Does the integration of lipidomic risk score, polygenic risk score, and coronary artery calcium score improve screening for high coronary plaque volume in primary prevention participants?
Coronary artery calcium score is the dominant predictor of high coronary plaque volume in primary prevention, with lipidomic and polygenic risk scores providing only modest incremental value.
Atherosclerotic plaque volume (PV) predicts future cardiovascular events. As coronary computed tomography angiography (CCTA) is unsuitable for population screening, individuals with high total (T)PV often remain undetected. To evaluate the relative and incremental contributions of lipidomic risk score (LRS), polygenic risk score (PRS), and coronary artery calcium score (CAC) improves screening for high TPV. Primary prevention participants in two trials underwent clinical assessment, CAC, and blood sampling for LRS and PRS. CCTA was obtained in participants with CAC>0 and ≤400. Associations between risk scores and TPV were assessed using linear regression. Logistic regression identified predictors of high TPV; model performance was evaluated using area under the curve (AUC), net reclassification index (NRI), and integrated discrimination index (IDI). In the development cohort (n=232, mean age 58.5 years), CAC showed the strongest correlation with TPV (R 2 =0.69). Multivariable regression analyses showed that CAC was the only predictor for high TPV (OR 1.03 per 10-point increase 95%CI 1.02-1.03). In the validation cohort (n=199, mean age 61.7 years), the AUC was shown to improve from 0.50 with MESA 10-year cardiovascular risk score (without CAC) to 0.91 with the addition of LRS, PRS and CAC ( p <0.001). The continuous NRI was shown to be +1.36 and IDI to be +0.38. CAC was the dominant determinant of high coronary plaque volume and accounted for the majority of predictive performance. LRS and PRS provided only modest incremental value beyond CAC and clinical risk, supporting their role as complementary rather than primary screening tools.
Soh et al. (Sun,) studied this question.