Xingping Kang
Cedars-Sinai Medical Center
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Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2003
Daniel S. Berman; Xingping Kang; Sean W. Hayes; John D. Friedman; Ishac Cohen; Aiden Abidov; Leslee J. Shaw; Aman M. Amanullah; Guido Germano; Rory Hachamovitch
OBJECTIVES This study was designed to assess the incremental prognostic value of adenosine stress myocardial perfusion single-photon emission computed tomography (MPS) in women versus men, and to explore the prognostic impact of diabetes mellitus. BACKGROUND Limited data are available regarding the incremental value of adenosine stress MPS for the prediction of cardiac death in women versus men and the impact of diabetes mellitus on post-adenosine MPS outcomes. Of 6,173 consecutive patients who underwent rest thallium-201/adenosine technetium-99m sestamibi MPS, 254 (4.1%) were lost to follow-up, and 586 with early revascularization < or = 60 days after MPS were censored, leaving 2,656 women and 2,677 men. RESULTS Women had significantly smaller adenosine stress, rest, and reversible defects than men. During 27.0 +/- 8.8 month follow-up, cardiac death rates were lower in women than men (2.0%/year vs. 2.7%/year, respectively, p < 0.05). Before and after risk adjustment, cardiac death risk increased significantly in both men and women as a function of MPS results. Multivariable models revealed that MPS results provided incremental prognostic value over pre-scan data for the prediction of cardiac death in both genders. Also, while comparative unadjusted rates of early (< or =60 days post-test) coronary angiography (17% vs. 23%) and revascularization (8% vs. 12%) were significantly lower in women (p < 0.05), after adjusting for MPS, these rates were similar in men and women. Importantly, diabetic women had a significantly greater risk of cardiac death compared with other patients. Also, after risk adjustment, patients with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) had higher risk of cardiac death for any MPS result than patients with non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. CONCLUSION The findings suggest that adenosine MPS has comparable incremental value for prediction of cardiac death in women and men and that MPS is appropriately influencing subsequent invasive management decisions in both genders. Diabetic women and patients with IDDM appear to have greater risk of cardiac death than other patients for any MPS result.
American Heart Journal | 1999
Xingping Kang; Daniel S. Berman; Howard C. Lewin; Ishac Cohen; John D. Friedman; Guido Germano; Rory Hachamovitch; Leslee J. Shaw
BACKGROUND Previous studies have shown that myocardial perfusion single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) provides incremental prognostic information in the general population, but the prognostic efficacy of nuclear testing in patients with diabetes mellitus is unclear. METHODS We conducted a study with 1271 consecutively registered patients with diabetes and 5862 patients without diabetes with known or suspected coronary artery disease undergoing rest thallium 201/stress technetium 99m sestamibi dual-isotope myocardial perfusion SPECT with exercise or adenosine pharmacologic testing. Patients were followed up for at least 1 year. The successful follow-up rate was 92.4% for patients with diabetes and 94.0% for subjects without diabetes. The mean follow-up period was 23.7 +/- 7.7 months for the former group and 21.5 +/- 6.1 months for the latter. RESULTS Over the follow-up period, patients with diabetes had significantly higher rates of hard events (cardiac death or nonfatal myocardial infarction) (4.3% per year versus 2.3% per year, P <.001) and higher total event rates (hard events and late revascularization) (9.0% per year versus 5.3% per year, P <. 001) compared with rates among patients without diabetes. Cox proportional hazards analysis revealed that nuclear testing added incremental value over clinical and historical variables among patients with diabetes (global chi(2) increased 46% for the exercise group [n = 619] and 88% for the adenosine group [n = 461]; both P <. 001). The event rates rose significantly as a function of summed stress score and summed difference score among both patients with diabetes and patients without diabetes (P <.001). The patients with diabetes with normal scans had relatively low hard event rates (1% to 2% per year), those with mildly abnormal scans had intermediate hard event rates (3% to 4% per year), and those with moderately to severely abnormal scans had relatively high hard event rates (>7% per year). CONCLUSIONS The results of this study indicated that exercise and adenosine stress myocardial perfusion SPECT are valuable for risk stratification and management of patients with diabetes.
Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 1998
DanielS Berman; Xingping Kang; KennethF Van Train; HowardC Lewin; Ishac Cohen; Joseph Areeda; JohnD Friedman; Guido Germano; LesleeJ Shaw; Rory Hachamovitch
OBJECTIVES The purpose of this study was to determine the prognostic value of automatic quantitative analysis in exercise dual-isotope myocardial perfusion single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) and to compare the prognostic value of quantitative analysis to semiquantitative visual SPECT analysis. BACKGROUND Extent, severity and reversibility of exercise myocardial perfusion defects have been shown to correlate with prognosis. However, most studies examining the prognostic value of SPECT in chronic coronary artery disease (CAD) have been based on visual analysis by experts. METHODS We studied 1,043 consecutive patients with known or suspected CAD who underwent rest Tl-201/exercise Tc-99m sestamibi dual-isotope myocardial perfusion SPECT and were followed up for at least 1 year (mean 20.0+/-3.7 months). After censoring 59 patients with early coronary artery bypass grafting or percutaneous transluminal coronary angioplasty, <60 days after nuclear testing, the final population consisted of 984 patients (36% women, mean age 63+/-12 years). RESULTS During the follow-up period, 28 hard events (14 cardiac deaths, 14 nonfatal myocardial infarctions) occurred. Patients with higher defect extent (>10%), severity (>150) and reversibility (>5%) by quantitative SPECT defect analysis, as well as those with an abnormal scan (>2 abnormal segments, summed stress score >4 and summed difference score >2) by semiquantitative visual SPECT analysis, had a significantly higher hard event rate compared to patients with a normal scan (p < 0.001). With both visual and quantitative analyses, hard event rates of approximately 1% with normal scans and 5% with abnormal scans (p > 0.05) were observed over the 20-month follow-up period. A Cox proportional hazards regression model showed that chi-square increased similarly with the addition of quantitative defect extent and visual summed stress score variables after considering both clinical and exercise variables (improvement chi-square = 11 for both, p < 0.0007). There were no significant differences in the areas under receiver operating characteristic curves between quantitative and visual analysis (p > 0.70). Linear regression analysis also indicated that quantitative assessments correlated well with visual semiquantitative assessments. CONCLUSIONS The findings of this study indicate that automatic quantitative analysis of exercise stress myocardial perfusion SPECT is similar to semiquantitative expert visual analysis for prognostic stratification. These findings may be of particular clinical importance in laboratories with less experienced visual interpreters.
American Heart Journal | 1999
Xingping Kang; Daniel S. Berman; Howard C. Lewin; Romalisa Miranda; Jacob Erel; John D. Friedman; Aman M. Amanullah
BACKGROUND Diabetics generally have more frequent and extensive silent myocardial ischemia than nondiabetics, increasing the importance of noninvasive detection of coronary artery disease (CAD) in this cohort. However, little is known regarding the diagnostic accuracy of myocardial perfusion single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) in patients with diabetes. This study was undertaken to compare the diagnostic value of rest thallium-201/stress technetium-99m sestamibi dual-isotope myocardial perfusion SPECT in patients with and without diabetes. METHODS Of the 203 patients with diabetes and 260 patients without diabetes who underwent dual-isotope myocardial perfusion SPECT with exercise or pharmacologic stress testing, 138 diabetics (12% type 1 diabetics) and 188 nondiabetics had coronary angiography within 6 months of the nuclear test, and 65 diabetics and 72 nondiabetics had a low likelihood (<10%, mean 6% +/- 3% and 6% +/- 3%) of CAD. RESULTS The angiographic data showed that patients with diabetes had less incidence of 1-vessel disease and a higher incidence of 3-vessel/left main artery disease than patients without diabetes (P <.05). The overall sensitivity and specificity, respectively, of SPECT for detecting CAD with the criterion of >/=50% diameter stenosis were 86% (95 of 111) and 56% (15 of 27) in diabetics, 86% (122 of 142) and 46% (21 of 46) in nondiabetics (P = not significant). With the criterion of >/=70% diameter stenosis the corresponding results were 90% (86 of 96) and 50% (21 of 42) in diabetics, and 91% (108 of 119) and 43% (30 of 69) in nondiabetics, respectively (P = not significant). The normalcy rate for low likelihood patients was 89% (58 of 65) in diabetics and 90% (65 of 72) in nondiabetics (P = not significant). The sensitivity and specificity for individual vessel detection were also similar in patients with and without diabetes (P = not significant) except for a lower sensitivity and a higher specificity for detecting left anterior descending coronary artery disease in the diabetic group (P <.05). CONCLUSION Dual-isotope myocardial perfusion SPECT has comparable accuracy for the diagnosis of CAD in diabetic and nondiabetic patients.
