Cardiac CT, MR, SPECT, ECHO, and PET: What test, when?

Dr. Al-Shehri is a Fellow in Cardiac Imaging, Department of Medicine (Cardiology), University of Ottawa Heart Institute, Ottawa, ON, Canada; Dr. Small is a Cardiac Imaging Fellow, Department of Medicine (Cardiology), University of Ottawa Heart Institute, Ottawa, ON, Canada; and Dr. Chow is the Co-Director of Cardiac Radiology, Director of Cardiac Imaging Fellowship Training, Associate Professor, Departments of Medicine (Cardiology) and Radiology, University of Ottawa Heart Institute, Ottawa, ON, Canada.

Dr. Chow is supported by CIHR New Investigator Award #MSH-83718.

Cardiovascular disease is the leading cause of morbidity and mortality in the Western world.1,2 With the aging of populations in developed countries and the industrialization of other nations, the prevalence of cardiovascular disease worldwide is likely to increase.3 Critical to management of symptomatic patients is the appropriate use of noninvasive diagnostic tests.

At the clinician’s disposal is a large armamentarium of tests, including treadmill stress tests, stress echocardiography (ECHO), myocardial perfusion imaging (MPI)—through both single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) and positron emission tomography (PET)—CT coronary angiography (CTA), and cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (CMR).

Though all are available for the diagnosis and prognostication of patients with suspected and documented coronary artery disease (CAD), selecting the “best test” can be daunting to clinicians.4 An understanding of the patient population, patient pretest probability of CAD, Bayes’ theorem, and the risk, benefits and limitations of each technology will enable the medical imaging professional to assist clinicians with test selection.

Functional versus anatomical imaging for CAD

Cardiac imaging modalities can be divided into 2 broad groups, though some overlap does exist (Figure 1). Modalities such as CTA and CMR angiography provide primarily anatomical data, allowing for the assessment of coronary stenosis. Alternatively, functional imaging modalities such as SPECT, PET, CMR, and stress ECHO provide measures of ischemia. The distinction between anatomical and functional imaging modalities is important because anatomical stenosis does not reliably predict ischemia or hemodynamic significance. Thus, the choice between anatomical and functional modalities potentially depends on the clinical question at hand.

Data from randomized trials suggest that low-risk, noninvasive tests have been associated with a hard annual cardiac event rate of <1%.5 These patients can safely be treated medically and investigated further only if their symptoms change or cannot be adequately controlled. This strategy was supported by the results of the Clinical Outcomes Utilizing Revascularization and Aggressive Drug Evaluation (COURAGE) trial, the largest randomized trial of patients with chronic CAD.6 A strategy of optimal medical therapy plus revascularization was not associated with improved outcomes compared with a strategy of optimal medical therapy in 2,287 patients. The nuclear substudy of the COURAGE trial, subsequently published by Shaw et al.7 confirmed the importance of the quantitative noninvasive assessment of perfusion on serial stress SPECT imaging in a subset of 314 patients from the COURAGE trial. Patients who had significant improvement in ischemia, regardless of whether it was achieved by optimal medical therapy plus revascularization or by optimal medical therapy alone, had fewer subsequent hard events (death or non-fatal myocardial infarction).

Patient selection and Bayes’ theorem

Noninvasive tests answer 2 fundamental questions important to patient care: What is the patient’s diagnosis and what is the patient’s prognosis?

Faced with a symptomatically stable patient, the clinician can estimate the patient’s likelihood of having CAD and risk of suffering a future cardiovascular event based upon the history, physical examination, and concomitant cardiac risk factors.8 However, patient diagnosis and prognosis can be further refined with noninvasive imaging.

More specifically an individual patient’s pretest likelihood for CAD can be calculated based upon age, gender and typicality of symptoms (Table 1). The assessment of a patient’s pretest is pivotal when deciding whether testing is indicated, selecting an appropriate test, and interpreting the test result.

