Subendocardial and Transmural Myocardial Ischemia: Clinical Characteristics, Prevalence, and Outcomes With and Without Revascularization

Elsevier

Available online 14 September 2022

JACC: Cardiovascular ImagingAbstractBackground

Subendocardial ischemia is commonly diagnosed but not quantified by imaging.

Objectives

This study sought to define size and severity of subendocardial and transmural stress perfusion deficits, clinical associations, and outcomes.

Methods

Regional rest-stress perfusion in mL/min/g, coronary flow reserve, coronary flow capacity (CFC), relative stress flow, subendocardial stress-to-rest ratio and stress subendocardial-to-subepicardial ratio as percentage of left ventricle were measured by positron emission tomography (PET) with rubidium Rb 82 and dipyridamole stress in serial 6,331 diagnostic PETs with prospective 10-year follow-up for major adverse cardiac events with and without revascularization.

Results

Of 6,331 diagnostic PETs, 1,316 (20.7%) had severely reduced CFC with 41.4% having angina or ST-segment depression (STΔ) >1 mm during hyperemic stress, increasing with size. For 5,015 PETs with no severe CFC abnormality, 402 (8%) had angina or ST-segment depression during stress, and 82% had abnormal subendocardial perfusion with 8.7% having angina or ST-segment depression >1 mm during dipyridamole stress. Of 947 cases with stress-induced angina or STΔ >1 mm, 945 (99.8%) had reduced transmural or subendocardial perfusion reflecting sufficient microvascular function to increase coronary blood flow and reduce intracoronary pressure, causing reduced subendocardial perfusion; only 2 (0.2%) had normal subendocardial perfusion, suggesting microvascular disease as the cause of the angina. Over 10-year follow-up (mean 5 years), severely reduced CFC associated with major adverse cardiac events of 44.4% compared to 8.8% for no severe CFC (unadjusted P < 0.00001) and mortality of 15.2% without and 6.9% with revascularization (P < 0.00002) confirmed by multivariable Cox regression modeling. For no severe CFC, mortality was 3% with and without revascularization (P = 0.90).

Conclusions

Reduced subendocardial perfusion on dipyridamole PET without regional stress perfusion defects is common without angina, has low risk of major adverse cardiac events, reflecting asymptomatic nonobstructive diffuse coronary artery disease, or angina without stenosis. Severely reduced CFC causes angina in fewer than one-half of cases but incurs high mortality risk that is significantly reduced after revascularization.

Key Words

coronary flow capacity

coronary flow reserve

coronary physiology

microvascular dysfunction

myocardial perfusion

positron emission tomography

revascularization

Abbreviations and AcronymsCFC

coronary flow capacity

ETT

exercise tolerance test

FFR

fractional flow reserve

LAD

left anterior descending

MACE

major adverse cardiovascular event

PCI

percutaneous coronary intervention

PET

positron emission tomography

STΔ

ST-segment depression

© 2022 The Authors. Published by Elsevier on behalf of the American College of Cardiology Foundation.

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