Correlation of Coronary Calcium Measured on Conventional Computed Tomography with Coronary Angiography Findings in Lung Transplant Patients

<b>Introduction and objective:</b> The pre-transplant protocol for lung transplant candidates includes a chest CT scan to assess disease progression and often coronary angiography (CA) to rule out coronary artery disease (CAD). Coronary artery calcium is commonly observed in these pre-tr...

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出版年:Tomography
主要な著者: Sergio Tapia Concha, Concepción Fariñas-Álvarez, Pedro Muñoz Cacho, José Manuel Cifrian Martínez, Javier Zueco Gil, José Antonio Parra Blanco
フォーマット: 論文
言語:英語
出版事項: MDPI AG 2025-01-01
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オンライン・アクセス:https://www.mdpi.com/2379-139X/11/2/11
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author Sergio Tapia Concha
Concepción Fariñas-Álvarez
Pedro Muñoz Cacho
José Manuel Cifrian Martínez
Javier Zueco Gil
José Antonio Parra Blanco
author_facet Sergio Tapia Concha
Concepción Fariñas-Álvarez
Pedro Muñoz Cacho
José Manuel Cifrian Martínez
Javier Zueco Gil
José Antonio Parra Blanco
author_sort Sergio Tapia Concha
collection DOAJ
container_title Tomography
description <b>Introduction and objective:</b> The pre-transplant protocol for lung transplant candidates includes a chest CT scan to assess disease progression and often coronary angiography (CA) to rule out coronary artery disease (CAD). Coronary artery calcium is commonly observed in these pre-transplant CT scans. This study aims to evaluate the relationship between coronary calcium detected on CT and findings from CA to determine whether calcium presence could serve as an additional criterion for selecting patients for CA. <b>Material and Methods</b>: We included 252 consecutive lung transplant patients who had both a CT scan and CA within 365 days of each other. Coronary calcium quantification was performed using artery-based, segment artery-based, and visual assessment methods. CA findings were classified by stenosis severity: ≤20%, 21–70%, and >70%. <b>Results:</b> This study showed very high concordance (kappa = 0.896; 95% CI: 0.843–0.948) between the three methods, especially in distinguishing patients without and with coronary calcium (kappa = 1.000; 95% CI: 0.929–1.071). ROC analysis identified the absence of coronary calcium as the best cutoff to differentiate patients with ≤20% stenosis from those with >21%, with a sensitivity of 73.5%, specificity of 55.7%, PPV of 28.5%, and NPV of 90%. Only 11 patients (8.7%) without coronary calcium had stenosis of 21–70%, and only 2 (1.6%) had stenosis > 70%. <b>Conclusions:</b> The visual assessment method yielded results similar to the other two quantification methods. The absence of coronary calcium in pre-transplant CT may be a useful criterion for selecting patients for CA.
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spelling doaj-art-080c5b9de17d4e2292fa97b3859732ef2025-08-20T02:45:31ZengMDPI AGTomography2379-13812379-139X2025-01-011121110.3390/tomography11020011Correlation of Coronary Calcium Measured on Conventional Computed Tomography with Coronary Angiography Findings in Lung Transplant PatientsSergio Tapia Concha0Concepción Fariñas-Álvarez1Pedro Muñoz Cacho2José Manuel Cifrian Martínez3Javier Zueco Gil4José Antonio Parra Blanco5Department of Radiology, Hospital de Laredo, Av. Derechos Humanos, 40, 39770 Laredo, SpainQuality Unit, Hospital Universitario Marqués de Valdecilla, Av. de Valdecilla, s/n, 39008 Cantabria, SpainInstituto de Investigación Valdecilla IDIVAL, 39011 Cantabria, SpainInstituto de Investigación Valdecilla IDIVAL, 39011 Cantabria, SpainInterventional Cardiology Unit, Department of Cardiology, Hospital Universitario Marqués de Valdecilla, Av. de Valdecilla, s/n, 39008 Cantabria, SpainInstituto de Investigación Valdecilla IDIVAL, 39011 Cantabria, Spain<b>Introduction and objective:</b> The pre-transplant protocol for lung transplant candidates includes a chest CT scan to assess disease progression and often coronary angiography (CA) to rule out coronary artery disease (CAD). Coronary artery calcium is commonly observed in these pre-transplant CT scans. This study aims to evaluate the relationship between coronary calcium detected on CT and findings from CA to determine whether calcium presence could serve as an additional criterion for selecting patients for CA. <b>Material and Methods</b>: We included 252 consecutive lung transplant patients who had both a CT scan and CA within 365 days of each other. Coronary calcium quantification was performed using artery-based, segment artery-based, and visual assessment methods. CA findings were classified by stenosis severity: ≤20%, 21–70%, and >70%. <b>Results:</b> This study showed very high concordance (kappa = 0.896; 95% CI: 0.843–0.948) between the three methods, especially in distinguishing patients without and with coronary calcium (kappa = 1.000; 95% CI: 0.929–1.071). ROC analysis identified the absence of coronary calcium as the best cutoff to differentiate patients with ≤20% stenosis from those with >21%, with a sensitivity of 73.5%, specificity of 55.7%, PPV of 28.5%, and NPV of 90%. Only 11 patients (8.7%) without coronary calcium had stenosis of 21–70%, and only 2 (1.6%) had stenosis > 70%. <b>Conclusions:</b> The visual assessment method yielded results similar to the other two quantification methods. The absence of coronary calcium in pre-transplant CT may be a useful criterion for selecting patients for CA.https://www.mdpi.com/2379-139X/11/2/11lung transplantationcoronary artery diseasecoronary calciumcoronary calcium on computed tomographycoronary angiography
spellingShingle Sergio Tapia Concha
Concepción Fariñas-Álvarez
Pedro Muñoz Cacho
José Manuel Cifrian Martínez
Javier Zueco Gil
José Antonio Parra Blanco
Correlation of Coronary Calcium Measured on Conventional Computed Tomography with Coronary Angiography Findings in Lung Transplant Patients
lung transplantation
coronary artery disease
coronary calcium
coronary calcium on computed tomography
coronary angiography
title Correlation of Coronary Calcium Measured on Conventional Computed Tomography with Coronary Angiography Findings in Lung Transplant Patients
title_full Correlation of Coronary Calcium Measured on Conventional Computed Tomography with Coronary Angiography Findings in Lung Transplant Patients
title_fullStr Correlation of Coronary Calcium Measured on Conventional Computed Tomography with Coronary Angiography Findings in Lung Transplant Patients
title_full_unstemmed Correlation of Coronary Calcium Measured on Conventional Computed Tomography with Coronary Angiography Findings in Lung Transplant Patients
title_short Correlation of Coronary Calcium Measured on Conventional Computed Tomography with Coronary Angiography Findings in Lung Transplant Patients
title_sort correlation of coronary calcium measured on conventional computed tomography with coronary angiography findings in lung transplant patients
topic lung transplantation
coronary artery disease
coronary calcium
coronary calcium on computed tomography
coronary angiography
url https://www.mdpi.com/2379-139X/11/2/11
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