Adenosine Stress Myocardial Contrast Echocardiography for the Detection of Coronary Artery Disease: A Comparison With Coronary Angiography and Cardiac Magnetic Resonance

Ranjit Arnold, Theodoros Karamitsos, Tammy Pegg, Jane Francis, Robert Olszewski, Nick Searle, Roxy Senior, Stefan Neubauer, Harald Becher, Joseph Selvanayagam

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    47 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    Objectives: To evaluate the accuracy of adenosine myocardial contrast echocardiography (MCE) in diagnosing coronary artery disease (CAD). Background: Adenosine stress echocardiography is not routinely used in the assessment of CAD. Since ultrasound microbubble contrast agents enable improved wall motion analysis and simultaneous assessment of myocardial perfusion, we sought to evaluate the diagnostic performance of combined wall motion/perfusion imaging with adenosine MCE in patients with suspected CAD. We evaluated the accuracy of adenosine MCE in identifying 1) the presence of anatomic disease, as defined by X-ray angiography, and 2) the functional significance of CAD, as determined by high field-strength (3-T), multiparametric cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) imaging. Methods: Sixty-five patients with suspected CAD were studied before angiography with MCE and CMR, at stress (140 μg/kg/min intravenous adenosine) and at rest. For MCE, 2-, 3- and 4-chamber long-axis images were acquired during intravenous sulfur hexafluoride infusion. For CMR, short-axis first-pass perfusion and delayed enhancement images were acquired following intravenous gadolinium–diethylenetriaminepentaacetic acid bolus injections (0.05 mmol/kg). Quantitative coronary angiography served as a reference standard for anatomic disease (significant CAD defined as ≥50% reference diameter in vessels with diameter ≥2 mm). Results: Compared with X-ray angiography, MCE provided diagnostic accuracy of 82%, sensitivity of 85%, and specificity of 76% for detecting significant coronary stenosis. Disease location was also identified with reasonable accuracy (diagnostic accuracy 81% for left anterior descending disease, 77% for left circumflex artery disease, and 84% for right coronary artery disease). With CMR as the reference standard for functional assessment, MCE provided diagnostic accuracy of 79%, sensitivity of 85%, and specificity of 74%. Interobserver agreement for MCE was 79% (95% confidence interval: 67% to 88%). Conclusions: Adenosine MCE achieved favorable diagnostic performance in identifying the presence and functional significance of coronary stenosis. Adenosine MCE may be useful in the clinical setting for evaluating patients with suspected CAD.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)934-943
    Number of pages10
    JournalJACC: Cardiovascular Imaging
    Volume3
    Issue number9
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - Sept 2010

    Keywords

    • adenosine
    • cardiac magnetic resonance
    • echocardiography

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