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Dive into the research topics where Pedro de Araújo Gonçalves is active.

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Featured researches published by Pedro de Araújo Gonçalves.


Circulation-cardiovascular Imaging | 2015

Long-term prognostic effect of coronary atherosclerotic burden validation of the computed tomography-leaman score

Saima Mushtaq; Pedro de Araújo Gonçalves; Hector M. Garcia-Garcia; Gianluca Pontone; Antonio L. Bartorelli; Erika Bertella; Carlos M. Campos; Mauro Pepi; Patrick W. Serruys; Daniele Andreini

Background— Computed tomography–adapted Leaman score (CT-LeSc) was developed to quantify coronary CT angiography information about atherosclerotic burden (lesion localization, stenosis degree, and plaque composition). The objective of the study is to evaluate CT-LeSc long-term prognostic value in patients with suspected coronary artery disease (CAD). Methods and Results— Single-center prospective registry including 1304 consecutive patients undergoing coronary CT angiography for suspected CAD. High CT-LeSc was defined by upper tertile (score, >5) cutoff. Segment involvement score and segment stenosis score were also evaluated. Hard cardiac events (cardiac death and nonfatal acute coronary syndromes) were considered for analysis. Different Cox regression models were used to identify independent event predictors. Kaplan–Meier event-free survival was evaluated in 4 patient subgroups stratified by obstructive (≥50% stenosis) versus nonobstructive CAD and a high (>5) versus a low (≤5) CT-LeSc. Of 1196 patients included in the final analysis (mean follow-up of 52±22 months), 125 patients experienced 136 hard events (18 cardiac deaths and 118 nonfatal myocardial infarction). All atherosclerotic burden scores were independent predictors of cardiac events (hazard ratios of 3.09 for segment involvement score, 4.42 for segment stenosis score, and 5.39 for CT-LeSc). Cumulative event-free survival was 76.8% with a high CT-LeSc and 96.0% with a low CT-LeSc. Event-free survival in nonobstructive CAD with high CT-LeSc (78.6%) was similar to obstructive CAD with high CT-LeSc (76.5%) but lower than obstructive CAD with low CT-LeSc (80.7%). Conclusions— CT-LeSc is an independent long-term predictor of hard cardiac events. Patients with nonobstructive CAD and high CT-LeSc had hard event-free survival similar to patients with obstructive CAD.Background—Computed tomography–adapted Leaman score (CT-LeSc) was developed to quantify coronary CT angiography information about atherosclerotic burden (lesion localization, stenosis degree, and plaque composition). The objective of the study is to evaluate CT-LeSc long-term prognostic value in patients with suspected coronary artery disease (CAD). Methods and Results—Single-center prospective registry including 1304 consecutive patients undergoing coronary CT angiography for suspected CAD. High CT-LeSc was defined by upper tertile (score, >5) cutoff. Segment involvement score and segment stenosis score were also evaluated. Hard cardiac events (cardiac death and nonfatal acute coronary syndromes) were considered for analysis. Different Cox regression models were used to identify independent event predictors. Kaplan–Meier event-free survival was evaluated in 4 patient subgroups stratified by obstructive (≥50% stenosis) versus nonobstructive CAD and a high (>5) versus a low (⩽5) CT-LeSc. Of 1196 patients included in the final analysis (mean follow-up of 52±22 months), 125 patients experienced 136 hard events (18 cardiac deaths and 118 nonfatal myocardial infarction). All atherosclerotic burden scores were independent predictors of cardiac events (hazard ratios of 3.09 for segment involvement score, 4.42 for segment stenosis score, and 5.39 for CT-LeSc). Cumulative event-free survival was 76.8% with a high CT-LeSc and 96.0% with a low CT-LeSc. Event-free survival in nonobstructive CAD with high CT-LeSc (78.6%) was similar to obstructive CAD with high CT-LeSc (76.5%) but lower than obstructive CAD with low CT-LeSc (80.7%). Conclusions—CT-LeSc is an independent long-term predictor of hard cardiac events. Patients with nonobstructive CAD and high CT-LeSc had hard event-free survival similar to patients with obstructive CAD.


Annals of Noninvasive Electrocardiology | 2011

Does continuous ST-segment monitoring add prognostic information to the TIMI, PURSUIT, and GRACE risk scores?

