AI Article Synopsis

  • The study evaluated the feasibility of using multidetector computed tomographic angiography (MCTA) as a noninvasive method to assess operability in patients with chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension (CTEPH), examining 176 patients between January 2016 and April 2018.
  • In the first phase, initial surgical decisions were made using MCTA, with further pulmonary angiography (PA) for cases needing clarification; results showed that MCTA successfully classified 50% of patients without changing decisions in most cases.
  • The approach reduced the need for invasive procedures, improved the speed of surgical assessments, and showed comparable outcomes in terms of baseline parameters, postoperative measures, and one-year survival rates for both assessment phases.

Article Abstract

This study aimed to evaluate the feasibility of a noninvasive operability assessment of chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension (CTEPH) based on multidetector computed tomographic angiography (MCTA). Up to 176 patients were evaluated from January 2016 to April 2018. Throughout the first phase, the initial surgical decision was made based on MCTA with further analysis of pulmonary angiography (PA) in order to evaluate in which cases the initial decision was not modified by PA. During the second phase, PA was limited to patients judged inoperable based on MCTA or those whose assessment was not possible. Patients deemed operable (50%) based on MCTA along the first phase had been adequately classified, as PA did not modify the initial decision in all but one patient. Comparable results were obtained throughout the implementation phase. Regarding operated patients, the decision of operability was based solely on MCTA in 94% of those with level I disease, in 75% with level II, and 54% with level III. This approach enabled shorter periods of time to complete surgical assessment and the avoidance of PA-related morbidity. Baseline parameters, postoperative measures, and survival rates at 1 year after surgery were comparable in both phases. Noninvasive operability assessment is feasible in a subset of CTEPH patients and optimizes surgical candidacy evaluation.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7589509PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics10100855DOI Listing

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