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Coronary
Artery Calcium Scans may help Patients lower
Heart Disease Risk without increasing tests
and costs
Newswise, April 12, 2011– A new study of
coronary artery calcium scanning – a simple,
noninvasive test that gives patients
baseline information about plaque in their
coronary arteries—has shown that the scan
helps them make heart-healthy lifestyle
changes and lower their heart disease risk
factors.
The study, the EISNER trial (Early
Identification of Subclinical
Atherosclerosis by Noninvasive Imaging
Research), was headed by researchers at
Cedars-Sinai Heart Institute and
Cedars-Sinai‘s S. Mark Taper Foundation
Imaging Department and published in the
April 12, 2011 issue of the Journal of the
American College of Cardiology.
The large, clinical trial of volunteers with
coronary risk factors but no known heart
disease randomized patients to either have
or not have a coronary calcium scan and then
followed the patients for their risk- factor
changes over four years. The final trial
result demonstrated that early screening
does not increase subsequent tests and their
associated costs.
“In our study, patients who knew their
coronary calcium scores improved their
coronary heart disease risk compared with
those with no scan, and those with high
calcium scores were motivated to take even
more aggressive steps to reduce their risk,”
said Daniel S. Berman, M.D., the study’s
principal investigator and chief of Cardiac
Imaging and Nuclear Cardiology at the
Cedars-Sinai Heart Institute and
Cedars-Sinai’s S. Mark Taper Foundation
Imaging Department.
Coronary artery calcium scanning shows
plaques in coronary arteries long before
symptoms develop, and has been consistently
shown to effectively identify patients with
silent heart disease and those at risk for a
heart attack or sudden death. The test is
rarely covered by insurance although
numerous, consistent studies show that it
detects these patients more accurately than
standard blood tests.
The current study found that patients who
were screened had better long-term risk
profiles than those who were not. All 2,137
study volunteers in the EISNER trial had an
initial, private risk factor counseling
session and assessment of seven modifiable
risk factors: blood pressure, cholesterol
and triglyceride profiles, blood sugar,
weight, waist circumference, exercise and
smoking.
Of the total participants, 1,424 were
selected at random to have a coronary artery
calcium scan. The remaining 713 were
assigned to a no-scan group. Four years
later, all available participants were
reevaluated in the clinic and both groups
had coronary artery calcium scans.
Compared to the no-scan group, patients who
underwent initial scanning had significant
improvement in several risk factors after
four years: systolic blood pressure (the top
number on a blood pressure reading); LDL
(“bad” cholesterol) levels; waist size among
those with large abdominal circumference;
and weight among those who were overweight.
An important outcome was that the Framingham
Risk Score, the widely used assessment tool
that calculates a person’s overall risk of
having a heart attack or dying within 10
years, increased in the no-scan group, but
remained unchanged in those who had initial
scans. Individual risk factor profiles,
based on the seven modifiable risk factors,
improved in both groups, but the degree of
improvement was greater in the scan group.
There was no difference between the groups
in the costs or use of invasive or
noninvasive diagnostic and treatment
procedures.
Patients who had normal baseline scans had
fewer tests and procedures in the subsequent
four years, compared to patients who did not
have scans. Drug costs were 7 percent higher
in the scan group because more of these
patients started taking blood pressure and
cholesterol medications.
Berman noted, “A large number of studies has
consistently shown that coronary calcium
scanning adds to standard risk factor
assessment in predicting heart attacks and
cardiac death. By showing improved patient
outcomes with scanning – without increasing
the need for subsequent tests -- the EISNER
study will be very helpful in our quest to
prevent heart attacks.” He added “The test
isn’t for everyone, but should be considered
in patients with risk factors for coronary
artery disease who are in the right age
group.”
The Eisner Study was supported by a grant
from the Eisner Foundation. Berman has
research grants from Siemens and GE/Amersham.
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