Computed tomography screening for heart disease

Waugh N, Black C, Walker S, McIntyre L, Cummins E, Hillis G
Record ID 32005000974
English
Authors' objectives:

To assess the clinical and cost-effectiveness of computed tomography (CT) screening for asymptomatic coronary artery disease; also to establish whether coronary artery calcification (CAC) predicts coronary events and adds anything to risk factor scores, and whether measuring CAC changes treatment.

Authors' recommendations: CT examination of the coronary arteries can detect calcification indicative of arterial disease in asymptomatic people, many of whom would be at low risk when assessed by traditional risk factors. The higher the CAC score, the higher the risk. Treatment with statins can reduce that risk. However, CT screening would miss many of the most dangerous patches of arterial disease, because they are not yet calcified, and so there would be false-negative results: normal CT followed by a heart attack. There would also be false-positive results in that many calcified arteries will have normal blood flow and will not be affected by clinically apparent thrombosis: abnormalCT not followed by a heart attack. For CT screening to be cost-effective, it has to add value over risk factor scoring, by producing sufficient additional information to change treatment and hence cardiac outcomes, at anaffordable cost per quality-adjusted life-year. There was insufficient evidence to support this. Most of the NSC criteria were either not met or only partially met. It would be useful to have more data on the distributions of risk scores and CAC scores in asymptomatic people, and the level of concordance between risk factor and CAC scores, the risk of cardiac events per annum according to CAC score and risk factor scores, information on the acceptability of CT screening, after information about the radiation dose, and an RCT of adding CT screening to current risk factor-based practice.
Details
Project Status: Completed
URL for project: http://www.hta.ac.uk/1444
Year Published: 2006
English language abstract: An English language summary is available
Publication Type: Not Assigned
Country: England, United Kingdom
MeSH Terms
  • Coronary Angiography
  • Mass Screening
  • Tomography, X-Ray Computed
  • Coronary Disease
Contact
Organisation Name: NIHR Health Technology Assessment programme
Contact Address: NIHR Journals Library, National Institute for Health and Care Research, Evaluation, Trials and Studies Coordinating Centre, Alpha House, University of Southampton Science Park, Southampton SO16 7NS, UK
Contact Name: journals.library@nihr.ac.uk
Contact Email: journals.library@nihr.ac.uk
Copyright: 2009 Queen's Printer and Controller of HMSO
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