NCBI Bookshelf. A service of the National Library of Medicine, National Institutes of Health.
Headline
In this review of two proprietary imaging systems, QAngio XA 3D/QFR showed good diagnostic accuracy but there was little data on clinical impact, and the effectiveness of CAAS vFFR was uncertain.
Abstract
Background:
QAngio® XA 3D/QFR® (three-dimensional/quantitative flow ratio) imaging software (Medis Medical Imaging Systems BV, Leiden, the Netherlands) and CAAS® vFFR® (vessel fractional flow reserve) imaging software (Pie Medical Imaging BV, Maastricht, the Netherlands) are non-invasive technologies to assess the functional significance of coronary stenoses, which can be alternatives to invasive fractional flow reserve assessment.
Objectives:
The objectives were to determine the clinical effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of QAngio XA 3D/QFR and CAAS vFFR.
Methods:
We performed a systematic review of all evidence on QAngio XA 3D/QFR and CAAS vFFR, including diagnostic accuracy, clinical effectiveness, implementation and economic analyses. We searched MEDLINE and other databases to January 2020 for studies where either technology was used and compared with fractional flow reserve in patients with intermediate stenosis. The risk of bias was assessed with quality assessment of diagnostic accuracy studies. Meta-analyses of diagnostic accuracy were performed. Clinical and implementation outcomes were synthesised narratively. A simulation study investigated the clinical impact of using QAngio XA 3D/QFR. We developed a de novo decision-analytic model to estimate the cost-effectiveness of QAngio XA 3D/QFR and CAAS vFFR relative to invasive fractional flow reserve or invasive coronary angiography alone. Scenario analyses were undertaken to explore the robustness of the results to variation in the sources of data used to populate the model and alternative assumptions.
Results:
Thirty-nine studies (5440 patients) of QAngio XA 3D/QFR and three studies (500 patients) of CAAS vFFR were included. QAngio XA 3D/QFR had good diagnostic accuracy to predict functionally significant fractional flow reserve (≤ 0.80 cut-off point); contrast-flow quantitative flow ratio had a sensitivity of 85% (95% confidence interval 78% to 90%) and a specificity of 91% (95% confidence interval 85% to 95%). A total of 95% of quantitative flow ratio measurements were within 0.14 of the fractional flow reserve. Data on the diagnostic accuracy of CAAS vFFR were limited and a full meta-analysis was not feasible. There were very few data on clinical and implementation outcomes. The simulation found that quantitative flow ratio slightly increased the revascularisation rate when compared with fractional flow reserve, from 40.2% to 42.0%. Quantitative flow ratio and fractional flow reserve resulted in similar numbers of subsequent coronary events. The base-case cost-effectiveness results showed that the test strategy with the highest net benefit was invasive coronary angiography with confirmatory fractional flow reserve. The next best strategies were QAngio XA 3D/QFR and CAAS vFFR (without fractional flow reserve). However, the difference in net benefit between this best strategy and the next best was small, ranging from 0.007 to 0.012 quality-adjusted life-years (or equivalently £140–240) per patient diagnosed at a cost-effectiveness threshold of £20,000 per quality-adjusted life-year.
Limitations:
Diagnostic accuracy evidence on CAAS vFFR, and evidence on the clinical impact of QAngio XA 3D/QFR, were limited.
Conclusions:
Quantitative flow ratio as measured by QAngio XA 3D/QFR has good agreement and diagnostic accuracy compared with fractional flow reserve and is preferable to standard invasive coronary angiography alone. It appears to have very similar cost-effectiveness to fractional flow reserve and, therefore, pending further evidence on general clinical benefits and specific subgroups, could be a reasonable alternative. The clinical effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of CAAS vFFR are uncertain. Randomised controlled trial evidence evaluating the effect of quantitative flow ratio on clinical and patient-centred outcomes is needed.
Future work:
Studies are required to assess the diagnostic accuracy and clinical feasibility of CAAS vFFR. Large ongoing randomised trials will hopefully inform the clinical value of QAngio XA 3D/QFR.
Study registration:
This study is registered as PROSPERO CRD42019154575.
