MR may replace some invasive angios for kids with heart transplants.
Full article below.
SOURCE: www.healthimaging.com - July 18, 2012
Contrast-enhanced cardiac MRI may help determine whether
children who have had heart transplants are showing early signs of rejection,
according to results of a pilot study published July 12 in the Journal of
Heart and Lung Transplantation. The technique could reduce the need for
these patients to undergo an invasive coronary angiogram every one to two
years.
Physicians have relied on angiography to assess pediatric heart
transplant patients for transplant coronary artery disease (TCAD), which is the
primary complication that limits survival among this population.
However, repeat coronary angiogram can be problematic for these
patients. “Many of these children have undergone so many operations, we have
lost access to their big blood vessels,” Charles E. Canter, MD, professor of
pediatrics at Washington University in St. Louis (WUSTL), Mo., said in a
release. “Sometimes it’s impossible to do catheterization procedures on them.”
Samuel A. Wickline, MD, professor of medicine, cardiology
division at WUSTL, and colleagues hypothesized that cardiac MR would reveal
differences in coronary wall signaling intensity between transplant recipients
with angiographic evidence of TCAD and those without such evidence.
The study included 29 heart transplant patients and eight
healthy children who served as controls. The transplant patients underwent
standard coronary angiograms as part of their normal care. They also had MRIs
of the coronary arteries to examine whether the noninvasive method correlated
with the degree of coronary artery disease found in the angiograms. The eight
children who served as controls underwent only MRI. Researchers assessing the
MRI results were blinded to the results of patients’ angiograms.
Although all of the transplant patients’ angiograms showed
evidence of plaque build-up, only six were diagnosed with coronary artery
disease. Contrast-enhanced MR also indicated inflamed arteries and heart muscle
in these six patients, compared to both the transplant patients without
coronary disease and the healthy controls. The 23 transplant patients without
coronary disease showed greater coronary wall contrast-to-noise ratio than the
healthy participants.
The researchers noted the noninvasive method may not be
appropriate for all pediatric heart transplant patients, particularly children
with a metallic stent, vessel coils or severe renal insufficiency. It also may
be challenging to use cardiac MR among infants and young children due to their
higher resting heart rates and need for sedation.
“The results of this pilot study were very promising,” Canter
said. The researchers have planned additional studies to confirm and refine the
results. “I think eventually this could be used as a screening technique, not
so much to eliminate, but to reduce, the number of angiograms,” Canter
predicted.
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