Bayes’ theorem indicates that the post-test probability of a patient having CAD is based upon pretest probability and test accuracy (Figure 2).8 The interplay between pretest accuracy and diagnostic accuracy is of critical importance. In the ideal practice, all patients would have access to the “most accurate test,” and the discussion regarding test selection would be moot. Recognizing that this is not the case, clinicians can often tailor the selection based upon pretest assessment and results.

High pretest probability of CAD

In patients with a high pretest probability of, or already-documented, CAD, noninvasive anatomical imaging with CTA, or CMR angiography (MRA) may play a secondary role to functional imaging. More important to patient care is the understanding of a patient’s prognosis, which will provide pertinent information needed to guide therapy and determine the need for invasive angiography and revascularization. Patients deemed to be at high pretest probability of having CAD may be risk stratified by SPECT, PET, stress ECHO or CMR.

MPI: SPECT and PET

MPI with SPECT is a commonly available test. Though exercise is the stressor of choice, vasodilator stress is indicated in patients with left bundle branch block (LBBB), for those who cannot exercise, and those who cannot achieve their target heart rate.9,10 Vasodilators, such as adenosine and dipyridamole, can exacerbate bronchospasm; therefore, they are contraindicated in patients with severe asthma and are replaced with dobutamine. A meta-analysis of 79 studies totaling 8,964 patients showed an overall diagnostic sensitivity and specificity of SPECT MPI of 86% and 74%, respectively.11 SPECT has the ability to identify disease in individual coronary arteries, and since the perfusion abnormalities correlate closely with coronary artery perfusion territories, MPI can be used to direct coronary intervention.12 There is robust evidence supporting the prognostic value of SPECT MPI and its ability to risk stratify patients with suspected or documented CAD. Specific features identify patients at high risk of future cardiac events and thus enable selection of those patients most appropriate for invasive investigations and coronary intervention (Figure 3, Table 2).

PET is increasingly available and its accuracy appears to be superior to that of SPECT MPI. The mean sensitivity and specificity of PET in CAD diagnosis have been found to be 89% (83% to 100%) and 90% (73% to 100%), respectively.13-19 PET’s superior diagnostic accuracy is attributed to its better spatial resolution, coincidence detection, and accurate attenuation correction. Such advantages may be particularly relevant in the increasingly obese population, which is typically vulnerable to soft tissue attenuation artifact and has poor acoustic ECHO windows. Bateman et al. compared the diagnostic accuracy of Rb-82 myocardial perfusion PET to Tc-99m sestamibi SPECT. PET’s diagnostic accuracy was higher than SPECT’s (89% versus 79%) and was higher in all populations, including the obese patients. Furthermore, the researchers demonstrated that image quality was excellent in 78% of PET scans compared to 62% of SPECT studies.20 The benefits of PET, however, must be balanced by the financial pressures of modern healthcare systems and the need for fiscal restraint.

Data supporting the prognostic value of PET is mounting. Patients with a normal Rb-82 PET have very low cardiac event rates (0.09%/year) and the prognostic value of PET has been confirmed by others.21 The low-risk status of individuals with normal Rb-82 PET scans was confirmed by Yoshinaga et al. Yoshinaga et al. demonstrated that Rb-82 PET MPI has a prognostic value in obese patients and those with equivocal SPECT results.22

PET has the additional benefit of quantifying myocardial blood flow (MBF) using N13 ammonia, O15 water and Rb-82 z9F (Figure 4).23-26 The advantage of flow quantification is its potential ability to detect patients with balanced triple vessel disease and possibly to permit early detection of endothelial dysfunction. The diagnostic and prognostic value of quantitative coronary blood flow is being explored.

