A new understanding of coronary curvature and haemodynamic impact on the course of plaque onset and progression.
Mingzi ZhangRamtin GharleghiChi ShenSusann BeierPublished in: Royal Society open science (2024)
The strong link between atherosclerosis and luminal biomechanical stresses is well established. Yet, this understanding has not translated into preventative coronary diagnostic imaging, particularly due to the under-explored role of coronary anatomy and haemodynamics in plaque onset, which we aim to address with this work. The left coronary trees of 20 non-stenosed (%diameter stenosis [%DS] = 0), 12 moderately (0 < %DS < 70) and 7 severely (%DS ≥ 70) stenosed cases were dissected into bifurcating and non-bifurcating segments for whole-tree and segment-specific comparisons, correlating nine three-dimensional coronary anatomical features, topological shear variation index (TSVI) and luminal areas subject to low time-average endothelial shear stress (%LowTAESS), high oscillatory shear index (%HighOSI) and high relative residence time (%HighRRT). We found that TSVI is the only metric consistently differing between non-stenosed and stenosed cases across the whole tree, bifurcating and non-bifurcating segments ( p < 0.002, AUC = 0.876), whereas average curvature and %HighOSI differed only for the whole trees ( p < 0.024) and non-bifurcating segments ( p < 0.027), with AUC > 0.711. Coronary trees with moderate or severe stenoses differed only in %LowTAESS ( p = 0.009) and %HighRRT ( p = 0.012). This suggests TSVI, curvature and %HighOSI are potential factors driving plaque onset, with greater predictive performance than the previously recognized %LowTAESS and %HighRRT, which appears to play a role in plaque progression.