2024
Association between 82Rb positron emission tomography-derived regional myocardial blood flow, severity of angiographic coronary artery stenosis, and mortality in patients with chest pain
Gallegos C, Paredes C, Hu J, Posada E, Saito Y, Lansky A, Shah S, Liu Y, Smolderen K, Mena-Hurtado C, Sinusas A, Miller E. Association between 82Rb positron emission tomography-derived regional myocardial blood flow, severity of angiographic coronary artery stenosis, and mortality in patients with chest pain. Advances In Radiotherapy & Nuclear Medicine 2024, 2: 3786. DOI: 10.36922/arnm.3786.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMyocardial flow reserveGlobal myocardial flow reserveQuantitative coronary angiographyAssociated with increased all-cause mortalityPositron emission tomographyCoronary artery stenosis severityMyocardial blood flowAll-Cause MortalityCoronary angiographyChest painStenosis severityAngiographic coronary artery stenosisResting myocardial blood flowAcute chest painBlood flowInvasive coronary angiographyLeft circumflex arteryLeft descending arteryRight coronary arteryCoronary artery stenosisStress testCoronary stenosis severityCardiovascular eventsDescending arteryWeak correlation
2022
Angiographic Lesion Discordance in Women Presenting With Ischemic Heart Disease: Comparison of Visual Assessment, Quantitative Coronary Angiography, and Quantitative Flow Ratio.
Gitto M, Saito Y, Taoutel R, Schneider MD, Papoutsidakis N, Ardito S, Henry G, Cristea E, Lansky AJ, Altin SE. Angiographic Lesion Discordance in Women Presenting With Ischemic Heart Disease: Comparison of Visual Assessment, Quantitative Coronary Angiography, and Quantitative Flow Ratio. Journal Of Invasive Cardiology 2022, 34: e202-e209. PMID: 35089162, DOI: 10.25270/jic/21.00146.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsQuantitative coronary angiographyIschemic heart diseaseQuantitative flow ratioStress perfusion imagingDiameter stenosisCoronary angiographyIschemic symptomsCoronary revascularizationHeart diseasePerfusion imagingStenosis severityIndependent core laboratoryCohort of womenVisual assessmentCoronary stenosis severityConsecutive patientsAngiographic severityCoronary stenosisLesion assessmentClinical practiceCore laboratoryLesionsAngiographyWomenBlinded operators
2020
TCT CONNECT-208 Accuracy of Quantitative Coronary Angiography and Visual Assessment for Predicting Functionally Significant Stenoses in Women With Chronic Coronary Syndrome
Gitto M, Taoutel R, Schneider M, Papoutsidakis N, Ardito S, Cristea E, Lansky A, Altin S. TCT CONNECT-208 Accuracy of Quantitative Coronary Angiography and Visual Assessment for Predicting Functionally Significant Stenoses in Women With Chronic Coronary Syndrome. Journal Of The American College Of Cardiology 2020, 76: b88. DOI: 10.1016/j.jacc.2020.09.223.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchChronic coronary syndromeQuantitative coronary angiographyCoronary syndromeCoronary angiographySignificant stenosisVisual assessmentStenosisAngiographySyndromeWomenShear Stress Estimated by Quantitative Coronary Angiography Predicts Plaques Prone to Progress and Cause Events
