Coronary artery calcification scores in patients with chronic kidney disease prior to dialysis: reliability as a trial outcome measure

KA Barraclough, LA Stevens, L Er… - Nephrology Dialysis …, 2008 - academic.oup.com
KA Barraclough, LA Stevens, L Er, D Rosenbaum, J Brown, P Tiwari, A Levin
Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation, 2008academic.oup.com
Background. Coronary artery calcification (CAC) is prevalent in patients with chronic kidney
disease (CKD). Data on the reliability and validity of high-resolution computerized
tomography (HRCT) in patients with CKD is lacking. The purpose of this study was to
evaluate the inter-and intra-reviewer agreement and inter-scan reproducibility of CACS
measurement with HRCT in a cohort of patients with CKD prior to dialysis, and to compare
the change in CACS at 30 minutes to the change in CACS over 1 year. Methods. Thirty-three …
Abstract
Background. Coronary artery calcification (CAC) is prevalent in patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD). Data on the reliability and validity of high-resolution computerized tomography (HRCT) in patients with CKD is lacking. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the inter- and intra-reviewer agreement and inter-scan reproducibility of CACS measurement with HRCT in a cohort of patients with CKD prior to dialysis, and to compare the change in CACS at 30 minutes to the change in CACS over 1 year.
Methods. Thirty-three patients with CKD not yet on dialysis underwent an HRCT scan at baseline and 1 year to assess for CAC and CAC progression. Two radiologists independently reviewed films and each radiologist re-reviewed a randomly selected subset of films they had previously viewed, to assess for inter-reviewer and intra-reviewer reliability, respectively. Patients underwent a repeat scan within 30 min of the first baseline scan to assess for inter-scan reproducibility.
Results. At baseline, eight patients (24%) had no CAC. Of the 25 patients (76%) with CAC, 10 (40%) had severe calcification. Intra-reviewer agreement was 83%. Inter-reviewer agreement ranged between 77 and 94%. Six (27%) of the patients with >30 baseline CACS had >15% change in CACS following repositioning. Four of these patients had an increase in CACS with position change [18% (95% CI: 5–40%)]. Of the 21 patients who underwent a follow-up scan at 1 year, 7 (33%) demonstrated CACS progression.
Conclusions. There is significant imprecision in HRCT-derived CACS in CKD patients. This suggests a need for standardization of methods of CACS measurement with HRCT.
Oxford University Press