Conference Coverage

VIDEO: FFR-CT could redefine interventional cardiology


 

AT THE ESC CONGRESS 2015

References

LONDON – A potential revolution may be underway in how patients with stable, new-onset chest pain are selected for invasive cardiac catheterization.

Fractional flow reserve–computed tomography (FFR-CT) utilized sophisticated computer software to noninvasively assess both coronary anatomy and function in symptomatic, intermediate-risk patients in the randomized PLATFORM trial. It proved a safe alternative to conventional invasive diagnostic cardiac catheterization in the 584-patient, 11-center study, Dr. Pamela S. Douglas said in an interview during the annual congress of the European Society of Cardiology.

Using FFR-CT safely resulted in cancellation of 61% of planned diagnostic catheterizations on the basis of finding no obstructive CAD lesions, explained Dr. Douglas of Duke University, Durham, N.C.

The big remaining question now concerns the cost-effectiveness of the HeartFlow FFR-CT method, now commercially available in both the United States and Europe. Those embargoed data will be presented by Dr. Mark A. Hlatky of Stanford (Calif.) University at the Transcatheter Cardiovascular Therapeutics (TCT) conference in San Francisco in October.

The video associated with this article is no longer available on this site. Please view all of our videos on the MDedge YouTube channel.

bjancin@frontlinemedcom.com

Recommended Reading

FDA clears noninvasive method of obtaining FFR measurements
MDedge Emergency Medicine
Hospitalization for pneumonia raises CVD risk
MDedge Emergency Medicine
Tide turns in favor of multivessel PCI in STEMI
MDedge Emergency Medicine
SCOT-HEART: CT angiography scores big in stable chest pain
MDedge Emergency Medicine
VIDEO: Did the PROMISE trial keep its promise?
MDedge Emergency Medicine
AHA/ACC updates hypertension guidelines for CAD patients
MDedge Emergency Medicine
‘Mossy Oak sign’ suggests delayed anaphylaxis to red meat
MDedge Emergency Medicine
Costs a wash between CTA and functional chest pain testing
MDedge Emergency Medicine
Chest pain: Risks of evaluation may outweigh benefits
MDedge Emergency Medicine
FDA approves cangrelor, an intravenous antiplatelet drug
MDedge Emergency Medicine