Title: Carotid IMT as a Surrogate of Cardiovascular Disease Risk
1Carotid IMT as a Surrogate of Cardiovascular
Disease Risk
- Allen J. Taylor MD
- COL, Medical Corps
- Professor of Medicine, USUHS
- Chief, Cardiology Service
- Walter Reed Army Medical Center
2What Is IMT ?
Ultrasound Image of the Aorta in Vitro
- IMT is the distance between the lumen-intima
interface and the media-adventitia interface - First described by Pignoli et al when imaging,
with ultrasound, the wall of the abdominal aorta
near wall
Lumen-Intima Interface
Media-adventitia Interface
far wall
Pignoli et al. Circulation. 1986741399
3B-Mode Image of theCarotid Artery Wall
Courtesy of W. Riley
4What is Carotid IntimaMedia Thickness (CIMT)?
Normal and DiseasedArterial Histology
External Carotid
Internal Carotid
10 mm
FlowDivider
Internal
10 mm
Bifurcation
10 mm
Common
SkinSurface
Common Carotid
5Portable Ultrasound for CIMT
- B mode ultrasound
- Frequency broadband
- Newest device 13 MHz
- Device cost 40K
- Specific advantages
- Clinical
- Noninvasive
- No radiation exposure
- No incidental findings
- Research
- Scalable
- Low entry costs for multicenter investigations
- Understood by clinicians
6Carotid Intima-media Thickness
Selection of end-diastolic images Systolic
expansion/IMT thinning
- Far wall
- Acoustic shadowing in near wall
- Which site?
- CCA most reproducible
- ICA/Bulb more difficult
- Plaque more common
- Greater magnitude of change
- Measurement
- ABD or manual, 1cm length
- Easy- takes minutes
- Accurate- .0x mm
Mean CIMT 1.174 mm
7(No Transcript)
8CIMT to Detect Atherosclerosis and CV Risk
9CIMT and Outcomes Meta-analysis
- Meta-analysis based on random effects models
- The age- and sex-adjusted overall estimates of
the relative risk of myocardial infarction was
1.15 (95 CI, 1.12 to 1.17) per 0.10-mm common
carotid artery IMT difference. - The relationship between IMT and risk was
nonlinear, but the linear models fitted
relatively well for moderate to high IMT values.
Circulation. 2007115459-467
10The Cardiovascular Health StudyIMT and Outcomes
- Relationship to CV prognosis
- 4476 pts, 65yrs
- Risk-factor adjusted data
- MAXIMAL IMT
- CIMT and MI/stroke
- Absolute risk exceeds 2 at 1.06 mm
- Risk is continuous
- RR 1.27 per 0.2 mm of CIMT increase
- Pooled gender
OLeary. NEJM 199934014
11- 6698 adults aged 45 to 84 years
- 23 735 person-years of follow-up
- 222 incident CVD events (159 CHD events)
- 59 stroke events
- 50 had detectable CAC
- 1.07 mm for max internal CIMT
- 0.87 mm for max common CIMT
Arch Intern Med. 2008168(12)1333-1339
12- CAC and CCA-IMT had similar hazard ratios for
total cardiovascular disease and coronary heart
disease. The CCA-IMT was more strongly related to
stroke than was CAC
Am J Cardiol. 2008 January 15 101(2) 186192
13An abnormal imaging study should meaningful shift
upwards a patients predicted CHD risk
- Focus Intermediate risk group
- Greatest likelihood of therapeutic impact
- Use imaging to select for treatments guided by
evidence based medicine
4
Identity Line
3
CHD equivalent
Post-test Event Probability ()
2
1
0
0
1
2
3
4
Initial Event Probability ()
14IMT as a marker of vascular age
- 83 patients
- Mean age 55
- ARIC data used to adjust age
- Mean vascular age 65
- 15 (1 in 7) reclassified to higher risk
- Intermediate risk patients
- 5/14 ? to high risk
- 2/14 ? to low risk
White
Black
Stein et al., University of Wisconsin- Presented
15Prevention V GuidelinesCirculation 2000101e3-22
- Secondary prevention guidelines
- Known CAD, and
- CAD-equivalents DM, ASPVD, Plaque burden
- Plaque burden measurement techniques
- ABI, Carotid IMT
- EBCT, MRI
16Behavioral change Potential within factorial
trials
- Lausanne, Switzerland
- Randomized trial in smokers
- N153
- Counseling imaging
- Smokers with plaque present and shown their
images were 6-fold more likely to quit smoking - Absolute 22.2 quit rate
- NNT 6
Bovet. Prev Cardiol 200234215
17Progression of CIMT
18Atherosclerosis a progressive disease
- Typical IMT
- Baseline- 0.60 to 1.00 mm
- Typical progression rates ?.01 mm/year
- Interventions affect the rate of progression of
atherosclerosis - This is measurable with carotid IMT
- Variability- protocol dependent
- Site
- Frequency of measurement
- Image quality
- Image interpretation
- Reader
- Methods
19Progressive Improvements in Imaging
20IMT and Progression of Atherosclerosis
Absolute Differences Between Replicate Scans
Baldassarre et al. Stroke. 2000311104
21IMT Variability Improving signalnoise
Readers
Noise
Subjects
- Sources of variability for measuring changes in
IMT progression - Proposed solutions
- Replicates
- Increase time interval
- Implicit solution
- Increase sample size
Variance of Measured Progression Rate
Single
Duplicate
2 years
3 years
6 years
8 years
Espeland et al. Stroke. 199627480
22Present Protocol
- 13 MHz
- ECG gated, diastolic images
- Common carotid
- 2 views
- 2 full sets
- Analysis
- Single observer, masked
- Manual and ABD
- All measurements performed twice on each image
set - Mean CC IMT, Max CC IMT
23CIMT Progression Rate Marker of Increased Risk
for Events
Secondary Prevention, Men, Colestipol/Niacin vs
Placebo CLAS
2.8
- Demonstrated value of changes in CIMT as an
intermediate endpoint - Showed that rate of common CIMT progression was
directly associated with higher risk for future
MI and CHD death
Plt 0.001
2.3
1.6
CHD Risk
1
lt0.011 mm/y 0.0180.033 mm/y
0.00110.017 mm/y gt0.033 mm/y
Hodis HN et al. Ann Intern Med 1998128262-269.
