Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2950685 Journal of the American College of Cardiology 2009 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

ObjectivesWe sought to identify prospectively the prevalence of significant ischemia (≥10% of the left ventricle [LV]) on exercise single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) imaging relative to workload achieved in consecutive patients referred for myocardial perfusion imaging (MPI).BackgroundHigh exercise capacity is a strong predictor of a good prognosis, and the role of MPI in patients achieving high workloads is questionable.MethodsProspective analysis was performed on 1,056 consecutive patients who underwent quantitative exercise gated 99mTc-SPECT MPI, of whom 974 attained ≥85% of their maximum age-predicted heart rate. These patients were further divided on the basis of attained exercise workload (<7, 7 to 9, or ≥10 metabolic equivalents [METs]) and were compared for exercise test and imaging outcomes, particularly the prevalence of ≥10% LV ischemia. Individuals reaching ≥10 METs but <85% maximum age-predicted heart rate were also assessed.ResultsOf these 974 subjects, 473 (48.6%) achieved ≥10 METs. This subgroup had a very low prevalence of significant ischemia (2 of 473, 0.4%). Those attaining <7 METs had an 18-fold higher prevalence (7.1%, p < 0.001). Of the 430 patients reaching ≥10 METs without exercise ST-segment depression, none had ≥10% LV ischemia. In contrast, the prevalence of ≥10% LV ischemia was highest in the patients achieving <10 METs with ST-segment depression (14 of 70, 19.4%).ConclusionsIn this referral cohort of patients with an intermediate-to-high clinical risk of coronary artery disease, achieving ≥10 METs with no ischemic ST-segment depression was associated with a 0% prevalence of significant ischemia. Elimination of MPI in such patients, who represented 31% (430 of 1,396) of all patients undergoing exercise SPECT in this laboratory, could provide substantial cost-savings.

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