Cardiac MR

Some centers have adopted CMR for the diagnosis of CAD. Several CMR protocols exist, including first-pass gadolinium myocardial enhancement with vasodilator stress and dobutamine stress-induced wall motion studies.27 CMR offers several advantages over SPECT/PET; along with higher resolution, it does not suffer from soft tissue attenuation artifact, it does not require ionizing radiation, and it can be used to assess valve and ventricular function.28

Acceptable levels of sensitivity and specificity for stress-rest perfusion and wall motion have been recorded (91% sensitivity and 81% specificity for stress-rest perfusion),29 and both techniques appear to have prognostic value with a high event-free survival rate for a negative study (Table 2).30 Coronary stents, devices, and mechanical valves remain obstacles. In addition, cardiac arrhythmias and reduced capacity for breath hold will adversely affect image acquisition and subsequent image quality. Furthermore, approximately 5% of patients develop significant claustrophobia in the scanner.31 Finally, concerns have been raised about the use of gadolinium in patients with renal failure due to the risk of nephrogenic systemic fibrosis.32 Although MRA can be performed—and has been used with some success in clinical research—its role in clinical practice has not been well defined. Its sensitivity and specificity is inferior to that of CTA and its clinical utility is uncertain.33,34

Stress echocardiography

Stress echocardiography has been used to assess the functional significance of CAD35,36 and to risk stratify patients with known or suspected disease. Exercise and pharmacologic stress echocardiography are widely accessible, less expensive, and typically well tolerated.

Stress ECHO is appropriate for symptomatic patients with an intermediate pretest probability of CAD and contraindication to regular treadmill stress testing.36 Using stress ECHO, myocardial ischemia is characterized as a worsening or new wall motion abnormality. Specific diagnostic criteria for severe CAD can be identified by stress ECHO (Table 2).

Compared to invasive coronary angiography, exercise stress ECHO has a sensitivity of 79% to 85% and a specificity of 72% to 87% for the diagnosis of CAD.37 Quinone et al. reported that the sensitivity and specificity of exercise echocardiography were 85% and 88%, respectively, which was similar to exercise thallium (85% and 81%, respectively).38 Stress ECHO also has prognostic value, and a normal exercise ECHO confers an excellent prognosis. This was verified in a report of 1,325 patients who were followed after a normal study; the 1- and 3-year cardiac event-free survival rates were 99% and 97%, respectively.39 Even patients with a high pretest probability of CAD with a normal exercise echocardiogram had a lower event rate than those with an abnormal result.40 Though the extent and severity of exercise-induced left ventricular (LV) wall motion abnormality has been the main prognostic variable studied,41,42 the prognostic value of exercise ECHO is enhanced when coupled with exercise stress results.43 Similarly, dobutamine stress ECHO and dobutamine SPECT MPI provide comparable long-term prognostic information.44

As with routine ECHO, the accuracy of stress ECHO is greatly dependent upon local expertise. As well, study quality is limited by patient factors such as body habitus and adequate acoustic windows; however, the implementation of contrast agents may enhance ECHO accuracy.45 In the future, echocardiographic MPI may be used to supplement regional wall motion changes to augment the accuracy of this technique.

Intermediate pretest probability of CAD

The intermediate pretest population is the group most commonly encountered in the outpatient clinic setting and most likely to benefit from diagnostic and prognostic testing.

In these patients, it is important to confirm or refute the presence of CAD, and this can be achieved with any of the aforementioned tests or with CTA. In the current American College of Cardiology Foundation appropriateness criteria guidelines for cardiac CT and MR, CTA is deemed to be appropriate in the investigation of intermediate risk patients whose ECG cannot be interpreted or who are unable to exercise.46 In recent guidelines issued by the National Institute of Clinical Excellence in the United Kingdom, CTA is acknowledged to have a diagnostic role in providing anatomical diagnostic information in patients with suspected CAD.47

Although noncontrast-enhanced CT can detect calcific coronary atherosclerosis, it cannot accurately predict coronary stenosis (Figure 5). Conversely, contrast-enhanced CTA can provide information on subclinical atherosclerosis and coronary stenosis and this has proven to be of diagnostic and prognostic value, incremental to traditional risk stratification methods.48,49

