Evaluation of Prospective ECG-Triggered CT Scan as a Practical Alternative to Standard Retrospective ECG-Gated Scan for Pre-TAVI Patients
Itshak Amsalem, Itzhak Vitkon-Barkay, Moshe Rav-Acha, Danny Dvir, Matan Elkan, Olga Pichkhadze, Naama Bogot, Fauzi Shaheen, Rafael Hitter, Boris Chutko, Michael Glikson, Jonathon Leipsic, Arik Wolak

TL;DR
This study compares two CT scan methods for pre-TAVI patients, finding that a faster, lower-dose method is as safe and effective as the standard method.
Contribution
The study evaluates the clinical utility of prospective ECG-triggered CT scans as a practical alternative for pre-TAVI assessments.
Findings
Prospective ECG-triggered scans reduced contrast and radiation exposure without compromising safety.
No significant differences in mortality or procedural outcomes were observed between the two scan methods.
The prospective method showed smaller aortic annulus measurements but no increased paravalvular leak risk.
Abstract
Purpose: CT-TAVI is a critical component of pre-TAVI assessment. The conventional method, retrospective ECG-gated scan, covering a complete cardiac cycle, measures the annulus during optimal systolic phases. Recently, prospective ECG-triggered scans acquiring images at a specific interval of the cardiac cycle were evaluated, allowing faster acquisition and lower contrast doses. Moreover, these scans might be beneficial for elderly patients, reducing the need for breath-holding and easing cooperation requirements. Still, their impact on annular measurement and procedural success has yet to be fully evaluated. Methods: This retrospective, single-center study included 419 patients who underwent CT-TAVI scans, by either prospective or retrospective scanning methods. Baseline data and calculated surgical risk scores were collected, with propensity score matching performed, followed by…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCardiac Valve Diseases and Treatments · Cardiac Imaging and Diagnostics · Cardiac, Anesthesia and Surgical Outcomes