Bourantas CV, Zanchin T, Torii R, Serruys PW, Karagiannis A, Ramasamy A, Safi H, Coskun AU, Koning G, Onuma Y, Zanchin C, Krams R, Mathur A, Baumbach A, Mintz G, Windecker S, Lansky A, Maehara A, Stone PH, Raber L, Stone GW. Shear Stress Estimated by Quantitative Coronary Angiography Predicts Plaques Prone to Progress and Cause Events. JACC Cardiovascular Imaging 2020, 13: 2206-2219. PMID: 32417338, DOI: 10.1016/j.jcmg.2020.02.028.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsHigh endothelial shear stressEndothelial shear stressLipid-rich plaquesPlaque burdenCardiovascular eventsPlaque characteristicsMajor adverse cardiovascular eventsSmaller minimum lumen areaLow endothelial shear stressHigh-risk anatomyAdverse cardiovascular eventsUseful prognostic informationQuantitative coronary angiographyMinimum lumen areaPrediction of lesionsLipid-rich lesionsESS valuesCoronary angiographyIndependent predictorsMultivariable analysisHemodynamic variablesPrognostic valueVH-IVUSHemodynamic indicesPrognostic informationPredictive value of the QFR in detecting vulnerable plaques in non-flow limiting lesions: a combined analysis of the PROSPECT and IBIS-4 study
Safi H, Bourantas CV, Ramasamy A, Zanchin T, Bär S, Tufaro V, Jin C, Torii R, Karagiannis A, Reiber JHC, Mathur A, Onuma Y, Windecker S, Lansky A, Maehara A, Serruys PW, Stone P, Baumbach A, Stone GW, Räber L. Predictive value of the QFR in detecting vulnerable plaques in non-flow limiting lesions: a combined analysis of the PROSPECT and IBIS-4 study. The International Journal Of Cardiovascular Imaging 2020, 36: 993-1002. PMID: 32152810, DOI: 10.1007/s10554-020-01805-9.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAgedCoronary AngiographyCoronary Artery DiseaseCoronary CirculationCoronary VesselsDisease ProgressionFemaleHumansMaleMiddle AgedPlaque, AtheroscleroticPredictive Value of TestsPrognosisRadiographic Image Interpretation, Computer-AssistedRetrospective StudiesRupture, SpontaneousSeverity of Illness IndexTime FactorsUltrasonography, InterventionalConceptsVirtual histology intravascular ultrasoundQuantitative flow ratioMinimum lumen diameterMinimum lumen areaCoronary angiographyPlaque burdenIBIS-4 studyPrognostic informationVulnerable plaquesSmaller minimum lumen areaMajor adverse cardiac eventsVulnerable phenotypeAdverse cardiac eventsGreater plaque burdenPredictors of MACENon-culprit lesionsAdditional prognostic informationSmaller minimum lumen diameterUseful prognostic informationQuantitative coronary angiographyAdditive valueCardiac eventsPlaque characteristicsLesion severityAngiographic dataQUANTITATIVE FLOW RATIO ACCORDING TO THREE-DIMENSIONAL QUANTITATIVE CORONARY ANGIOGRAPHY DEFINED SEVERITY OF STENOSIS IN A COHORT OF WOMEN WITH STABLE CORONARY ARTERY DISEASE
Gitto M, Saito Y, Schneider M, Papoutsidakis N, Ardito S, McCarthy M, Cristea E, Lansky A, Altin S. QUANTITATIVE FLOW RATIO ACCORDING TO THREE-DIMENSIONAL QUANTITATIVE CORONARY ANGIOGRAPHY DEFINED SEVERITY OF STENOSIS IN A COHORT OF WOMEN WITH STABLE CORONARY ARTERY DISEASE. Journal Of The American College Of Cardiology 2020, 75: 177. DOI: 10.1016/s0735-1097(20)30804-4.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchDISCREPANCY BETWEEN VISUALLY ASSESSED AND QUANTITATIVE CORONARY ANGIOGRAPHY DERIVED DIAMETER STENOSIS IN A COHORT OF WOMEN WITH STABLE CORONARY ARTERY DISEASE
Gitto M, Saito Y, Schneider M, Papoutsidakis N, Ardito S, McCarthy M, Cristea E, Lansky A, Altin S. DISCREPANCY BETWEEN VISUALLY ASSESSED AND QUANTITATIVE CORONARY ANGIOGRAPHY DERIVED DIAMETER STENOSIS IN A COHORT OF WOMEN WITH STABLE CORONARY ARTERY DISEASE. Journal Of The American College Of Cardiology 2020, 75: 178. DOI: 10.1016/s0735-1097(20)30805-6.Peer-Reviewed Original Research
2019
P869Predictive value of the endothelial shear stress distribution in three-dimensional quantitative coronary angiography models in detecting vulnerable plaques
