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Evaluating Pericoronary Adipose Tissue Attenuation to Predict Cardiovascular Events: A Multicenter Study in East Asians (JACC Asia January 2025)
Description

Background: Pericoronary adipose tissue attenuation (PCATA) is a novel imaging biomarker of pericoronary inflammation associated with coronary artery disease. Several studies have reported the usefulness of PCATA among people of European ethnicity; however, data are lacking concerning those of Asian ethnicity.

Objectives: This multicenter study aimed to evaluate the effect of PCATA on prognosis in East Asian patients.

Methods: Between August 2011 and December 2016, 2,172 patients underwent clinically indicated coronary computed tomography angiography (CTA) at 4 hospitals in Japan. Among them, 1,270 patients were analyzed. PCATA was evaluated using coronary CTA to measure pericoronary adipose tissue density surrounding the 3 major coronary arteries. The outcomes were composite cardiovascular events, including cardiovascular death and acute coronary syndrome; 33 cardiovascular events observed during a median follow-up of 6.0 years (Q1-Q3: 3.6-8.2 years).

Results: Right coronary artery (RCA)-PCATA was significantly higher in patients with cardiovascular events than in those without (−63.7 ± 8.9 HU vs −67.4 ± 9.1 HU, respectively; P = 0.021). High RCA-PCATA was significantly associated with cardiovascular events in a model that included the Hisayama risk score and adverse coronary CTA findings (HR: 1.55; 95% CI: 1.07-2.24; P = 0.019).

Conclusions: High RCA-PCATA showed significant association with future cardiovascular events after adjusting conventional risk factors and adverse coronary CTA findings in East Asian patients who underwent clinically indicated coronary CTA

 

JACC: Asia Editor-in-Chief 

Jian’an Wang, MD, PhD, FACC

CME Editor 

Kenneth A. Ellenbogen, MD

Author
Ioannis Dimarakis MD, PhD


Important Dates

Date of Release: January 7, 2025
Term of Approval/Date of CME/MOC Expiration: January 6, 2026

Summary
Availability: On-Demand
Access expires on Jan 06, 2026
Cost: FREE
Credit Offered:
1 CME Credit
1 ABIM-MOC Point
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