AI Article Synopsis

  • - Several risk models exist for predicting atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease in asymptomatic individuals, but they often have limited effectiveness, while the coronary artery calcium score (CACS) shows promise, especially in ruling out severe cases.
  • - A CACS of 0 can lower perceived cardiovascular risk, but this status requires reassessment every 5 to 10 years; conversely, higher CACS values can identify individuals at greater risk who may benefit from preventive medications.
  • - Upcoming updates to Dutch guidelines aim to better integrate CACS into cardiovascular risk assessments, while also advocating for coronary CT angiography (CCTA) to gather more detailed information, particularly for symptomatic or high-risk patients.

Article Abstract

Several risk prediction models exist to predict atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease in asymptomatic individuals, but systematic reviews have generally found these models to be of limited utility. The coronary artery calcium score (CACS) offers an improvement in risk prediction, yet its role remains contentious. Notably, its negative predictive value has a high ability to rule out clinically relevant atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease. Nonetheless, CACS 0 does not permanently reclassify to a lower cardiovascular risk and periodic reassessment every 5 to 10 years remains necessary. Conversely, elevated CACS (> 100 or > 75th percentile adjusted for age, sex and ethnicity) can reclassify intermediate-risk individuals to a high risk, benefiting from preventive medication. The forthcoming update to the Dutch cardiovascular risk management guideline intends to re-position CACS for cardiovascular risk assessment as such in asymptomatic individuals. Beyond CACS as a single number, several guidelines recommend coronary CT angiography (CCTA), which provides additional information about luminal stenosis and (high-risk) plaque composition, as the first choice of test in symptomatic patients and high-risk patients. Ongoing randomised studies will have to determine the value of atherosclerosis evaluation with CCTA for primary prevention in asymptomatic individuals.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11502644PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12471-024-01897-1DOI Listing

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