Article Text
Statistics from Altmetric.com
Learning objectives
To provide readers an overview of technical advances in CT which have optimised safety allowing for broader cardiac application.
To understand appropriate and relevant clinical indications and patient selection for CT coronary angiography.
To recognise the potential utility of CT for cardiac valve evaluation and guidance of interventions.
Since its initial introduction about two decades ago, cardiac computed tomography (CCT) has rapidly evolved into one of the most versatile imaging modalities for evaluation of the cardiovascular system. Technical advances including prospective ECG gating, padding, variable pitch, weight-based lowering of tube potential (70 peak kilovoltage (kVp) in select patients) and iterative reconstruction algorithms have led to substantial improvement in image quality while reducing radiation exposure and contrast dose.1–3 Even though 64-slice systems are adequate for most CCT applications, 256-slice and 320-slice systems allow full volume acquisition in one to two cardiac cycles with superior image quality while significantly reducing radiation dose.4 ,5 Dual-source CT systems provide even higher temporal resolution virtually eliminating artefacts caused by high heart rates.6 More recently, multienergy CT has shown the potential for improved characterisation of atherosclerotic plaque and myocardial perfusion imaging.7 ,8
Applications of CCT
Coronary artery imaging
Coronary artery calcification scoring
Accurate quantification of the extent of coronary artery calcification can be performed using ECG-gated non-contrast CT with reasonably low radiation exposure. Coronary artery calcification scoring (CACS) is an established and extensively validated imaging biomarker for cardiovascular risk,9 allowing enhanced risk reclassification for the prediction of all-cause mortality and cardiac-specific mortality in asymptomatic subjects.10–12 The 2010 American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association guidelines recognise CACS as a Class IIa recommendation for screening of asymptomatic adults with intermediate risk (10–20%, 10 years based on Framingham Risk Score) and patients with diabetes; Class IIb recommendation for low-risk individuals (6–10%, 10 years risk) and for individuals who have a family history …
Footnotes
Contributors All authors participated in the organisation, drafting and review of this review manuscript.
Competing interests None declared.
Provenance and peer review Commissioned; externally peer reviewed.