Funding:
This project was funded by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Evidence Synthesis programme and will be published in full in Health Technology Assessment; Vol. 25, No. 56. See the NIHR Journals Library website for further project information.
Contents
- Plain English summary
- Scientific summary
- Chapter 1. Background
- Chapter 2. Aims and objectives
- Chapter 3. Assessment of clinical effectiveness
- Methods for reviewing effectiveness
- Quantity and quality of evidence available
- Overview of the meta-analyses (QAngio XA 3D/QFR)
- Univariate meta-analyses (QAngio XA 3D/QFR)
- Bivariate meta-analysis (QAngio XA 3D/QFR)
- Impact of patient and study characteristics (QAngio XA 3D/QFR)
- Meta-analyses of data extracted from figures (QAngio XA 3D/QFR)
- CAAS vFFR
- Clinical outcomes
- Implementation evidence
- Clinical effectiveness summary and conclusions
- Chapter 4. Assessment of existing cost-effectiveness evidence
- Methodology of the cost-effectiveness review of QAngio XA 3D/QFR and CAAS vFFR
- Results of the cost-effectiveness review of QAngio XA 3D/QFR and CAAS vFFR
- Methodology of the review of decision models evaluating invasive coronary angiography
- Results of the review of decision models evaluating invasive coronary angiography
- Conclusions of the assessment of existing cost-effectiveness evidence
- Chapter 5. Independent economic assessment: York model
- Chapter 6. Discussion
- Chapter 7. Conclusions
- Acknowledgements
- References
- Appendix 1. Clinical review literature search strategies
- Appendix 2. Included, excluded and ongoing studies
- Appendix 3. Risk-of-bias and applicability assessment: Quality Assessment of Diagnostic Accuracy Studies-2
- Appendix 4. Further meta-analysis results
- Appendix 5. Further narrative synthesis results
- Appendix 6. Further simulation study results
- Appendix 7. Review of decision models evaluating invasive coronary angiography
- Appendix 8. Supplemental data used to inform the cost-effectiveness analysis
- Appendix 9. Deterministic results of the cost-effectiveness analysis
- Glossary
- List of abbreviations
About the Series
Declared competing interests of authors: Simon Walker reports grants from the NIHR Evaluation, Trials and Studies Coordinating Centre (NETSCC) Production of Technology Assessment Reviews during the conduct of the study.
Article history
The research reported in this issue of the journal was commissioned and funded by the Evidence Synthesis Programme on behalf of NICE as project number NIHR129932. The contractual start date was in October 2019. The draft report began editorial review in July 2020 and was accepted for publication in January 2021. The authors have been wholly responsible for all data collection, analysis and interpretation, and for writing up their work. The HTA editors and publisher have tried to ensure the accuracy of the authors’ report and would like to thank the reviewers for their constructive comments on the draft document. However, they do not accept liability for damages or losses arising from material published in this report.
Last reviewed: July 2020; Accepted: January 2021.
- NLM CatalogRelated NLM Catalog Entries
- Non-invasive imaging software to assess the functional significance of coronary ...Non-invasive imaging software to assess the functional significance of coronary stenoses: a systematic review and economic evaluation
- The Role of Ultrasound Compared to Biopsy of Temporal Arteries in the Diagnosis ...The Role of Ultrasound Compared to Biopsy of Temporal Arteries in the Diagnosis and Treatment of Giant Cell Arteritis (TABUL): a diagnostic accuracy and cost-effectiveness study
- Evaluation and validation of social and psychological markers in randomised tria...Evaluation and validation of social and psychological markers in randomised trials of complex interventions in mental health: a methodological research programme
- Selective internal radiation therapies for unresectable early-, intermediate- or...Selective internal radiation therapies for unresectable early-, intermediate- or advanced-stage hepatocellular carcinoma: systematic review, network meta-analysis and economic evaluation
- Interventions to Reduce or Prevent Obesity in Pregnant Women: A Systematic Revie...Interventions to Reduce or Prevent Obesity in Pregnant Women: A Systematic Review
Your browsing activity is empty.
Activity recording is turned off.
See more...