Pedro Carmo; Ferreira J; Carlos Aguiar; António Miguel Ferreira; Luís Raposo; Pedro de Araújo Gonçalves; João Brito; Aniceto Silva

Background: Recurrent ischemia is frequent in patients with non‐ST‐elevation acute coronary syndromes (NST‐ACS), and portends a worse prognosis. Continuous ST‐segment monitoring (CSTM) reflects the dynamic nature of ischemia and allows the detection of silent episodes. The aim of this study is to investigate whether CSTM adds prognostic information to the risk scores (RS) currently used.


Arquivos Brasileiros De Cardiologia | 2014

Cost-Effectiveness of Different Diagnostic Strategies in Suspected Stable Coronary Artery Disease in Portugal

António Miguel Ferreira; Hugo Marques; Pedro de Araújo Gonçalves; Nuno Cardim

Background Cost-effectiveness is an increasingly important factor in the choice of a test or therapy. Objective To assess the cost-effectiveness of various methods routinely used for the diagnosis of stable coronary disease in Portugal. Methods Seven diagnostic strategies were assessed. The cost-effectiveness of each strategy was defined as the cost per correct diagnosis (inclusion or exclusion of obstructive coronary artery disease) in a symptomatic patient. The cost and effectiveness of each method were assessed using Bayesian inference and decision-making tree analyses, with the pretest likelihood of disease ranging from 10% to 90%. Results The cost-effectiveness of diagnostic strategies was strongly dependent on the pretest likelihood of disease. In patients with a pretest likelihood of disease of ≤50%, the diagnostic algorithms, which include cardiac computed tomography angiography, were the most cost-effective. In these patients, depending on the pretest likelihood of disease and the willingness to pay for an additional correct diagnosis, computed tomography angiography may be used as a frontline test or reserved for patients with positive/inconclusive ergometric test results or a calcium score of >0. In patients with a pretest likelihood of disease of ≥ 60%, up-front invasive coronary angiography appears to be the most cost-effective strategy. Conclusions Diagnostic algorithms that include cardiac computed tomography angiography are the most cost-effective in symptomatic patients with suspected stable coronary artery disease and a pretest likelihood of disease of ≤50%. In high-risk patients (pretest likelihood of disease ≥ 60%), up-front invasive coronary angiography appears to be the most cost-effective strategy. In all pretest likelihoods of disease, strategies based on ischemia appear to be more expensive and less effective compared with those based on anatomical tests.


European Journal of Preventive Cardiology | 2014

Body mass index as a predictor of the presence but not the severity of coronary artery disease evaluated by cardiac computed tomography

Hélder Dores; Pedro de Araújo Gonçalves; Maria Salomó Carvalho; Pedro Jerónimo Sousa; António Miguel Ferreira; Nuno Cardim; Miguel Mota Carmo; Ana Aleixo; Miguel Mendes; Francisco Pereira Machado; José Roquette; Hugo Marques

Background The relation between body mass index (BMI) and coronary artery disease (CAD) extension remains controversial. The aim of this study was to evaluate the correlation between BMI and CAD extension documented by coronary computed tomography angiography (CCTA). Methods and results Prospective registry including 1706 consecutive stable patients that performed CCTA (dual source scanner) for the evaluation of CAD. The population was stratified by BMI: normal 530 (31.1%), overweight 802 (47.0%) and obesity 374 (21.9%). BMI was significantly higher in patients with CAD (27.7 ± 4.3 vs 26.8 ± 4.3 kg/m2, p < 0.001); these patients were also older, more often male and had higher prevalence of diabetes, hypertension and dyslipidemia. By multivariate analysis (logistic regression) BMI remains an independent predictor of CAD (odds ratio (OR) 1.03, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.01–1.06; p = 0.012). Regarding the severity of CAD, BMI was not significantly different among patients with and without obstructive CAD (27.7 ± 4.3 vs 27.2 ± 4.3 kg/m2, p = 0.120). In 319 patients (4516 segments; 4077 evaluable), a detailed atherosclerotic burden was evaluated and compared among BMI classes, defined according to the presence of plaque and the degree of stenosis. Obstructive CAD was identified in 16.9% of the patients and 45.1% had non-obstructive CAD. The discriminative threshold for high burden, established by the segment involvement score (SIS), was >5 segments with plaque (15.4% patients). The prevalence of SIS >5 among the BMI classes was: 18.7%, 13.7% and 13.6% for normal, overweight and obesity respectively (p values for the specific classes versus all other patients: 0.241, 0.450 and 0.663). Conclusions In this population of stable patients undergoing CCTA for suspected CAD, BMI was an independent predictor of its presence, but was not correlated with the coronary disease severity.


