Assessment of Left Ventricular Function with Reduced Phase Cardiac CT Reconstructions: Preliminary Results from the CT-STEMI Study
Author Block: M. Moretti1, F. Troise2, A. Maiorana1, L. Blasi1, D. Verna1, T. D'Angelo3, M. Olivieri4, R. Faletti1, M. Gatti1; 1Torino/IT, 2Bari/IT, 3Messina/IT, 4Chieti/IT
Purpose: To evaluate the agreement between cardiac computed tomography (CCT) and cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) in assessing left ventricular (LV) function in post-STEMI patients, and to investigate the impact of CCT acquisitions on restricted R–R intervals, with a view toward potential prospective protocols.
Methods or Background: Forty-eight patients (mean age 62 ± 11 years, 87.5% male) were prospectively enrolled in the multicenter CT-STEMI study (NCT05941585, November 2023 – October 2024). Patients were randomized to undergo either CCT or CMR at 6.8 ± 1.8 days after STEMI, followed by the complementary exam within 5.3 ± 2.8 days. LVEDV, LVESV, and LVEF were measured using CVI42 software. The inclusion of true systolic and diastolic phases was assessed across 40–80%, 30–90%, and 30–100% R–R ranges, along with their corresponding functional estimates.
Results or Findings: Full-cycle CCT demonstrated excellent concordance with CMR (LVEF: 46 ± 11% vs 45 ± 10.9%, p=0.40). The 40–80% interval included 26/48 systolic and 2/48 diastolic phases, with a mean LVEF underestimation of –8.7% (p<0.0001). The 30–90% interval captured all systolic but only 5/48 diastolic phases, leading to an underestimation of –3.4% (p<0.0001). The 30–100% range consistently included both systolic and diastolic phases in all patients (48/48), providing functional measurements comparable to CMR.
Conclusion: CCT shows high agreement with CMR in the evaluation of LV function. However, a 40–80% acquisition window significantly underestimates LVEF. When precise functional assessment is required, extending the reconstruction range to 30–100% allows comprehensive and reliable analysis.
Limitations: These results should be interpreted in light of study limitations, including the small sample size, preliminary nature of the data, variable imaging timing after STEMI, reliance on a single software platform, and lack of outcome or radiation analysis.
Funding for this study: This research was supported by a grant from the Italian Ministry of Health under the “Ricerca Finalizzata 2021 – Giovani Ricercatori” program, project number GR-2021-12372092. The funding was allocated to the project titled “Cardiac Computed Tomography for Comprehensive Risk Stratification of Arrhythmic, Atherothrombotic, and Heart Failure Events Following Reperfused ST-Segment Elevation Myocardial Infarction”. The funder had no role in the design, data collection, analysis, or interpretation of this study
Has your study been approved by an ethics committee? Yes
Ethics committee - additional information: No additional information