride tablet ingestion. Res Dev Disabil. 2011 Nov-Dec;32(6):2441-8. doi: 10.1016/j.ridd.2011.07.016. Epub 2011 Aug 5. — View Citation

Meijboom WB, Meijs MF, Schuijf JD, Cramer MJ, Mollet NR, van Mieghem CA, Nieman K, van Werkhoven JM, Pundziute G, Weustink AC, de Vos AM, Pugliese F, Rensing B, Jukema JW, Bax JJ, Prokop M, Doevendans PA, Hunink MG, Krestin GP, de Feyter PJ. Diagnostic accuracy of 64-slice computed tomography coronary angiography: a prospective, multicenter, multivendor study. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2008 Dec 16;52(25):2135-44. doi: 10.1016/j.jacc.2008.08.058. — View Citation

Miller JM, Rochitte CE, Dewey M, Arbab-Zadeh A, Niinuma H, Gottlieb I, Paul N, Clouse ME, Shapiro EP, Hoe J, Lardo AC, Bush DE, de Roos A, Cox C, Brinker J, Lima JA. Diagnostic performance of coronary angiography by 64-row CT. N Engl J Med. 2008 Nov 27;359(22):2324-36. doi: 10.1056/NEJMoa0806576. — View Citation

Min JK, Leipsic J, Pencina MJ, Berman DS, Koo BK, van Mieghem C, Erglis A, Lin FY, Dunning AM, Apruzzese P, Budoff MJ, Cole JH, Jaffer FA, Leon MB, Malpeso J, Mancini GB, Park SJ, Schwartz RS, Shaw LJ, Mauri L. Diagnostic accuracy of fractional flow reserve from anatomic CT angiography. JAMA. 2012 Sep 26;308(12):1237-45. doi: 10.1001/2012.jama.11274. — View Citation

Niska R, Bhuiya F, Xu J. National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey: 2007 emergency department summary. Natl Health Stat Report. 2010 Aug 6;(26):1-31. — View Citation

Norgaard BL, Leipsic J, Gaur S, Seneviratne S, Ko BS, Ito H, Jensen JM, Mauri L, De Bruyne B, Bezerra H, Osawa K, Marwan M, Naber C, Erglis A, Park SJ, Christiansen EH, Kaltoft A, Lassen JF, Botker HE, Achenbach S; NXT Trial Study Group. Diagnostic performance of noninvasive fractional flow reserve derived from coronary computed tomography angiography in suspected coronary artery disease: the NXT trial (Analysis of Coronary Blood Flow Using CT Angiography: Next Steps). J Am Coll Cardiol. 2014 Apr 1;63(12):1145-1155. doi: 10.1016/j.jacc.2013.11.043. Epub 2014 Jan 30. — View Citation

Poon M, Cortegiano M, Abramowicz AJ, Hines M, Singer AJ, Henry MC, Viccellio P, Hellinger JC, Ferraro S, Poon A, Raff GL, Voros S, Farkouh ME, Noack P. Associations between routine coronary computed tomographic angiography and reduced unnecessary hospital admissions, length of stay, recidivism rates, and invasive coronary angiography in the emergency department triage of chest pain. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2013 Aug 6;62(6):543-52. doi: 10.1016/j.jacc.2013.04.040. Epub 2013 May 15. — View Citation

Taylor AJ, Cerqueira M, Hodgson JM, Mark D, Min J, O'Gara P, Rubin GD; American College of Cardiology Foundation Appropriate Use Criteria Task Force; Society of Cardiovascular Computed Tomography; American College of Radiology; American Heart Association; American Society of Echocardiography; American Society of Nuclear Cardiology; North American Society for Cardiovascular Imaging; Society for Cardiovascular Angiography and Interventions; Society for Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance; Kramer CM, Berman D, Brown A, Chaudhry FA, Cury RC, Desai MY, Einstein AJ, Gomes AS, Harrington R, Hoffmann U, Khare R, Lesser J, McGann C, Rosenberg A, Schwartz R, Shelton M, Smetana GW, Smith SC Jr. ACCF/SCCT/ACR/AHA/ASE/ASNC/NASCI/SCAI/SCMR 2010 appropriate use criteria for cardiac computed tomography. A report of the American College of Cardiology Foundation Appropriate Use Criteria Task Force, the Society of Cardiovascular Computed Tomography, the American College of Radiology, the American Heart Association, the American Society of Echocardiography, the American Society of Nuclear Cardiology, the North American Society for Cardiovascular Imaging, the Society for Cardiovascular Angiography and Interventions, and the Society for Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance. J Am Coll Cardiol. 2010 Nov 23;56(22):1864-94. doi: 10.1016/j.jacc.2010.07.005. — View Citation

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Comparison of CCTA Alone to FFR-CT After CCTA To evaluate sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative predictive value for FFR-CT after CCTA vs. CCTA alone, using invasive FFR as the gold standard. Up to 1 year from the study initiation will be required to enroll all study patients and obstain invasive and noninvasive FFR.
Secondary Inter-observer Reliability: Assessment of All Cases To evaluate differences in performance of readers of CCTA and CT-FFR based on years of experience. CCTA results were documented by the official reader, all of whom had less than 9 years experience reading CCTA. Independently the exams were reviewed by a second reader with more than 10 years experience reading CCTA. Due to an operational error, for 5 of the 572 cases that received CCTA, the detailed data was removed from the server before the second read. Therefore these cases were excluded from this analysis. Up to 1 year will be required to obtain all reader evaluations for the study in order to asses inter-observer reliability.
Secondary Inter - Observer Reliability: Assessment of at Least Mild Disease (30% Stenosis or More) To evaluate differences in performance of readers of CCTA and CT-FFR based on years of experience when assessing cases on which the official reading identified at least mild disease. Mild disease is defined as cases with 30% or more stenosis documented on CCTA reading. CCTA cases that cannot be read are treated as severe.) Up to 1 year will be required to obtain all reader evaluations for the study in order to asses inter-observer reliability.
Secondary Inter - Observer Reliability: Assessment of at Least Moderate Disease (50% Stenosis or More on CCTA) To evaluate differences in performance of readers of CCTA and CT-FFR based on years of experience when assessing cases on which the official reading is at least moderate (50% stenosis on CCTA. CCTA cases that cannot be read are treated as severe. Up to 1 year will be required to obtain all reader evaluations for the study in order to asses inter-observer reliability.
Secondary Inter - Observer Reliability: Assessment of Severe Disease is Diagnosesed on Official Read (70% or Greater) To evaluate differences in performance of readers of CCTA and CT-FFR based on years of experience when assessing cases with suspected severe disease on the official reading. (CCTAs that cannot be read are treated as severe). Up to 1 year will be required to obtain all reader evaluations for the study in order to asses inter-observer reliability.
Secondary Return Visits To identify factors influencing return visits within 90 days for all patients enrolled who received CCTA. While we are not aware of any documented incremental risks for adding FFR-CT to the evaluation process of coronary artery disease, this safety measure was designed to identify and evaluate all unplanned return events to ensure that they were not related to FFR-CT or to flaws in study design or operations. Up to 15 months will be required to collect 90 day follow up information on all study participants.
Secondary Return Visits -- Reasons for Return To identify factors influencing return visits within 90 days. All patient's who returned to the ED within 90 days of their initial visit were contacted for follow up. All their medical records were reviewed. Up to 15 months will be required to collect 90 day follow up information on all study participants.