Jacc-cardiovascular Imaging | 2009
Daniel S. Berman; Xingping Kang; Balaji Tamarappoo; Arik Wolak; Sean W. Hayes; Louise Thomson; Faith Kite; Ishac Cohen; Piotr J. Slomka; Andrew J. Einstein; John D. Friedman
OBJECTIVES Our purpose was to describe a novel, rapid stress thallium-201 (Tl-201)/rest technetium-99m (Tc-99m) agent myocardial perfusion imaging (MPI) protocol (Tl/Tc) with a high-speed MPI scanner and to compare this protocol with a standard rest/stress Tc-99m agent protocol (Tc/Tc) with respect to image quality and radiation dosimetry. BACKGROUND Recent advances in gamma camera technology have provided opportunity for improved SPECT MPI protocols. A rapid Tl/Tc protocol that could improve image information while maintaining a low radiation burden for the patient would be desirable. METHODS We compared high-speed SPECT MPI studies in 374 consecutive patients undergoing exercise or pharmacologic Tl/Tc protocol to those of 262 patients undergoing rest/stress Tc/Tc protocol. RESULTS Tl/Tc imaging was accomplished in <20 min. Overall image quality was good to excellent in 96% and 98% of patients with the Tl/Tc and the Tc/Tc protocols, respectively (p = ns). Beginning rest imaging within 2 min after rest injection with the Tl/Tc protocol did not result in reduced confidence in image interpretation. Early rest Tc images of the Tl/Tc protocol showed less extracardiac activity than was observed on standard rest imaging used in the Tc/Tc protocol (84% vs. 61%), respectively (p < 0.01). The normalcy rate was high in both groups (100% vs. 92%). Radiation burden was similar between the Tl/Tc and Tc/Tc protocols. CONCLUSIONS A rapid stress Tl-201/rest Tc-99m protocol for use with high-speed SPECT MPI has image quality and radiation dosimetry similar to those observed with a conventional rest/stress Tc-99m protocol. The Tl/Tc protocol offers promise as an efficient and relatively low radiation dose method, in which the superior qualities of Tl-201 for stress imaging and of the Tc-99m agents for rest imaging can be preserved. The findings also suggest that with rapid imaging rest MPI immediately after Tc-99m agent injection may be superior to standard delayed image initiation.
American Journal of Cardiology | 1996
Nathan D. Wong; Robert Detrano; George A. Diamond; Combiz Rezayat; Rciymond Mahmoudi; Eun C. Chong; Weiyi Tang; Gail Puentes; Xingping Kang; David Abrahamson
We evaluated the extent to which cardiovascular risk-reducing behaviors are initiated as a result of knowledge of newly detected coronary artery disease, based on test results from noninvasive electron beam computed tomography (EBCT). A total of 703 men and women, aged 28 to 84 years, asymptomatic and without prior coronary disease, who had a baseline EBCT coronary artery scan and basic medical history and risk factor information completed a follow-up survey questioning them about health behaviors undertaken since their scan. Baseline calcium scores were significantly higher in those who subsequently reported consulting with a physician, or reported new hospitalization, coronary revascularization, beginning aspirin usage, blood pressure medications, cholesterol-lowering therapy, decreasing dietary fat, losing weight, beginning vitamin E, and under more worry (all p <0.01). Other factors, including reducing time worked, obtaining life insurance, losing employment, increased work absenteeism, increasing exercise, or stopping smoking were not associated with coronary calcium. In logistic regression, after adjusting for age, gender, pre-existing high cholesterol, high blood pressure, cigarette smoking, and a positive family history of coronary disease, the natural log of total calcium score remained associated with new aspirin usage, new cholesterol medication, consulting with a physician, losing weight, decreasing dietary fat, new coronary revascularization (all p <0.01), but also new hospitalization (p <0.05) and increased worry (p <0.001). The results suggest that potentially important risk-reducing behaviors may be reinforced by the knowledge of a positive coronary artery scan, independent of preexisting coronary risk factor status.
Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2001
Michael J. Zellweger; Howard C. Lewin; Shenghan Lai; Eric A. Dubois; John D. Friedman; Guido Germano; Xingping Kang; Tali Sharir; Daniel S. Berman
OBJECTIVES The study compared the prognostic significance of myocardial perfusion single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) (MPS) in patients early and late after coronary artery bypass graft surgery (CABG). BACKGROUND The long-term effectiveness of CABG is limited by graft stenosis. The greatest incidence of graft occlusion occurs between five and eight years after surgery. However, little is known regarding the appropriate time to stress patients post-CABG with respect to risk stratification. METHODS We identified 1,765 patients, who underwent MPS 7.1 +/- 5.0 years post-CABG. All patients underwent rest T1-201/stress Tc-99m sestamibi MPS and were followed up > or =1 year after testing. Patients with early CABG or PTCA (<60 days after MPS) were censored. The prognostic population consisted of 1,544 patients. A semiquantitative visual analysis employing a 20-segment model was used to define summed stress score (SSS), summed rest score (SRS), summed difference score (SDS), and the number of nonreversible segments (NRS). RESULTS During follow-up, 53 cardiac deaths (CD) occurred. There was a significant increase in annual CD rates as a function of SSS. A multivariate analysis identified age, ischemia (SDS), and infarct size (NRS) as independent predictors of CD. Nuclear variables added incremental value to prescan information. The annual CD rate was relatively low (1.3%) in patients < or =5 years post-CABG. In this subgroup only age and infarct size (NRS) were predictive of CD. CONCLUSION MPS is strongly predictive of subsequent CD in post-CABG patients and adds incremental value over clinical and treadmill test information. Our data suggest that symptomatic patients < or =5 years and all patients >5 years post-CABG may benefit from testing.
Circulation | 2009
Rory Hachamovitch; Xingping Kang; Aman Amanullah; Aiden Abidov; Sean W. Hayes; John D. Friedman; Ishac Cohen; Louise Thomson; Guido Germano; Daniel S. Berman
Background— The goal of this study was to assess the clinical value of stress myocardial perfusion scintigraphy (MPS) in elderly patients (≥75 years of age). Methods and Results— We followed up 5200 elderly patients (41% exercise) after dual-isotope MPS over 2.8±1.7 years (362 cardiac deaths [CDs], 7.0%, 2.6%/y) and a subset with extended follow-up (684 patients for 6.2±2.9 years; 320 all-cause deaths). Survival modeling of CD revealed that both MPS-measured ischemia and fixed defect added incrementally to pre-MPS data in both adenosine and exercise stress patients. Modeling a subset with gated MPS (n=2472) revealed that ejection fraction and perfusion data added incrementally to each other, further enhancing risk stratification. Unadjusted, annualized post-normal MPS CD rate was 1.3% but <1% in patients with normal rest ECG, exercise stress, or age of 75 to 84 years and was 2.3% to 3.7% in patients ≥85 years of age or undergoing pharmacological stress. However, compared with age-matched US population CD rates (75 to 84 years of age, 1.5%; ≥85 years, 4.8%), normal MPS CD rates were approximately one-third lower than the baseline risk of US individuals (both P<0.05). Modeling of all-cause death in 684 patients with extended follow-up revealed that after risk adjustment, an interaction between early treatment and ischemia was present; increasing ischemia was associated with increasing survival with early revascularization, whereas in the setting of little or no ischemia, medical therapy had improved outcomes. Conclusions— Stress MPS effectively stratifies CD risk in elderly patients and may identify optimal post-MPS therapy. CD rates after normal MPS are low in all subsets in relative terms compared with the age-matched US population.
