A team headed by professor Eike Nagel, director of the Institute for Experimental and Translational Cardio Vascular Imaging at Goethe University was able to demonstrate that MRI measurements are as safe to guide decision-making as the currently used invasive procedure for stable coronary heart disease imaging. Within the international MR-INFORM study, they examined 918 patients with an indication for cardiac catheterization to see if decision-making by an MRI scan led to the same results as the current invasive method.
Cardiovascular MRI is an alternative for directly measuring the blood flow in the myocardium. In contrast to cardiac catheterization, MRI is noninvasive, works without ionizing radiation, can be done in 40 minutes and delivers direct measurements of the blood flow to the heart.
In the study, patients were randomly assigned to two groups. One group received the standard diagnostic investigation with cardiac catheterization and pressure measurement of the coronary arteries. The other had the 40-minute MRI scan of the heart to decide whether to send the patient on for invasive angiography. In each study arm, constricted coronary vessels were dilated when indicated by the examination. In the following year, the physicians documented how many patients died, suffered a heart attack or required a repeated vascular dilation. In addition, they recorded whether the heart symptoms continued.
The result: in the group of patients examined by MRI, less than half required a diagnostic cardiac catheterization and fewer patients received a vascular dilation (36% vs. 45%). This means that with a fast and non-invasive MRI examination as the first test, both diagnostic and therapeutic cardiac catheterizations can be reduced. Importantly, the two groups did not differ in terms of continuing symptoms, the development of new symptoms, complications, or deaths.
“This means that patients with stable chest pains who previously would have received cardiac catheterization can alternatively be examined with MRI,” concludes professor Eike Nagel. “The results for the patients are just as good, but an examination by MRI has many advantages: the procedure takes about 40 minutes, patients merely receive a small cannula in their arm and are not subject to radiation.”
The physician hopes that the less invasive method will now be used as a method of first choice, reducing the need for cardiac catheterizations.