Coronary calcium level can predict coronary heart disease risk better
Researchers believe the new findings lead to coronary calcium tests becoming more accepted and covered by medical insurance.
Washington DC: According to a recent study, testing a patient's coronary calcium levels is a better predictor of blocked coronary arteries at risk for a heart attack. The study was presented at the American Heart Association Scientific Sessions 2018.
"With coronary calcium, we're looking at a marker indicating the actual presence of anatomic disease - we're not just looking at probabilities of disease based on a patient's standard risk factors. The risk factors are worth knowing, but they don't tell whether or not you actually have the disease," said Jeffrey L. Anderson.
Cardiovascular disease remains the greatest cause of morbidity and mortality in the United States, and determining who's most at risk continues to be suboptimal, said Dr. Anderson.
In the study, researchers at the Intermountain Medical Center Heart Institute identified 1,107 symptomatic patients who presented to the healthcare system without any known coronary artery disease and who had a PET-stress test to measure coronary flow, conducted as part of their diagnostic evaluation.
The PET/CT test also enabled a coronary calcium score to be measured. Based on the coronary calcium score and standard risk factors documented in their medical records, three different atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease risk scores were calculated: the standard Pooled Cohort Equation (based on traditional risk factors), the Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis (MESA) Risk Score (which combines coronary calcium and traditional risk factors), and the Coronary Calcium Score alone.
Researchers tracked those patients to identify who, based on PET scan results suggesting a blocked artery, went on to revascularization (a coronary stent or bypass surgery) and who had a subsequent heart attack or died during the subsequent two years.
They found that risk equations that included coronary artery calcium measurements, i.e., the MESA Score and the Coronary Calcium Risk Score, were better able to predict the presence of symptomatic coronary artery disease requiring revascularization than the Pooled Cohort Equation, which relies only on standard risk factors such as age, gender, blood pressure, and cholesterol measurements.
However, after the PET-scan results were acted upon, all three equations were only moderately successful in determining who over two years of follow-up would go on to die or have a heart attack. Noteworthy was that of the 29 patients who showed no coronary artery calcium, none had any major heart problems in the time-period tracked.
"Calcium in the artery doesn't tell you the extent of soft plaque, but it does mark that disease is present. These results tell us that coronary calcium adds importantly to probability estimates," Dr. Anderson said.
He also said the cost of coronary calcium screening is low, in the range of USD 100 or less, and should be considered in the future as part of routine medical care after age 50 for men and 55-60 for women.
"We accept that mammograms should be done for women and colonoscopies should be done for everybody at a certain age, and they're much more expensive than a calcium scan," he added.
Dr. Anderson hopes the findings lead to coronary calcium tests becoming more accepted and covered by medical insurance as a means to better predict who is at coronary risk, which not only will get high-risk patients into treatment earlier, but also keeps patients who aren't truly at risk from being overtreated.