Zanchin T, Bourantas C, Torii R, Serruys P, Karagiannis A, Ramasamy A, Onuma Y, Mathur A, Baumbach A, Windecker S, Lansky A, Maehara A, Stone P, Raeber L, Stone G. P869Predictive value of the endothelial shear stress distribution in three-dimensional quantitative coronary angiography models in detecting vulnerable plaques. European Heart Journal 2019, 40: ehz747.0466. DOI: 10.1093/eurheartj/ehz747.0466.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchHigh endothelial shear stressEndothelial shear stressLow endothelial shear stressQuantitative coronary angiographyMinimum lumen areaPd/PaVulnerable plaquesPlaque burdenSmaller minimum lumen areaMajor adverse cardiac eventsLarge-scale prospective studiesBaseline plaque characteristicsHigh-risk anatomyAdverse cardiac eventsNon-culprit lesionsOnly independent predictorUseful prognostic informationHigh-risk plaquesESS valuesNC-MACECardiac eventsCoronary atherosclerosisCoronary angiographyIndependent predictorsMultivariable analysis
2018
Comparison of Physician Visual Assessment With Quantitative Coronary Angiography in Assessment of Stenosis Severity in China
Zhang H, Mu L, Hu S, Nallamothu BK, Lansky AJ, Xu B, Bouras G, Cohen DJ, Spertus JA, Masoudi FA, Curtis JP, Gao R, Ge J, Yang Y, Li J, Li X, Zheng X, Li Y, Krumholz HM, Jiang L. Comparison of Physician Visual Assessment With Quantitative Coronary Angiography in Assessment of Stenosis Severity in China. JAMA Internal Medicine 2018, 178: 239-247. PMID: 29340571, PMCID: PMC5838612, DOI: 10.1001/jamainternmed.2017.7821.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAgedAged, 80 and overChinaCoronary AngiographyCoronary StenosisCoronary VesselsCross-Sectional StudiesFemaleFollow-Up StudiesHumansIncidenceMaleMiddle AgedPercutaneous Coronary InterventionPractice Patterns, Physicians'Predictive Value of TestsProspective StudiesRisk AssessmentSeverity of Illness IndexTime FactorsConceptsPhysician visual assessmentPercutaneous coronary interventionAcute myocardial infarctionQuantitative coronary angiographyStenosis severityCoronary angiographyMean agePCI studiesMean percent diameter stenosisIndependent core laboratoryPercent diameter stenosisCross-sectional studyNon-AMI patientsStandard clinical practiceFractional flow reserveSubset of participantsQCA assessmentCoronary revascularizationMore stenosisCoronary interventionCoronary lesionsChina PatientCoronary angiogramDiameter stenosisMyocardial infarction
2016
Diagnostic Accuracy of Fast Computational Approaches to Derive Fractional Flow Reserve From Diagnostic Coronary Angiography The International Multicenter FAVOR Pilot Study
Tu S, Westra J, Yang J, von Birgelen C, Ferrara A, Pellicano M, Nef H, Tebaldi M, Murasato Y, Lansky A, Barbato E, van der Heijden LC, Reiber JH, Holm NR, Wijns W, Group F. Diagnostic Accuracy of Fast Computational Approaches to Derive Fractional Flow Reserve From Diagnostic Coronary Angiography The International Multicenter FAVOR Pilot Study. JACC Cardiovascular Interventions 2016, 9: 2024-2035. PMID: 27712739, DOI: 10.1016/j.jcin.2016.07.013.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAdenosineAdministration, IntravenousAgedArea Under CurveBlood Flow VelocityCardiac CatheterizationChinaComputer SimulationCoronary AngiographyCoronary StenosisCoronary VesselsEuropeFeasibility StudiesFemaleFractional Flow Reserve, MyocardialHumansHyperemiaJapanMaleMiddle AgedModels, CardiovascularMyocardial Perfusion ImagingPilot ProjectsPredictive Value of TestsPrognosisProspective StudiesRadiographic Image Interpretation, Computer-AssistedRegional Blood FlowReproducibility of ResultsROC CurveSeverity of Illness IndexTime FactorsUnited StatesVasodilator AgentsWorkflowConceptsQuantitative flow ratioHyperemic flow velocityReceiver-operating characteristic curveCoronary angiographyDiagnostic accuracyAngiographic percent diameter stenosisDiagnostic coronary angiographyProspective multicenter studyIndependent core laboratoryAdenosine-induced hyperemiaPercent diameter stenosisQuantitative coronary angiographyIntermediate coronary lesionsCharacteristic curveFractional flow reservePositive likelihood ratioOverall diagnostic accuracyNegative likelihood ratioDrug-induced hyperemiaLikelihood ratioCoronary lesionsMulticenter studyDiameter stenosisMaximal hyperemiaFlow reserve
