Coronary calcification improves the estimation for clinical likelihood of obstructive coronary artery disease and avoids unnecessary testing in patients with borderline pretest probability
Jia Zhou, Jia Zhao, Zhaoying Li, Hongliang Cong, Chengjian Wang, Hong Zhang, Xing Wang, Yanhe Ma, Chunjie Li, Zhigang Guo
Abstract
The 2019 European Society of Cardiology (ESC) guideline advocated an updated pretest probability (PTP) estimator, ESC-PTP model to facilitate decision-making in risk assessment of stable chest pain (SCP).1 For patients with borderline ESC-PTP (5–15%), clinical likelihood (CL) incorporating risk factors of coronary artery disease (CAD) other than age, sex, and type of SCP was introduced,1 but the most appropriate model to estimate CL of obstructive CAD in these patients still remains as a 'gap in evidence'.1 Recently, Winther et al.2 developed two models for the estimation of CL: risk factor-weighted CL (RF-CL) model and coronary artery calcium score (CACS)-weighted CL (CACS-CL) model. Consequently, we aimed to validate and compare the RF-CL model and CACS-CL model and investigate whether the addition of CACS would effectively avoid unnecessary cardiovascular imaging testing (CIT) among patients with borderline ESC-PTP in a coronary computed tomography angiography (CCTA)-based SCP cohort. Details...