Impact of Patient Visualization of Cardiovascular Images on Modification of Cardiovascular Risk Factors: Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis




Whitmore Kristyn, Zhou Zhen, Chapman Niamh, Huynh Quan, Magnussen Costan G., Sharman James E., Marwick Thomas H.

PublisherElsevier Inc.

2023

JACC: Cardiovascular Imaging

JACC: Cardiovascular Imaging

16

8

1069

1081

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.jcmg.2023.03.007

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jcmg.2023.03.007



BACKGROUND It is unclear whether detection and patient visualization of cardiovascular (CV) images using computed tomography to assess coronary artery calcium or carotid ultrasound (CU) to identify plaque and intima-medial thickness merely prompts prescription of lipid-lowering therapy or whether it motivates lifestyle change among patients.

OBJECTIVES This systematic review and meta-analysis sought to investigate whether patient visualization of CV images (computed tomography or CU) has a beneficial impact on improving overall absolute CV risk as well as lipid and nonlipid CV risk factors in asymptomatic individuals.

METHODS The key words “CV imaging,” “CV risk,” “asymptomatic persons,” “no known or diagnosed CV disease,” and “atherosclerotic plaque” were searched in PubMed, Cochrane, and Embase in November 2021. Randomized trials that assessed the role of CV imaging in reducing CV risk in asymptomatic persons with no known CV disease were eligible for study inclusion. The primary outcome was a change in 10-year Framingham risk score from the trial commencement to the end of the follow-up following patient visualization of CV images.

RESULTS Six randomized controlled trials (7,083 participants) were included; 4 studies used coronary artery calcium and 2 used CU to detect subclinical atherosclerosis. All studies used image visualization in the intervention group to communicate CV risk. Imaging-guidance was associated with a 0.91% improvement in 10-year Framingham risk score (95% CI: 0.24%-1.58%; P = 0.01). Significant reductions in low-density-lipoprotein, total cholesterol, and systolic blood pressure were observed (all P < 0.05).

CONCLUSIONS Patient visualization of CV imaging is associated with overall CV risk reduction and improvement of individual risk factors: cholesterol and systolic blood pressure.



Last updated on 2025-27-03 at 22:04