» Articles » PMID: 29446681

Coronary CT Angiography: Use in Patients With Chest Pain Presenting to Emergency Departments

Overview
Specialties Oncology
Radiology
Date 2018 Feb 16
PMID 29446681
Citations 4
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Objective: Previously published reports have shown that coronary CT angiography (CCTA) is a more efficient method of diagnosis than myocardial perfusion imaging (MPI) and stress echocardiography for patients presenting to emergency departments (EDs) with acute chest pain. In light of this evidence, the objective of this study was to examine recent trends in the use of these techniques in EDs.

Materials And Methods: The nationwide Medicare Part B databases for 2006-2015 were the data source. The Current Procedural Terminology, version 4, codes for CCTA, MPI, and stress echocardiography were selected. Medicare place-of-service codes were used to determine procedure volumes in EDs. Medicare specialty codes were used to ascertain how many of these examinations were interpreted by radiologists, cardiologists, and other physicians as a group.

Results: From 2006 to 2015, there was essentially no change in the number of MPI examinations performed in EDs for patients using Medicare (22,342 in 2006, 22,338 in 2015) or in the number of stress echocardiograms (3544 in 2006, 3520 in 2015). By contrast, the number of CCTA examinations increased rapidly, from 126 in 2006 to 1919 in 2015 (compound annual growth rate, 35%). Despite this rapid growth, patients in EDs underwent 11.6 times as many MPI as CCTA examinations in 2015. In that last year of the study, radiologists interpreted 78% of ED MPI and 83% of ED CCTA examinations.

Conclusion: Use of CCTA in EDs has increased rapidly, but far more MPI examinations are still being performed. This finding suggests that recently acquired evidence is not yet being fully acted upon.

Citing Articles

Nationwide Trends of Gatekeeper to Invasive Coronary Angiography in Suspected Coronary Artery Disease.

Cha M, Kim W, Won H, Joo J, Kim H, Kim I Korean Circ J. 2022; 52(11):814-825.

PMID: 36217588 PMC: 9643567. DOI: 10.4070/kcj.2022.0110.


Use of Coronary CT Angiography to Predict Obstructive Lesions in Patients with Chest Pain without Enzyme and ST-Segment Elevation.

Kim J, Kim Y, Shin Y, Ahn S, Kim W J Clin Med. 2021; 10(22).

PMID: 34830723 PMC: 8625085. DOI: 10.3390/jcm10225442.


Artificial Intelligence to Assist in Exclusion of Coronary Atherosclerosis During CCTA Evaluation of Chest Pain in the Emergency Department: Preparing an Application for Real-world Use.

White R, Erdal B, Demirer M, Gupta V, Bigelow M, Dikici E J Digit Imaging. 2021; 34(3):554-571.

PMID: 33791909 PMC: 8329136. DOI: 10.1007/s10278-021-00441-6.


Incidental Non-cardiac Findings in Coronary Computed Tomography Angiography: Is it Worth Reporting?.

Ramanathan S, Ladumor S, Francis W, Allam A, Alkuwari M J Clin Imaging Sci. 2019; 9:40.

PMID: 31538038 PMC: 6737442. DOI: 10.25259/JCIS_41_2019.