Revista Espanola De Cardiologia | 2016

Impact of the Everolimus-eluting Bioresorbable Scaffold in Coronary Atherosclerosis.

Carlos M. Campos; Hector M. Garcia-Garcia; Takashi Muramatsu; Pedro de Araújo Gonçalves; Yoshinobu Onuma; Dariusz Dudek; Leif Thuesen; Mark Webster; Pieter H. Kitslaar; Susan Veldhof; Johan H. C. Reiber; Koen Nieman; John A. Ormiston; Patrick W. Serruys

INTRODUCTION AND OBJECTIVES The Absorb bioresorbable vascular scaffold has been shown to decrease total plaque areas in the treated segment. However, it is unknown whether plaque size is modified in scaffolded segments only or whether the modification extends to other coronary segments. METHODS Absorb Cohort A is a single-arm, prospective study, with safety and imaging endpoints, in which 30 patients underwent percutaneous coronary intervention with the first generation Absorb bioresorbable vascular scaffold. Noninvasive multislice computed tomography imaging was performed in 18 patients at 18 months and 5 years of follow-up. The present study was an intrapatient comparison of matched segments (normalized by the segment length) of the scaffolded region with nonintervened segments for lumen volume, vessel volume, plaque volume, plaque burden, and percent change in plaque atheroma volume. RESULTS All 18 scaffolded segments could be analyzed. In the nonintervened segments, 1 of 72 segments had a motion artifact and was excluded. Serial comparison showed that the scaffolded segments showed no significant change in the mean plaque burden, total atheroma volume, total lumen volume, or vessel volume between 18 months and 5 years. Conversely, the untreated segments showed a significant increase in plaque burden (2.7 ± 6.5%; P < .01) and normalized plaque volumes (8.0 ± 22.8mm(3); P < .01). This resulted in a significant difference in plaque burden between scaffolded and nonintervened segments (P = .03). CONCLUSIONS In this small series, the Absorb bioresorbable vascular scaffold showed the potential to provide an additional benefit to pharmacological therapy in locally reducing progression of percent plaque burden. These findings need to be confirmed in larger studies.


Revista Portuguesa De Pneumologia | 2013

Diagnostic yield of current referral strategies for elective coronary angiography in suspected coronary artery disease—An analysis of the ACROSS registry

Miguel Borges Santos; António Miguel Ferreira; Pedro de Araújo Gonçalves; Luís Raposo; Rui Campante Teles; Manuel Almeida; Miguel Mendes

INTRODUCTION AND OBJECTIVES The purpose of this study was to assess the diagnostic yield of current referral strategies for elective invasive coronary angiography (ICA). METHODS We performed a cross-sectional observational study of consecutive patients without known coronary artery disease (CAD) undergoing elective ICA due to chest pain symptoms. The proportion of patients with obstructive CAD (defined as the presence of at least one ≥50% stenosis on ICA) was determined according to the use of noninvasive testing. RESULTS The study population consisted of 1892 individuals (60% male, mean age 64±11 years), of whom 1548 (82%) had a positive noninvasive test: exercise stress test (41%), stress myocardial perfusion imaging (36%), stress echocardiogram (3%) or coronary computed tomography angiography (3%). Referral without testing occurred in 18% of patients. The overall prevalence of obstructive CAD was 57%, higher among those with previous testing (58% vs. 51% without previous testing, p=0.026) and when anatomic rather than functional tests were used (81.3% vs. 57.1%, p=0.001). A positive test and conventional risk factors were all independent predictors of obstructive CAD, with adjusted odds ratios (95% confidence interval) of 1.34 (1.03-1.74) for noninvasive testing, 1.05 (1.04-1.06) for age, 3.48 (2.81-4.29) for male gender, 1.86 (1.32-2.62) for current smoking, 1.74 (1.38-2.20) for diabetes, 1.30 (1.04-1.62) for hypercholesterolemia, and 1.39 (1.08-1.80) for hypertension. CONCLUSIONS More than 40% of patients without known CAD undergoing elective ICA did not have obstructive lesions, even though four out of five had a positive noninvasive test. These exams were relatively weak gatekeepers; functional tests were more often used but appeared to be outperformed by the anatomic test.


