Spontaneous Coronary Artery Dissection
St. Michael's Hospital · Royal Columbian Hospital · +4 more institutions
Abstract
Nonatherosclerotic spontaneous coronary artery dissection (NA-SCAD) is underdiagnosed and an important cause of myocardial infarction in young women. The frequency of predisposing and precipitating conditions and cardiovascular outcomes remains poorly described. METHODS AND RESULTS: Patients with NA-SCAD prospectively evaluated (retrospectively or prospectively identified) at Vancouver General Hospital were included. Angiographic SCAD diagnosis was confirmed by 2 experienced interventional cardiologists and categorized as type 1 (multiple lumen), 2 (diffuse stenosis), or 3 (mimic atherosclerosis). Fibromuscular dysplasia screening of renal, iliac, and cerebrovascular arteries were performed with angiography or computed tomographic angiography/MR angiography. Baseline, predisposing and precipitating conditions, angiographic, revascularization, in-hospital, and long-term events were recorded. We prospectively evaluated 168 patients with NA-SCAD. Average age was 52.1±9.2 years, 92.3% were women (62.3% postmenopausal). All presented with myocardial infarction. ECG showed ST-segment elevation in 26.1%, and 3.6% had ventricular tachycardia/ventricular fibrillation arrest. Fibromuscular dysplasia was diagnosed in 72.0%. Precipitating emotional or physical stress was reported in 56.5%. Majority had type 2 angiographic SCAD (67.0%), only 29.1% had type 1, and 3.9% had type 3. The majority (134/168) were initially treated conservatively. Overall, 6 of 168 patients had coronary artery bypass surgery and 33 of 168 had percutaneous coronary intervention in-hospital. Of those treated conservatively (n=134), 3 required revascularization for SCAD extension, and all 79 who had repeat angiogram ≥26 days later had spontaneous healing. Two-year major adverse cardiac events were 16.9% (retrospectively identified group) and 10.4% (prospectively identified group). Recurrent SCAD occurred in 13.1%.
Majority of patients with NA-SCAD had fibromuscular dysplasia and type 2 angiographic SCAD. Conservative therapy was associated with spontaneous healing. NA-SCAD survivors are at risk for recurrent cardiovascular events, including recurrent SCAD.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 34.90
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 30
Authors
11- JSJacqueline SawCorresponding
St. Michael's Hospital, Royal Columbian Hospital, St. Paul's Hospital, Royal Jubilee Hospital, BC Research (Canada), St Michaels Hospital
- EAEve Aymong
St. Michael's Hospital, Royal Columbian Hospital, St. Paul's Hospital, Royal Jubilee Hospital, BC Research (Canada), St Michaels Hospital
- TSTara Sedlak
St. Michael's Hospital, Royal Columbian Hospital, St. Paul's Hospital, Royal Jubilee Hospital, BC Research (Canada), St Michaels Hospital
- CEChristopher E. Buller
St. Michael's Hospital, Royal Columbian Hospital, St. Paul's Hospital, Royal Jubilee Hospital, BC Research (Canada), St Michaels Hospital
- ASAndrew Starovoytov
St. Michael's Hospital, Royal Columbian Hospital, St. Paul's Hospital, Royal Jubilee Hospital, BC Research (Canada), St Michaels Hospital
Topics & keywords
- Medicine
- Artery dissection
- Cardiology
- Internal medicine
- Percutaneous coronary intervention
- Artery
- Coronary artery disease
- Dissection (medical)
- Good health and well-being