American Journal of Cardiology | 1997
Aman M. Amanullah; Daniel S. Berman; Rory Hachamovitch; Hosen Kiat; Xingping Kang; John D. Friedman
To assess the ability of adenosine technetium-99m sestamibi myocardial perfusion single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) to identify high-risk women with severe or extensive coronary artery disease (CAD), we studied 130 consecutive women who underwent adenosine sestamibi myocardial perfusion SPECT and catheterization within 2 months. Severe (> or = 50% stenosis of left main coronary artery, > or = 90% stenosis in the proximal left anterior descending or in > or = 2 coronary arteries) or extensive (> or = 70% stenosis in 3 vessels) CAD was present in 54 patients, whereas 76 had no CAD or mild to moderate CAD. Semiquantitative visual SPECT analysis used 20 segments and a 5-point scoring system (0 = normal, 4 = absent uptake). Among the clinical, hemodynamic and nuclear variables analyzed, univariate predictors of severe or extensive CAD included a higher prescan likelihood of CAD, history of myocardial infarction, a higher heart rate at rest, a lower increase in heart rate during adenosine infusion, a higher summed stress score, summed reversibility score, and multivessel scan abnormality. Multivariate logistic analysis of the most predictive clinical (prescan likelihood of CAD), hemodynamic (increase in heart rate during adenosine infusion), and scan variables (summed stress score) revealed summed stress score (chi-square = 32; p <0.0001) and prescan likelihood of CAD (chi-square = 6.4; p <0.05) as the only independent predictors of severe or extensive CAD. Based on these logistic models, we determined the probability for the presence of severe or extensive CAD in patients with low, intermediate, and high prescan likelihood of CAD across the range of values of a summed stress score. This revealed that there were incremental increases in the probability for severe or extensive CAD both as a function of prescan likelihood of CAD and summed stress score. A severely abnormal scan (summed stress score > 8) during adenosine technetium-99m sestamibi myocardial perfusion SPECT had a high sensitivity of 91% and a moderately high specificity of 70% for identifying high-risk women with severe or extensive CAD. These results coupled with the previously defined prognostic significance of these findings suggest this test to be a useful diagnostic tool for the evaluation of CAD in women.
The Journal of Nuclear Medicine | 2010
Balaji Tamarappoo; Xingping Kang; Arik Wolak; Faith Kite; Sean W. Hayes; Louise Thomson; John D. Friedman; Daniel S. Berman; Piotr J. Slomka
A recently developed camera system for high-speed SPECT (HS-SPECT) myocardial perfusion imaging shows excellent correlation with conventional SPECT. Our goal was to test the diagnostic accuracy of an automated quantification of combined upright and supine myocardial SPECT for detection of coronary artery disease (CAD) (≥70% luminal diameter stenosis or, in left main coronary artery, ≥50% luminal diameter stenosis) in comparison to invasive coronary angiography (ICA). Methods: We studied 142 patients undergoing upright and supine HS-SPECT, including 56 consecutive patients (63% men; mean age ± SD, 64 ± 13 y; 45% exercise stress) without known CAD who underwent diagnostic ICA within 6 mo of HS-SPECT and 86 consecutive patients with a low likelihood of CAD. Reference limits for upright and supine HS-SPECT were created from studies of patients with a low likelihood of CAD. Automated software adopted from supine–prone analysis was used to quantify the severity and extent of perfusion abnormality and was expressed as total perfusion deficit (TPD). TPD was obtained for upright (U-TPD), supine (S-TPD), and combined upright–supine acquisitions (C-TPD). Stress U-TPD ≥ 5%, S-TPD ≥ 5%, and C-TPD ≥ 3% myocardium were considered abnormal for per-patient analysis, and U-TPD, S-TPD, and C-TPD ≥ 2% in each coronary artery territory were considered abnormal for per-vessel analysis. Results: On a per-patient basis, the sensitivity was 91%, 88%, and 94% for U-TPD, S-TPD, and C-TPD, respectively, and specificity was 59%, 73%, and 86% for U-TPD, S-TPD, and C-TPD, respectively. C-TPD had a larger area under the receiver-operating-characteristic curve than U-TPD or S-TPD for identification of stenosis ≥ 70% (0.94 vs. 0.88 and 0.89, P < 0.05 and not significant, respectively). On a per-vessel basis, the sensitivity was 67%, 66%, and 69% for U-TPD, S-TPD, and C-TPD, respectively, and specificity was 91%, 94%, and 97% for U-TPD, S-TPD, and C-TPD, respectively (P = 0.02 for specificity U-TPD vs. C-TPD). Conclusion: In this first comparison of HS-SPECT with ICA, new automated quantification of combined upright and supine HS-SPECT shows high diagnostic accuracy for detecting clinically significant CAD, with findings comparable to those reported using conventional SPECT.