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Combined Supine/Prone Acquisitions in Stress-First/Stress-Only Myocardial Perfusion Imaging to Reduce Equivocal Results

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Coronary Artery Disease
Interventions
Device: Gamma Camera
Procedure: Prone Imaging
Registration Number
NCT02576886
Lead Sponsor
Hamilton Health Sciences Corporation
Brief Summary

Participants are being asked to participate in this research study because the participant's doctor has ordered a myocardial perfusion SPECT (Single-Photon Emission Computed Tomography) scan to look at the blood flow in the participants heart.

Myocardial perfusion imaging is a proven test that looks at the blood flow to the participant's heart after the injection of a radioactive tracer. The standard test requires two injections of the radioactive tracer and takes images of the participant's heart at rest and after a stress test. It has been proposed that in some cases, patients could have images done only after the stress portion of the test and, if normal, the rest images would not need to be done. In this case, only one injection of the radioactive tracer would be needed. It has further been proposed that adding another stress image made with the participant lying on their stomach, will increase the confidence of the reporting doctor in reporting stress images.

The purpose of this study is to find out if the extra information added from the image with the participant on their stomach helps the doctor when reporting the test results.

Detailed Description

Successfully implementing a SFSO-MPI protocol requires a validated pre-screening tool and a proven imaging protocol that aids the physician in reporting the study with confidence. The investigator's previous study, entitled "The feasibility of Stress-First/Stress-Only Myocardial Perfusion Imaging to reduce patient radiation exposure in a selected subset of patients undergoing testing in a tertiary care facility (SFSO-MPI)", was designed to validate a pre-screening tool developed by Duvall et al. In the investigator's population the tool demonstrated sensitivity and specificity (95% CI) of 0.79 (0.74-0.83) and 0.55 (0.48-0.62) (unpublished data). The sensitivity was lower than previous published. However the investigators noted that a greater proportion of participants were classified as abnormal (55% vs 31 and 36% in the two cohorts described by Duvall et al) and a high number of patients (15%) were reported as having equivocal stress images. These factors may have affected the sensitivity of the pre-screening tool. A greater proportion of the investigator's participants would then have required a rest study for proper interpretation of the test. Additional imaging increases the patients' radiation exposure and time requirement for the study and affects the proper allocation of department resources.

The department routinely images patients in only the supine position. The implementation of routine combined supine/prone imaging is expected to decrease image artifacts which may reduce the number of studies reported as equivocal. If combined supine/prone imaging is successful in changing the interpretation of a significant proportion of equivocal stress studies to normal, then the need for rest imaging will be obviated in a larger group of patients, resulting in reduced radiation dose to patients and medical staff, better laboratory efficiency due to faster throughput, reduced time commitment for patients and lower radiopharmaceutical cost. This change to practice will also further aid meeting the American Society of Nuclear Cardiology (ASNC) goal of no more than 9mSv patient exposure in 50% of studies.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
490
Inclusion Criteria
  • Any patient referred for a clinically indicated rest/stress myocardial perfusion imaging test
Exclusion Criteria
  • None

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
SINGLE_GROUP
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Supine/Prone ImagingProne ImagingThe patient will be imaged in the standard supine position and then an additional image will be acquired of the patient in the prone position.
Supine/Prone ImagingGamma CameraThe patient will be imaged in the standard supine position and then an additional image will be acquired of the patient in the prone position.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Performance of the screening tool for each imaging protocol will be evaluated in terms of sensitivity and specificity to predict an unsuccessful SFSO study.day of test

The performance of the screening tool with supine-only and combined supine-prone imaging will be compared with a McNemar Chi-squared test for each of Group 1 and Group 2 to determine if the combined imaging protocol reduces equivocal results.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Negative predictive value (i.e. the likelihood of successfully predicting a normal MPI based on the screening tool and a normal stress test) will be calculated for each of Group 1 and Group 2 with supine, and supine/prone imaging.day of test

The results for each group will be compared using a paired t-test, while results across groups will be compared using an unpaired t-test.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Hamilton Health Sciences - Hamilton General Site

🇨🇦

Hamilton, Ontario, Canada

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