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Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology
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Published Online
on December 15, 2005

Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology. 2005
Published online before print December 15, 2005, doi: 10.1161/01.ATV.0000200079.18690.60
A more recent version of this article appeared on March 1, 2006
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Submitted on September 1, 2005
Accepted on November 28, 2005

A Negative Carotid Plaque Area Test Is Superior to Other Noninvasive Atherosclerosis Studies for Reducing the Likelihood of Having Underlying Significant Coronary Artery Disease

Robert D. Brook *; Robert L. Bard ; Smita Patel ; Melvyn Rubenfire ; Nicholas S. Clarke ; Ella A. Kazerooni ; Thomas W. Wakefield ; Peter K. Henke ; and Kim A. Eagle

From the Division of Cardiovascular Medicine (R.D.B., R.L.B., M.R., N.S.C., K.A.E.), Department of Internal Medicine, the Division of Thoracic Radiology (S.P., E.A.K.), Department of Radiology, and the Division of Vascular Surgery (T.W.W., P.K.H.), Department of Surgery, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: robdbrok{at}umich.edu.

Objective--Coronary calcium score (CCS), carotid plaque area (CPA), intima-media thickness (IMT), and C-reactive protein (CRP) are independent predictors of cardiovascular prognosis. Although each test may enhance risk stratification, their comparative abilities to screen for underlying coronary stenoses in individual patients is less established.

Methods and Results--Forty-two patients who had a 16-slice coronary computed tomography angiogram (CTA) performed were invited to have CPA, IMT, and CRP measured. CPA was defined as the sum of all the cross-sectional areas of each plaque >1 mm in diameter found in all carotid vessels bilaterally. CCS and the number plus degree of stenotic coronary arteries were determined by CTA. The presence of clinically significant coronary artery disease (CAD) was defined as the existence of any stenosis ≥50%. CTA identified clinically significant CAD in 43% of the patients. CPA >0 was more sensitive (72%) and specific (58%) than a CCS >0 (58% and 55%) for identifying CAD. A "clean" carotid artery (CPA=0) provides a superior negative predictive value (74%) and likelihood ratio of a negative test (0.48) than all other studies, in particular versus a CCS=0 (65% and 0.72). The areas under the receiver-operator curves for CPA and CCS in relation to any CAD were similar (0.640 versus 0.675). Carotid IMT and CRP performed poorly compared with CPA and CCS. For detecting CAD in only the left main or left anterior descending artery, the negative predictive value and likelihood ratio of a negative test remained superior for CPA (87% and 0.33) compared with CCS (80% and 0.56). In our population with a prevalence of these coronary lesions of 30%, the post-test probability in any patient with a negative CPA result is reduced to 10%.

Conclusion--CPA determination is superior to CCS, IMT, and CRP in its ability to reduce the likelihood of clinically significant underlying CAD in patients of varying cardiac risk.




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