2015
Bioabsorbable polymer‐coated sirolimus‐eluting stent implantation preserves coronary vasomotion: A DESSOLVE II trial sub‐study
Rusinaru D, Vrolix M, Verheye S, Chowdhary S, Schoors D, Di Mario C, Desmet W, Donohoe DJ, Ormiston JA, Knape C, Bezerra H, Lansky A, Wijns W, Investigators O. Bioabsorbable polymer‐coated sirolimus‐eluting stent implantation preserves coronary vasomotion: A DESSOLVE II trial sub‐study. Catheterization And Cardiovascular Interventions 2015, 86: 1141-1150. PMID: 25044635, DOI: 10.1002/ccd.25610.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAbsorbable ImplantsAgedCardiac Pacing, ArtificialCardiovascular AgentsCoronary AngiographyCoronary Artery DiseaseCoronary VesselsDrug-Eluting StentsEuropeFemaleHistorically Controlled StudyHumansMaleMiddle AgedNew ZealandPercutaneous Coronary InterventionPolymersProspective StudiesSingle-Blind MethodSirolimusTime FactorsTreatment OutcomeVasoconstrictionVasodilationConceptsZotarolimus-eluting stentsDrug-eluting stentsCoronary vasomotionII trialVasomotor dysfunctionFirst-generation drug-eluting stentsEndeavor zotarolimus-eluting stentsGeneration drug-eluting stentsCoronary vasomotor dysfunctionSirolimus-eluting stentsQuantitative coronary angiographyVessel diameterMaximal pacingCoronary angiographyZES groupCoronary arteryVasomotor responsesHistorical groupStent edgeNormal vasomotionPatientsPercent changeReference segmentsVasomotionSES groupA novel drug‐coated scoring balloon for the treatment of coronary in‐stent restenosis: Results from the multi‐center randomized controlled PATENT‐C first in human trial
Scheller B, Fontaine T, Mangner N, Hoffmann S, Bonaventura K, Clever Y, Chamie D, Costa R, Gershony G, Kelsch B, Kutschera M, Généreux P, Cremers B, Böhm M, Speck U, Abizaid A. A novel drug‐coated scoring balloon for the treatment of coronary in‐stent restenosis: Results from the multi‐center randomized controlled PATENT‐C first in human trial. Catheterization And Cardiovascular Interventions 2015, 88: 51-59. PMID: 26331782, DOI: 10.1002/ccd.26216.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAgedAngioplasty, Balloon, CoronaryBrazilCardiac CathetersCardiovascular AgentsCoated Materials, BiocompatibleCoronary AngiographyCoronary Artery DiseaseCoronary RestenosisFemaleGermanyHumansMaleMetalsMiddle AgedPaclitaxelPercutaneous Coronary InterventionRetreatmentStentsTime FactorsTomography, Optical CoherenceTreatment OutcomeConceptsTarget lesion revascularizationLate lumen lossIn-segment late lumen lossIn-stent restenosisSB groupScoring balloonBare metal stentsAngiographic in-segment late lumen lossCoronary bare metal stentTreatment of in-stent restenosisTreatment of coronary in-stent restenosisRate of binary restenosisCoronary in-stent restenosisAdverse cardiovascular eventsPresence of diabetesFollow-up quantitative coronary angiographyQuantitative coronary angiographyBlinded core labRandomized Controlled TrialsPrimary endpointSecondary endpointsCoronary angiographyMACE rateCardiovascular eventsLesion revascularizationRandomised study of a bioabsorbable polymer-coated sirolimus-eluting stent: results of the DESSOLVE II trial.
