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A C Villena García, A Gutierrez Cardo, C M Hidalgo, L Palomo, E Lillo, J Espíldora, J Manuel Trigo, M Á Sánchez Chaparro, P Valdivielso, 18FDG PET/CT & arterial inflammation: predicting cardiovascular events in lung cancer, QJM: An International Journal of Medicine, Volume 112, Issue 6, June 2019, Pages 401–407, https://doi.org/10.1093/qjmed/hcz036
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Summary
18F-FDG PET/CT predicts cardiovascular disease. To analyze the predictive value of cardiovascular events from inflammation and arterial calcification in patients who underwent an 18F-FDG PET/CT for lung cancer.
A retrospective study of 274 patients with primary lung neoplasia. We determined: (i) TBR (target-to-background ratio), and (ii) the calcium score, at eight common arterial segments. We took as arteriosclerosis, a TBR ≥1.6 and ≥15 Calcium Score sum. We registered cardiovascular risk factors, comorbidities, histology, stage, treatment, status at the last clinical review, cause of death and cardiovascular event during the follow-up.
The territory presenting the greatest uptake of 18F-FDG, was the thoracic aorta with an average of 1.77 (± 0.27 TBR) in the aortic arch, while the greatest degree of calcification was obtained in the abdominal aorta (52% with a Calcium Score ≥ 3). 24% of the patients presented a sum Calcium Score ≥15, and 17% a TBR ≥1.6. Patients with high TBR, (17%), had not a higher frequency of cardiovascular comorbidities beforehand, nor did they in the follow-up. However, those with a sum Calcium Score ≥15 (24%), were older, had more cardiovascular risk factors and ischemic events during follow-up. The calcium score, but not the TBR, predicted the emergence of a cardiovascular event (HR 4.9 IC95% 2.1–9.1, P < 0.05).
In our cohort, a high Calcium Score was an independent predictor for developing cardiovascular events.
- aortic arch
- arteritis
- fluorodeoxyglucose f18
- cardiovascular diseases
- arteriosclerosis
- heart disease risk factors
- inflammation
- calcium
- abdominal aorta
- cardiovascular system
- cause of death
- comorbidity
- follow-up
- neoplasms
- lung cancer
- computed tomography/positron emission tomography imaging
- cardiovascular event
- calcification