Abstract
Coronary
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F-sodium fluoride (
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F-fluoride) uptake is a marker of both atherosclerotic disease activity and disease progression. It is currently unknown whether there are rapid temporal changes in coronary
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F-fluoride uptake and whether these are more marked in those with clinically unstable coronary artery disease. This study aimed to determine the natural history of coronary
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F-fluoride uptake over 12 mo in patients with either advanced chronic coronary artery disease or a recent myocardial infarction.
Methods:
Patients with established multivessel coronary artery disease and either chronic disease or a recent acute myocardial infarction underwent coronary
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F-fluoride PET and CT angiography, which was repeated at 3, 6, or 12 mo. Coronary
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F-fluoride uptake was assessed in each vessel by measuring the coronary microcalcification activity (CMA). Coronary calcification was quantified by measuring calcium score, mass, and volume.
Results:
Fifty-nine patients had chronic coronary artery disease (median age, 68 y; 93% male), and 52 patients had a recent myocardial infarction (median age, 65 y; 83% male). Reflecting the greater burden of coronary artery disease, baseline CMA values were higher in those with chronic coronary artery disease. Coronary
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F-fluoride uptake (CMA > 0) was associated with higher baseline calcium scores (294 Agatston units [AU] [interquartile range, 116–483 AU] vs. 72 AU [interquartile range, 8–222 AU];
P
< 0.001) and more rapid progression of coronary calcification scores (39 AU [interquartile range, 10–82 AU] vs. 12 AU [interquartile range, 1–36 AU];
P
< 0.001) than was the absence of uptake (CMA = 0). Coronary
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F-fluoride uptake did not markedly alter over the course of 3, 6, or 12 mo in patients with either chronic coronary artery disease or a recent myocardial infarction.
Conclusion:
Coronary
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F-fluoride uptake is associated with the severity and progression of coronary artery disease but does not undergo a rapid dynamic change in patients with chronic or unstable coronary artery disease. This finding suggests that coronary
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F-fluoride uptake is a temporally stable marker of established and progressive disease.