News

Coronary Calcium Score May Underestimate CV Risk


 

ORLANDO, FLA. — Reference norms for coronary artery calcium may be significantly lower than previously believed, Axel Schmermund, M.D., said at the annual meeting of the American College of Cardiology.

This new finding means that a fair number of patients deemed not to have a clinically significant amount of coronary artery calcium (CAC) on electron beam computed tomography (EBCT) for the detection of subclinical atherosclerosis may in truth have more than the average amount for their age—and thus may be at increased risk, explained Dr. Schmermund of the West German Heart Center at the University of Essen.

Until now, the reference standards applied throughout the world in using EBCT for the measurement of CAC as a means of stratifying coronary risk have relied principally on data from four large prospective U.S. studies. The studies involved subjects referred by their physicians or self-referred for EBCT, and hence are subject to several major types of bias.

Dr. Schmermund presented baseline data from the 4,259-subject Heinz Nixdorf RECALL (Risk Factors, Evaluation of Coronary Calcium and Lifestyle) study, the first large prospective study of CAC measurement in an unselected population. “Our subjects were strictly unselected. We approached them, not the other way around,” he noted.

The investigators found the distribution of CAC scores in their German population-based study differed significantly from that in the U.S. studies.

“Compared with American values, the Heinz Nixdorf values for the 50th percentile are all lower, at least in the higher age groups. There is an age shift of approximately 5 years,” Dr. Schmermund said.

This means, for example, that a 67-year-old man with a CAC Agatston score of 150 would be below the age-matched median using the widely cited American reference cohorts—but above the median value using the Heinz Nixdorf data as the reference norm.

Dr. Schmermund said it would be a mistake for American physicians to rely on German CAC EBCT reference data to estimate the cardiovascular risk of U.S. patients, since the two populations differ in various ways. But the Heinz Nixdorf data raise a red flag regarding reliance on reference data that are based on referral populations.

The good news, he added, is that soon American physicians will for the first time have coronary artery calcium reference data obtained prospectively from an unselected, unbiased U.S. population, when the baseline data from the large prospective ongoing National Institutes of Health-sponsored Multiethnic Study of Atherosclerosis (MESA) are published.

Recommended Reading

Nuclear Scans Aid in Urgent Care Diagnosis of ACS
MDedge Cardiology
Hybrid PET/CT Camera Boosts Cardiac Imaging
MDedge Cardiology
New Agents, Methods May Change Heart Imaging
MDedge Cardiology
Prevalence of Valvular Heart Disease in the Elderly May Top 10%
MDedge Cardiology