Wijns W, Vrolix M, Verheye S, Schoors D, Slagboom T, Gosselink M, Benit E, Donohoe D, Knape C, Attizzani GF, Lansky AJ, Ormiston J. Randomised study of a bioabsorbable polymer-coated sirolimus-eluting stent: results of the DESSOLVE II trial. EuroIntervention 2015, 10: 1383-90. PMID: 24801119, DOI: 10.4244/eijy14m05_03.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsZotarolimus-eluting stentsLate lumen lossStent late lumen lossOptical coherence tomographyII trialMajor adverse cardiac eventsMean late lumen lossClinical safety endpointPrimary efficacy hypothesisAdverse cardiac eventsPrimary efficacy endpointStent thrombosis ratesMean neointimal thicknessSirolimus-eluting stentsQuantitative coronary angiographyZES patientsEfficacy endpointPrimary endpointSafety endpointVolume obstructionCardiac eventsCoronary angiographyThrombosis rateZES groupStrut coverage
2013
Response to Letters Regarding Article, “Comparison of Clinical Interpretation With Visual Assessment and Quantitative Coronary Angiography in Patients Undergoing Percutaneous Coronary Intervention in Contemporary Practice
Nallamothu BK, Spertus JA, Lansky AJ, Cohen DJ, Jones PG, Kureshi F, Dehmer GJ, Drozda JP, Walsh MN, Brush JE, Koenig GC, Waites TF, Gantt DS, Kichura G, Chazal RA, O’Brien P, Valentine CM, Rumsfeld JS, Reiber JH, Elmore JG, Krumholz RA, Weaver WD, Krumholz HM. Response to Letters Regarding Article, “Comparison of Clinical Interpretation With Visual Assessment and Quantitative Coronary Angiography in Patients Undergoing Percutaneous Coronary Intervention in Contemporary Practice. Circulation 2013, 128: e463-e464. PMID: 24344070, PMCID: PMC8698215, DOI: 10.1161/circulationaha.113.005507.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsPercutaneous coronary interventionQuantitative coronary angiographyCoronary interventionCoronary angiographyClinical interpretationVisual assessmentPatientsAngiographyA Next-Generation Bioresorbable Coronary Scaffold System: From Bench to First Clinical Evaluation 6- and 12-Month Clinical and Multimodality Imaging Results
Verheye S, Ormiston J, Stewart J, Webster M, Sanidas E, Costa R, Costa J, Chamie D, Abizaid A, Pinto I, Morrison L, Toyloy S, Bhat V, Yan J, Abizaid A. A Next-Generation Bioresorbable Coronary Scaffold System: From Bench to First Clinical Evaluation 6- and 12-Month Clinical and Multimodality Imaging Results. JACC Cardiovascular Interventions 2013, 7: 89-99. PMID: 24139932, DOI: 10.1016/j.jcin.2013.07.007.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAbsorbable ImplantsAgedAged, 80 and overBelgiumCardiovascular AgentsCoronary AngiographyCoronary Artery DiseaseCoronary RestenosisDrug-Eluting StentsFemaleHumansLactic AcidMaleMaterials TestingModels, CardiovascularMultidetector Computed TomographyMultimodal ImagingMyocardial InfarctionNeointimaNew ZealandPercutaneous Coronary InterventionPolyestersPolymersPredictive Value of TestsProspective StudiesProsthesis DesignTime FactorsTissue ScaffoldsTomography, Optical CoherenceTreatment OutcomeUltrasonography, InterventionalVascular PatencyConceptsMultislice Computed TomographyQuantitative coronary angiographyOptical coherence tomographyBioresorbable coronary scaffoldsNeointimal volumeExcellent vessel patencyComposite of cardiac deathIntravascular ultrasoundAcute procedural successProspective multicenter studyAdverse cardiac eventsFirst-in-manPrincipal safety endpointTarget lesion revascularizationMultimodal imaging resultsMetallic drug-eluting stentsCoronary angiographyDrug-eluting stentsSafety endpointsMulticenter studyCardiac eventsConventional metallic drug-eluting stentsProcedural successCardiac deathCoherence tomographyA composite peripheral blood gene expression score has high sensitivity for obstructive coronary artery disease in a non-invasive imaging population and correlates with plaque burden and morphology by