For the diagnosis of CAD, CTA has proved to be comparable to invasive coronary angiogram and is highly sensitive and specific (Figure 6).48,50,51 Chow et al. studied 1,029 patients who underwent clinically indicated cardiac CT. Of these, 482 (46.8%) patients had stress tests performed within the preceding 3 months. CTA was requested to rule out CAD in 705 patients and/or to clarify equivocal stress test results in 251 patients. A total of 543 (52.8%) CTAs revealed no significant coronary stenosis and 37.7% were abnormal. A total of 148 patients underwent both CTA and clinically indicated invasive coronary angiography (ICA). The prevalence of obstructive CAD was 81%. CTA had excellent per-patient sensitivity (99%), positive predictive value (92%), and negative predictive value (95%) for CAD. Given CTA’s high negative predictive value, its greatest role may be to rule out CAD and restrict the use of ICA to diagnose CAD.48 However the specificity of CTA is reduced in the presence of coronary artery calcium if the Agatston score is >400.52-54

In addition to refining diagnostic accuracy in patients with suspected CAD, CTA also predicts the likelihood of coronary events and mortality. Prognosis is predicted by coronary anatomy (Table 2). Recent data suggest that CTA had incremental prognostic value over traditional risk factors. Ostrom et al. found that in symptomatic patients without known CAD, the diagnosis of significant (&ge;50% narrowing) stenosis on electron beam CTA was an independent predictor of mortality in a multivariable model adjusted for age, gender, cardiac risk factors, and coronary artery calcification.55 Werkhoven et al. demonstrated that in patients with suspected CAD and an intermediate pretest likelihood, CTA can efficiently make a distinction between patients at low or at high risk for future events.56 Recently, Chow et al. verified that incremental prognostic value of cardiac CTA could be achieved by the addition of the left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) and the total plaque score to CAD severity as determined by CTA.49

The limitations of CTA are its exposure to ionizing radiation, the necessity for a slow heart rate, arrhythmia, severe renal impairment, and allergy to contrast agents.57

Technological advances have lessened the dependence on slow heart rates and some scanners can image patients with atrial fibrillation. As well, radiation reduction techniques are being adopted and radiation doses have been reduced by using prospective gating.58-59

Low pretest probability of CAD

In patients with a low pretest probability of CAD, the appropriateness of noninvasive imaging remains uncertain. Currently, patients assessed by traditional risk stratification schemata like the Framingham risk score and pronounced to be of low risk are not routinely investigated with noninvasive imaging techniques. The AHA/ACC guidelines for exercise testing provides a IIb-graded recommendation in this population.8

Exercise treadmill testing (ETT) may be a useful investigation in that population to help ration access to other more expensive diagnostic testing if used appropriately. However, we recognize that the sensitivity and specificity for CAD detection is relatively poor (68% and 77%, respectively).60 Conversely, ETT still has prognostic value. The Duke treadmill score, which is [(exercise time (minutes) minus (5 x ST-depression (mm)) &ndash; (4 x angina score; (0 = no angina, 1 = non-limiting angina, 2 = limiting angina)], can identify patients at high risk of a future cardiac event.61 Other poor prognostic variables for severe CAD by exercise treadmill testing have been identified in Table 2.62-66

Conclusion

Accurate diagnosis and prognosis are important to patient care. Cardiac imaging modalities have very good accuracy with the potential to guide patient management (Table 3). Every patient should be evaluated clinically for pretest probability for CAD and risk of future cardiovascular events. Patients with intermediate and high pretest probability could potentially benefit from testing for either diagnosis or prognosis. Test selection should be based upon patient factors, recognizing that each technique has its limitations and that not all techniques are readily available. An algorithm can be used to guide clinicians through the myriad noninvasive modalities (Figure 7).

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