24Carotid IMTModestly related to cardiovascular
risk factorsand Age (a surrogate of exposure
duration)
25Carotid IMT- Broadly related to risk factors
- Related to risk factors
- Relationship varies across carotid segments
- Relationships modest
Junyent et al. ATVB 2006261107
26CIMT Progression Relationship to risk factors
age 4564 years n 15,792
CIMT progression associated with -baseline or
new diabetes -smoking -high density lipoprotein
cholesterol -pulse pressure, new HTN -change in
low density lipoprotein -change in triglycerides
Am J Epidemiol 20021553847.
27CIMT Progression Relationship to risk factors
age 4564 years n 15,792
Am J Epidemiol 20021553847.
28Therapeutics and IMT
- Lifestyle interventions- exercise, diet
- Lipid modifying agents-
- Binding resins, Niaspan, statins, CETPi
- Anti-hypertensives
- CCBs, ? blockers
- Anti-diabetic agents
- Metformin, TZDs, tight diabetic control
29RADIANCE 1 and 2 Carotid Imaging Program
Rating Atherosclerotic Disease change by Imaging
with A New CETP inhibitor
B-mode US
B-mode US/6 months
S C R E E N I N G
Torcetrapib/atorvastatin
Dose titration (mg) 10 20 40 80
Atorvastatin dose titration Target LDL-C to CV
risk goal
R
Atorvastatin
24-month double-blind treatmentSame as
atorvastatin dose at end of titration period
RADIANCE 1 starts at 20 mg no wash-out
periodRADIANCE 2 4 week wash-out, 416 week
titration
30Torcetrapib and CIMT
N Engl J Med 20073561620-30.
31Torcetrapib and CIMT
N Engl J Med 20073561620-30.
32Torcetrapib and CIMT RADIANCE 2?Net Biomarker
Impact
- Systolic blood pressure increased by 66 mm Hg in
the combined-treatment group and 1.5 mm Hg in the
atorvastatin-only group (difference 5.4 mm Hg,
95 CI 4.36.4, plt00001).
Lancet 2007 370 15360
33ENHANCE Effect of Simvastatin with or without
Ezetimibe on Carotid IMT
Simva
Simva Ezetimibe
N Engl J Med 20083581431-43
34Ezetimibe
- Licensed by the FDA in 2002 for treatment of
- Hypercholesterolaemia
- Homozygous sitosterolemia
35ENHANCE Effect of Simvastatin with or without
Ezetimibe on Carotid IMT
Subgroup Data
N Engl J Med 20083581431-43
36- Hard ischemic events
- NFMI, stroke, hospitalized USA, CV death
-
- Placebo 119/929- 12.8
- Simva/ezetimibe 102/944- 10.8
- Chi-square P .21
N Engl J Med 2008 3591343
37SEAS 15.6 RRR 63 LDL reduction
NFMI, USA, Stroke, CV death
38Limitation of CIMT
- Greater understanding of change in CIMT
progression and outcomes would be useful - Definitive outcomes testing remains necessary
- Early in vivo probe to athero-biologic
potential - One surrogate doesnt have all the answers
- Surrogates exist in potentially complementary
fashion - ? BP and HDL with CETP
- Will not likely provide any data on adverse
effects
39Assessing IMT as a Biomarker
- PRO
- Scalable, widely used
- Noninvasive, no incidental findings, predicts
outcomes - Quantitative relevance
- Atherosclerosis extent
- All atherosclerosis (not just a single component)
- Changes in IMT definitively linked to clinical
outcomes - Broad track record of success in clinical trials
- Modifiable with wide range of therapeutic
interventions
- CON
- Geared for groups of patients vs. individuals
- Segmental response (CCA vs. ICA IT vs. MT) may
vary - Requires quality imaging protocols to ensure
inter-test variability is low enough to detect
changes in IMT across reasonable time horizons - Trials utilizing IMT not likely to identify
adverse effects