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Diagnostic Performance of Coronary Angiography Derived Computational Fractional Flow Reserve.
Vardhan, Madhurima; Tanade, Cyrus; Chen, S James; Mahmood, Owais; Chakravartti, Jaidip; Jones, W Schuyler; Kahn, Andrew M; Vemulapalli, Sreekanth; Patel, Manesh; Leopold, Jane A; Randles, Amanda.
Affiliation
  • Vardhan M; Department of Biomedical Duke University Durham NC USA.
  • Tanade C; Department of Biomedical Duke University Durham NC USA.
  • Chen SJ; Department of Medicine University of Colorado Aurora CO USA.
  • Mahmood O; Department of Biomedical Duke University Durham NC USA.
  • Chakravartti J; Department of Medicine Duke University Durham NC USA.
  • Jones WS; Department of Medicine University of Colorado Aurora CO USA.
  • Kahn AM; Division of Cardiovascular Medicine University of California San Diego La Jolla CA USA.
  • Vemulapalli S; Department of Biomedical Duke University Durham NC USA.
  • Patel M; Department of Biomedical Duke University Durham NC USA.
  • Leopold JA; Division of Cardiovascular Medicine Brigham and Women's Hospital Boston MA USA.
  • Randles A; Department of Biomedical Duke University Durham NC USA.
J Am Heart Assoc ; 13(13): e029941, 2024 Jul 02.
Article in En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38904250
ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND:

Computational fluid dynamics can compute fractional flow reserve (FFR) accurately. However, existing models are limited by either the intravascular hemodynamic phenomarkers that can be captured or the fidelity of geometries that can be modeled. METHODS AND

RESULTS:

This study aimed to validate a new coronary angiography-based FFR framework, FFRHARVEY, and examine intravascular hemodynamics to identify new biomarkers that could augment FFR in discerning unrevascularized patients requiring intervention. A 2-center cohort was used to examine diagnostic performance of FFRHARVEY compared with reference wire-based FFR (FFRINVASIVE). Additional biomarkers, longitudinal vorticity, velocity, and wall shear stress, were evaluated for their ability to augment FFR and indicate major adverse cardiac events. A total of 160 patients with 166 lesions were investigated. FFRHARVEY was compared with FFRINVASIVE by investigators blinded to the invasive FFR results with a per-stenosis area under the curve of 0.91, positive predictive value of 90.2%, negative predictive value of 89.6%, sensitivity of 79.3%, and specificity of 95.4%. The percentage ofdiscrepancy for continuous values of FFR was 6.63%. We identified a hemodynamic phenomarker, longitudinal vorticity, as a metric indicative of major adverse cardiac events in unrevascularized gray-zone cases.

CONCLUSIONS:

FFRHARVEY had high performance (area under the curve 0.91, positive predictive value 90.2%, negative predictive value 89.6%) compared with FFRINVASIVE. The proposed framework provides a robust and accurate way to compute a complete set of intravascular phenomarkers, in which longitudinal vorticity was specifically shown to differentiate vessels predisposed to major adverse cardiac events.
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Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Predictive Value of Tests / Coronary Angiography / Fractional Flow Reserve, Myocardial Limits: Aged / Female / Humans / Male / Middle aged Language: En Journal: J Am Heart Assoc Year: 2024 Document type: Article

Full text: 1 Collection: 01-internacional Database: MEDLINE Main subject: Predictive Value of Tests / Coronary Angiography / Fractional Flow Reserve, Myocardial Limits: Aged / Female / Humans / Male / Middle aged Language: En Journal: J Am Heart Assoc Year: 2024 Document type: Article