Voros S, Thomas G, Bateman T, Mcpherson J, Lansky A, Douglas P, Ladapo J, Wingrove J, Elashoff M, Rosenberg S. A composite peripheral blood gene expression score has high sensitivity for obstructive coronary artery disease in a non-invasive imaging population and correlates with plaque burden and morphology by. European Heart Journal 2013, 34: p2413. DOI: 10.1093/eurheartj/eht308.p2413.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMyocardial perfusion imagingNon-calcified plaquePlaque burdenInvasive angiogramObstructive coronary artery diseaseQuantitative CTA analysisNon-diabetic patientsCoronary artery diseaseOverall plaque burdenQuantitative coronary angiographyNegative predictive valueGene expression scoreNeutrophil upregulationArtery diseaseCalcium scoreCoronary angiographyInvasive angiographyGES scoresCAD casesBlood samplesCTA analysisPatientsPerfusion imagingReferral pathsPredictive valueComparison of Clinical Interpretation With Visual Assessment and Quantitative Coronary Angiography in Patients Undergoing Percutaneous Coronary Intervention in Contemporary Practice
Nallamothu BK, Spertus JA, Lansky AJ, Cohen DJ, Jones PG, Kureshi F, Dehmer GJ, Drozda JP, Walsh MN, Brush JE, Koenig GC, Waites TF, Gantt DS, Kichura G, Chazal RA, O’Brien P, Valentine CM, Rumsfeld JS, Reiber JH, Elmore JG, Krumholz RA, Weaver WD, Krumholz HM. Comparison of Clinical Interpretation With Visual Assessment and Quantitative Coronary Angiography in Patients Undergoing Percutaneous Coronary Intervention in Contemporary Practice. Circulation 2013, 127: 1793-1800. PMID: 23470859, PMCID: PMC3908681, DOI: 10.1161/circulationaha.113.001952.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsQuantitative coronary angiographyPercent diameter stenosisPercutaneous coronary interventionDiameter stenosisCoronary interventionCoronary angiographyCoronary lesionsClinical interpretationAngiographic interpretationStenosis severityHigher percent diameter stenosisMedian percent diameter stenosisElective percutaneous coronary interventionMean differenceCoronary stenosis severityIntermediate lesionsUS hospitalsStenosisLesionsAngiographyPatientsInterventionSeverityVisual assessmentSuch findingsVery long-term follow-up of strut apposition and tissue coverage with Biolimus A9 stents analyzed by optical coherence tomography
Staico R, Costa M, Chamié D, Bezerra H, Armaganijan L, Costa R, Costa J, Siqueira D, Centemero M, Chaves Á, Tanajura L, Abizaid A, Feres F, Sousa J, Sousa A. Very long-term follow-up of strut apposition and tissue coverage with Biolimus A9 stents analyzed by optical coherence tomography. The International Journal Of Cardiovascular Imaging 2013, 29: 977-988. PMID: 23456358, DOI: 10.1007/s10554-013-0188-8.