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Head CT Scans Can Identify Hidden Heart Disease Risk in the ED
Routine head CT scans performed in emergency departments can predict cardiovascular disease risk without additional cost, identifying high-risk patients who would otherwise be missed.
Background
Millions of patients undergo head CT scans in emergency departments annually. Researchers used deep learning models to investigate whether these routine scans could reveal hidden cardiovascular risks.
Key Findings
- A model combining head CT analysis with traditional risk factors (CTH+PREVENT) achieved C-index of 0.82 (95% CI: 0.78-0.85) for cardiovascular event prediction versus 0.75 for risk assessment alone
- For CAC estimation, the combined model achieved C-index of 0.76 and AUC of 0.80, reclassifying 15.7% of patients between risk categories
- Patients reclassified to higher risk were younger (median 59 vs. 66 years) with favorable traditional profiles but higher vascular calcifications (30.2% vs. 24.8%) and brain infarcts (20.1% vs. 5.8%)
Why It Matters
This opportunistic screening requires no additional imaging, radiation, or workflow disruption. By extracting risk information from existing scans, the approach enables earlier intervention, especially in younger patients with favorable traditional profiles.
Limitations
The study was conducted at a single health system. External validation in different populations is needed to confirm generalizability.
Original paper: Opportunistic Cardiovascular Risk Assessment Using Routine Head CT in the Emergency Department. — Journal of the American College of Cardiology. 10.1016/j.jacc.2026.02.5095




