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Primary prevention of coronary disease and especially its major complication, inaugural myocardial infarction, is based on any prodromal symptoms identification and on risk profile establishment. About 50% of myocardial infarctions are caused by an unstable non-stenosing plaque, asymptomatic before the event since without significant reduction in coronary flow, particularly during a stress test or during stress imaging.
Study purpose is to set up, in medical emergency department, check-up unit and cardiology department, a primary prevention strategy articulated around a routine examination: calcium scoring. The latter makes it possible to categorize patients according to their risk of generating atheromatous plaques and to classify them into several risk levels (groups) according to their score: low (<40th percentile), intermediate (between the 40th percentile and the 65th percentile: group III) or high risk (>65th percentile, group IV). 18F-Na PET scan can mark unstable coronary plaques. For the intermediate risk population who would demonstrate within 6 to 18 months after first calcium score either an increase of percentile of more than 20% or an increase above 20 points of the calcium score and for high risk population, 18F-Na PET scan will be recommended and repeated 6 months later. Secondary prevention treatment will then be administered in the event of an abnormal examination.
Full description
The purpose of this protocol is to determine the frequency and the mapping of unstable coronary plaques highlighted by 18F-Na PET in patients at intermediate and high risk, as well as their evolution under treatment.
Aside from traditional risk factors collection and related biological assessments, risk establishment is based on calcium score, a simple non-injected and very little irradiating scanner which measures coronary calcifications, stigmata of healed atheroma plaques and, as a rule, non-evolving. Calcium score, which is interpreted according to age, sex and ethnicity, therefore makes it possible to assign a percentile within the distribution of all the patients and to classify patients in:
Study assumptions are:
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Inclusion criteria
Patient with no coronary history presenting to the emergency room, to the assessment unit or having consulted in the cardiology department for suspicious chest pain that does not allow an acute coronary syndrome or angina to be excluded and:
Age above or equal to 18 and strictly below 80 years old
Having given informed consent
Exclusion criteria
Pregnant woman
Patient with cognitive disorders
Claustrophobic patient, or refusing radiological examinations
Patient refusing cardiological follow-up and/or treatment of his risk factors or refusing to participate in the study
Patient with contraindications or intolerances to HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors (statins) and/or Ezetimibe
Patient with liver failure
Patient with myopathy or with a history of (rhabdo)myolysis
Marked arrhythmia and in particular supraventricular or ventricular hyperexcitability, or chronic or paroxysmal atrial fibrillation not controlled by antiarrhythmic treatment
Patients with a history of sternotomy or valve replacement or metallic intracardiac probes, generators of scanner artefacts
Calcium score corresponding to the percentiles of groups I and II
For patients in groups III and IV:
Person participating in another biomedical research
Person under judicial protection (guardianship, curatorship...)
Person deprived of liberty by a judicial or administrative decision.
Primary purpose
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Interventional model
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250 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
Asmaa JOBIC
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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