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAgedCardiovascular AgentsCoronary AngiographyCoronary Artery DiseaseCoronary RestenosisCoronary VesselsDrug-Eluting StentsFemaleHumansMaleMiddle AgedNeointimaPercutaneous Coronary InterventionPredictive Value of TestsProsthesis DesignSirolimusTime FactorsTomography, Optical CoherenceTreatment OutcomeUltrasonography, InterventionalConceptsOptical coherence tomographyLong-term follow-upDrug-eluting stentsVery late stent thrombosisCoherence tomographyStrut appositionPercentage of neointimal coverageTissue coverageIn-stent late lossNonparametric Mann-Whitney U testFisher's exact testMann-Whitney U testQuantitative coronary angiographyAssociated with lower ratesIn-stent obstructionIn-stent restenosisStent obstructionCoronary angiographyOCT analysisSafety endpointsExact testLate lossIncreased riskFirst generation drug-eluting stentsGeneration drug-eluting stents
2012
Long-Term Prognosis of Patients Presenting With ST-Segment Elevation Myocardial Infarction With No Significant Coronary Artery Disease (from The HORIZONS-AMI Trial)
Larsen AI, Nilsen DW, Yu J, Mehran R, Nikolsky E, Lansky AJ, Caixeta A, Parise H, Fahy M, Cristea E, Witzenbichler B, Guagliumi G, Peruga JZ, Brodie BR, Dudek D, Stone GW. Long-Term Prognosis of Patients Presenting With ST-Segment Elevation Myocardial Infarction With No Significant Coronary Artery Disease (from The HORIZONS-AMI Trial). The American Journal Of Cardiology 2012, 111: 643-648. PMID: 23261001, DOI: 10.1016/j.amjcard.2012.11.011.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsST-segment elevation myocardial infarctionSignificant coronary artery diseaseCoronary artery diseaseElevation myocardial infarctionArtery diseaseMyocardial infarctionGreater left ventricular ejection fractionMajor adverse cardiovascular eventsNet adverse clinical eventsAcute Myocardial Infarction trialObstructive coronary artery diseaseLeft ventricular ejection fractionLower body mass indexBaseline coronary angiogramAdverse cardiovascular eventsCoronary artery bypassMyocardial Infarction trialNormal coronary arteriesOutcomes of patientsAdverse clinical eventsPrognosis of patientsVentricular ejection fractionBody mass indexQuantitative coronary angiographyRate of deathA gender-specific blood-based gene expression score for assessing obstructive coronary artery disease in nondiabetic patients: Results of the Personalized Risk Evaluation and Diagnosis in the Coronary Tree (PREDICT) Trial
Lansky A, Elashoff MR, Ng V, McPherson J, Lazar D, Kraus WE, Voros S, Schwartz RS, Topol EJ. A gender-specific blood-based gene expression score for assessing obstructive coronary artery disease in nondiabetic patients: Results of the Personalized Risk Evaluation and Diagnosis in the Coronary Tree (PREDICT) Trial. American Heart Journal 2012, 164: 320-326. PMID: 22980297, DOI: 10.1016/j.ahj.2012.05.012.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsObstructive coronary artery diseaseCoronary artery diseaseMyocardial perfusion imagingGene expression scoreQuantitative coronary angiographyExpression scoreNondiabetic patientsArtery diseaseCardiac catheterizationCoronary angiographyBurden of CADSeverity of CADNoninvasive myocardial perfusion imagingProspective multicenter observational studyUnknown coronary artery diseaseSignificant coronary artery diseaseDiagnostic approachUnnecessary cardiac catheterizationMulticenter observational studyChest pain symptomsDiagnostic cardiac catheterizationAvailable noninvasive testsNoninvasive test resultsPositive predictive valueReliable diagnostic approach
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