Annals
of Intensive Care volume 15,
Article number: 50 (2025) Published: 07 April 2025
Background
Emergency coronary angiogram after a cardiac arrest without
ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) is still a matter of debate.
To better select patients who may benefit from this procedure, we tested a
visual coronary artery calcification (VCAC) score available in chest CT to
predict significant coronary artery stenosis and/or culprit lesion or ad hoc or
delayed percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI).
Results
A total of 113 patients with cardiac arrest and without
STEMI who had a coronary angiogram and chest CT (January 2013 to March 2023,
Croix-Rousse Hospital, Lyon, France) were retrospectively included. VCAC was
scored from 0 (no calcification) to 3 (diffuse calcification) for each 4 four
main arteries (left main, left anterior descending, circumflex, and right
coronary artery). At baseline the median [interquartile range] age was 65.8
years [53.4–75.7], 61.9% were male, and 59.3% presented with ventricular fibrillation.
Coronary angiogram identified at least one significant coronary artery stenosis
in 32.7%, and ad hoc and delayed PCI were performed in 12.4% and 6.2% of the
patients, respectively. VCAC score was an excellent predictor of significant
coronary artery stenosis with an area under the ROC curve (AUC) of 0.95 (95%CI
[0.90-1.00]) and the optimal threshold was ≥ 4
(specificity 94.7%, sensitivity 91.9%). For the detection of culprit coronary
artery stenosis, the AUC was at 0.90 (95%CI [0.85–0.96])
and the optimal threshold was ≥ 5
(specificity 83.5%, sensitivity 87.5%). The AUC was 0.886 [0.823–0.948] (specificity 81.8%, sensitivity 85.7%) for ad hoc PCI and
0.921 [0.872–0.972] (specificity 85.3%,
sensitivity 88.9%) for both delayed and ad hoc PCI with a same optimal
threshold of VCAC ≥ 5. A VCAC
score ≥ 4 had a
sensitivity at 100% to predict a significant or culprit coronary artery
stenosis and ad hoc or delayed PCI.
Conclusions
The present study found that a non-dedicated CT thorax may
be useful to measure VCAC and if this is scored ≥ 4 it allows
physicians to better select patients resuscitated from cardiac arrest with
non-STEMI and without history of coronary artery disease who may benefit from
an emergency coronary angiogram to detect a significant or culprit coronary
artery stenosis and had PCI if appropriate.
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