CT angiography using cross-sectional area better detected surgical carotid stenoses (sensitivity 81%, specificity 77%) compared to diameter measurement, which systematically underestimated stenosis.
Cross-Sectional (n=113)
Does CTA based on cross-sectional area provide better agreement with Doppler ultrasonography for grading carotid stenosis compared to CTA based on narrowest diameter?
CTA based on cross-sectional area provides better agreement with Doppler ultrasonography and more accurately detects surgical carotid stenoses than CTA based on narrowest diameter, which systematically underestimates stenosis severity.
cross sectional area (CSA) with the measurement by color Doppler ultrasonography (CDUS) as a reference standard, and analyzed how the application of different statistical methods affected the result. On 113 carotid arteries with ≥50% stenosis, we quantified the level of correlation among the three measurements, sensitivity, specificity, and differences in the estimated stenosis level. Correlation between both CTA measurements was good with Pearson's ρ between 0.87 and 0.91 (p<0.001). Correlation between CDUS and CTA measurements was only modest with Pearson's ρ between 0.2 (p=0.075) and 0.4 (p=0,007) for CDUS CTA (CSA), and between 0.23 (p=0.062) and 0.39 (p=0.008) for CDUS CTA (diameter). Differences in stenosis between CTA (CSA) and CDUS were centered around 0%, and between CTA (diameter) and CDUS around 20%. Sensitivity and specificity for CTA (CSA) method were 81% and 77%, and for CTA (diameter) 23% and 100%, respectively. A good correlation between CSA and diameter measurement just means that these are two related features of stenosis, it does not mean good agreement. CTA (CSA) method better detected surgical stenoses, whereas CTA (diameter) systematically underestimated stenosis level. The study of differences between the measurements indicated agreement better than the calculation of correlation coefficients.
Kristina Samaržija (Fri,) conducted a cross-sectional in Carotid stenosis (n=113). CT Angiography (CTA) vs. Color Doppler ultrasonography (CDUS) was evaluated on Correlation, sensitivity, specificity, and differences in estimated stenosis level. CT angiography using cross-sectional area better detected surgical carotid stenoses (sensitivity 81%, specificity 77%) compared to diameter measurement, which systematically underestimated stenosis.
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