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Real-world performance and accuracy of stress echocardiography: the EVAREST observational multi-centre study

  • William Woodward
  • , Jamie O'Driscoll
  • , Nikant Sabharwal
  • , Roxy Senior
  • , Paul Leeson
  • , Cameron Dockerill
  • , Annabelle McCourt
  • , Ross Upton
  • , Katrin Balkhausen
  • , Badrinathan Chandrasekaran
  • , Soroosh Firoozan
  • , Attila Kardos
  • , Kenneth Wong
  • , Gary Woodward
  • , Rizwan Sarwar
  • , Elena Benedetto
  • , Nancy Spagou
  • , Rajan Sharma
  • , Daniel Augustine
  • , Apostolos Tsiachristas
  • Henry Boardman, Joanna d’Arcy, Abraheem Abraheem, Sanjay Banypersad, Christopher Boos, Sudantha Bulugahapitiya, Jeremy Butts, Duncan Coles, Jacob Easaw, Haytham Hamdan, Shahnaz Jamil-Copley, Gajen Kanaganayagam, Tom Mwambingu, Antonis Pantazis, Alexandros Papachristidis, Ronak Rajani, Muhammad Amer Rasheed, Naveed A Razvi, Sushma Rekhraj, David P Ripley, Kathleen Rose, Michaela Scheuermann-Freestone, Rebecca Schofield, Ayyaz Sultan

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    Abstract

    Aims: Stress echocardiography is widely used to identify obstructive coronary artery disease (CAD). High accuracy is reported in expert hands but is dependent on operator training and image quality. The EVAREST study provides UK-wide data to evaluate real-world performance and accuracy of stress echocardiography. Methods and results: Participants undergoing stress echocardiography for CAD were recruited from 31 hospitals. Participants were followed up through health records which underwent expert adjudication. Cardiac outcome was defined as anatomically or functionally significant stenosis on angiography, revascularization, medical management of ischaemia, acute coronary syndrome, or cardiac-related death within 6 months. A total of 5131 patients (55% male) participated with a median age of 65 years (interquartile range 57–74). 72.9% of studies used dobutamine and 68.5% were contrast studies. Inducible ischaemia was present in 19.3% of scans. Sensitivity and specificity for prediction of a cardiac outcome were 95.4% and 96.0%, respectively, with an accuracy of 95.9%. Sub-group analysis revealed high levels of predictive accuracy across a wide range of patient and protocol sub-groups, with the presence of a resting regional wall motion abnormalitiy significantly reducing the performance of both dobutamine (P < 0.01) and exercise (P &;lt; 0.05) stress echocardiography. Overall accuracy remained consistently high across all participating hospitals. Conclusion: Stress echocardiography has high accuracy across UK-based hospitals and thus indicates stress echocardiography is being delivered effectively in real-world practice, reinforcing its role as a first-line investigation in the assessment of patients with stable chest pain.
    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)689-698
    JournalEuropean Heart Journal Cardiovascular Imaging
    Volume23
    Issue number5
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 20 Jun 2021

    Keywords

    • Cardiology
    • Stress echocardiography

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