Diagnostic accuracy of carotid plaque instability by noninvasive imaging: a systematic review and meta-analysis
European Heart Journal - Cardiovascular Imaging

Abstract
There is increasing evidence that plaque instability in the extracranial carotid artery may lead to an increased stroke risk independently of the degree of stenosis. We aimed to determine diagnostic accuracy of vulnerable and stable plaque using noninvasive imaging modalities when compared to histology in patients with symptomatic and asymptomatic carotid atherosclerosis.
Medline Ovid, Embase, Cochrane Library, and Web of Science were searched for diagnostic accuracy of noninvasive imaging modalities (CT, MRI, US) in the detection of 1) vulnerable/stable plaque, and 2) vulnerable/stable plaque characteristics, compared to histology. The quality of included studies was assessed by QUADAS-2 and univariate and bivariate random-effect meta-analyses were performed. We included 36 vulnerable and 5 stable plaque studies in the meta-analysis, and out of 211 plaque characteristics from remaining studies, we classified 169 as vulnerable and 42 as stable characteristics (28 CT, 120 MRI, 104 US characteristics). We found that MRI had high accuracy [90% (95% CI: 82–95%)] in the detection of vulnerable plaque, similar to CT [86% (95% CI: 76–92%);
CT and MRI have a similar, high performance in detecting vulnerable carotid plaques, whereas US showed significantly less diagnostic accuracy. Moreover, MRI visualized all vulnerable plaque characteristics allowing for a better stroke risk assessment.
PROSPERO ID CRD42022329690
Contributors

David Pakizer
Author

Jiří Kozel
Author

Patrick Taffé
Author

Jolanda Elmers
Author

Janusz Feber
Author

Patrik Michel
Author

David Školoudík
Author

Gaia Sirimarco
Author