Revista Portuguesa De Pneumologia | 2013

Doença coronária não obstrutiva documentada por tomografia computorizada cardíaca: contraste entre a carga aterosclerótica e o risco cardiovascular

Hélder Dores; Pedro de Araújo Gonçalves; Maria Salomé Carvalho; Pedro Jerónimo Sousa; Hugo Marques; Nuno Cardim; Ana Aleixo; Miguel Mota Carmo; Francisco Pereira Machado; José Roquette

Cardiac computed tomography (CT) documents the presence of coronary artery disease, regardless of the degree of stenosis. The prognostic value of non-obstructive coronary artery disease documented by cardiac CT has recently been validated. However, there are still no clear guidelines on the management of such patients, particularly concerning initiation of more aggressive pharmacological measures for primary prevention. The approach to these patients remains controversial, especially in cases in which there is a discrepancy between cardiovascular risk and the atherosclerotic burden as documented by cardiac CT. The authors describe the case of a patient with a discrepancy between the extent of documented coronary atherosclerosis and that estimated according to pretest probability and cardiovascular risk scores. As this individual had more severe coronary atherosclerosis than expected (calcium score above the 90th percentile and non-obstructive coronary artery disease on cardiac CT) but was a competitive athlete and otherwise asymptomatic and without risk factors or cardiovascular history, with a very low estimated cardiovascular risk, it was difficult to decide on the risks and benefits of pharmacological primary prevention.


Revista Portuguesa De Pneumologia | 2012

Ablação da atividade simpática renal para tratamento da hipertensão arterial resistente

Pedro de Araújo Gonçalves; Manuel Almeida; Patrícia Branco; Augusta Gaspar; Hélder Dores; Maria Salomé Carvalho; Maria João Andrade; André Weigert; José Diogo Barata; Ângela Canha Gomes; Luís Raposo; Henrique Mesquita Gabriel; Rui Campante Teles; Miguel Mendes

Hypertension is an important cardiovascular risk factor and although there have been many improvements in pharmacological treatment, a significant percentage of patients are still considered resistant. The authors describe two cases of radiofrequency renal sympathetic denervation that illustrate the feasibility of this new technique for the treatment of resistant hypertension. The procedure consists of the application of radiofrequency energy inside the renal arteries to ablate afferent and efferent sympathetic renal activity, which has been implicated in the pathophysiology of hypertension.


Acute Cardiac Care | 2010

Diagnosis of myocardial infarction using the new universal definition: is it enough for risk stratification and guiding decision for revascularization?

Rita Calé; Jorge Ferreira; Carlos Aguiar; Nuno Santos; Pedro Carmo; João Figueira; Luís Raposo; Pedro de Araújo Gonçalves; Jose A. Silva

Abstract Objectives: Evaluate the new ESC/ACCF/AHA/WHF universal definition of myocardial infarction (MI) in relation to its prognostic implications and the role for guiding decision for revascularization. It was also compared with the multivariable based GRACE Risk Score (GRS). Methods: Single centre registry of 389 consecutive patients admitted with non-ST-segment elevation (NSTE) ACS. We calculated the adjusted HR & 95%CI for death/MI at 30-days and one-year follow-up, between the presence or absence of MI using: (1) universal definition: > 99th URL for cTnI (> 0.06 ng/ml) or MBm (> 3.2 ng/ml); (2) MBm > 2 × URL (> 12.2 ng/ml); 3) old WHO: MBact > 2 × URL (> 32U/l). Logistic analysis was performed to test the interaction between tertiles of biomarkers or GRS and the effect of revascularization on the outcome. Results: The universal definition increased the incidence of MI in 3.5-fold for cTnI, but was not an independent predictor of outcome. The GRS was the only independent predictor of prognosis at 30-days and one-year. The interaction with the prognostic impact of revascularization was only present for the GRS categorized by tertiles. Conclusions: In a contemporary unselected population with NSTE-ACS, the universal definition of MI alone was not adequate for risk assessment and revascularization decision making. These purposes were fully addressed with the GRS.


Jacc-cardiovascular Imaging | 2013

Prognostic Value of Coronary CT Angiography

Pedro de Araújo Gonçalves; Hector M. Garcia-Garcia

We read with interest the paper from Andreini et al. ([1][1]) that provided more evidence on the prognostic value of cardiac computed tomography angiography (CTA) in patients referred for evaluation of possible coronary artery disease (CAD), an area of research in need of long term follow up studies

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Manuel Almeida

Nova Southeastern University

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Miguel Mendes

Nova Southeastern University

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Rui Campante Teles

Hospital Universitario La Paz

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Hélder Dores

Nova Southeastern University

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Nuno Cardim

Universidade Nova de Lisboa

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Ana Aleixo

Universidade Nova de Lisboa

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Miguel Mota Carmo

Universidade Nova de Lisboa

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