Magnetic Resonance Angiography Clinical Trial
Official title:
Development of Magnetic Resonance Coronary Angiography (MRCA) Stenosis Assessment Quantification Method by Comparison With Coronary Computed Tomography Angiography (CTA)
Verified date | April 2024 |
Source | Johns Hopkins University |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Observational [Patient Registry] |
Magnetic resonance coronary angiography (MRCA) has its advantage in its ability to assess the coronary artery morphology without radiation or contrast media. The clinical application of MRCA is still challenging mainly because of technical limitations such as: its time-consuming image acquisition, inconsistent image quality, and low spatial resolution. Optimization of MRCA image acquisition method is in progress and compressed sensing (CS) with post-processing (de-noising) by deep learning reconstruction (DLR) is promising to solve these problems. The lack of a consensus method to assess the coronary stenosis on MRCA is another issue. Generally, a stenosis in MRCA is observed as a signal intensity (SI) drop along the artery compared to the healthy segments. A previous study has reported from its comparison of MRCA with coronary angiography (CAG) that the SI drop of 35% in MRCA stenosis lesion corresponded to the significant stenosis in CAG. Although this SI drop phenomenon was not observed in a different study on chronic total obstruction cases. One of the hypothesized reasons is that the SI drop in MRCA is affected not only by the stenosis severity but also the plaque characteristics, which is not assessable by CAG. To investigate this hypothesis coronary CTA is needed, which is a robust modality to assess coronary stenosis and plaque characteristics. Comparison between MRCA with CTA has the potential to give better information for developing a robust method to assess MRCA. In this study, the investigators aim to evaluate the feasibility of MRCA scanned with optimized protocol and post-processing, and to develop robust coronary artery assessment method on MRCA, by comparison with clinical coronary CTA.
Status | Active, not recruiting |
Enrollment | 50 |
Est. completion date | April 2025 |
Est. primary completion date | April 2025 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years and older |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: - Participants who underwent clinical coronary CTA within 6 months and allow the study to use the image. - Willing to sign a consent. - Overall health status is rated as good/healthy other than suspected coronary artery disease - Weight is <300 pounds - Not claustrophobic - Age: 18 or older - No clear contraindication against the sublingual nitro administration Exclusion Criteria: - Previous history of bypass surgery or percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) - Metal fragments in the eyes, brain, or spinal cord - Internal electrical devices, such as a cochlear implant, spinal cord stimulator, pacemaker, or defibrillator - Pregnancy - Claustrophobia - Unstable angina pectoris patients - Taking phosphodiesterase V inhibitors (If the participant is taking this medication for erectile dysfunction and allowed to stop it for 72 hours before the MRI, the participant can be included in this study.) - Contraindication to use sublingual nitro administration, such as occlusive glaucoma, known allergy or severe intolerance, critical aortic stenosis. Blood pressure is not included in the exclusion criteria, but when the SBP<110 mmHg just before the cardiac MRI, the participant will not be administered the sublingual nitro. |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United States | Division of Cardiology, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine | Baltimore | Maryland |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Johns Hopkins University | Canon Medical Systems, USA |
United States,
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Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | The SI drop (%) threshold that corresponds to the significant stenosis in coronary CTA. | MRCA signal intensity change compared to the proximal or distal segments of the coronary artery will be measured and compared with corresponding lesion of coronary CTA. The threshold of SI drop (%) which corresponds to the significant stenosis in CTA will be assessed. | After the last participant MRI scan, up to 6 months | |
Secondary | Semi-quantitative image quality assessment score for each segments in MRCA | Image quality assessed by categorical numbers score ranging from 1 to 4 with higher scores indicating better image quality. | After participant's MRI scan, up to 2 weeks | |
Secondary | Visible coronary length in MRCA | The length of the coronary arteries in mm that is visually assessable which are compared with coronary CTA | After participant's MRI scan, up to 2 weeks |
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