Comparison of exercise testing and CMR measured myocardial perfusion reserve for predicting outcome in asymptomatic aortic stenosis: the PRognostic Importance of MIcrovascular Dysfunction in Aortic Stenosis (PRIMID AS) Study
European Heart Journal

Abstract
To assess cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) measured myocardial perfusion reserve (MPR) and exercise testing in asymptomatic patients with moderate-severe AS.
Multi-centre, prospective, observational study, with blinded analysis of CMR data. Patients underwent adenosine stress CMR, symptom-limited exercise testing (ETT) and echocardiography and were followed up for 12–30 months. The primary outcome was a composite of: typical AS symptoms necessitating referral for AVR, cardiovascular death and major adverse cardiovascular events. 174 patients were recruited: mean age 66.2 ± 13.34 years, 76% male, peak velocity 3.86 ± 0.56 m/s and aortic valve area index 0.57 ± 0.14 cm2/m2. A primary outcome occurred in 47 (27%) patients over a median follow-up of 374 (IQR 351–498) days. The mean MPR in those with and without a primary outcome was 2.06 ± 0.65 and 2.34 ± 0.70 (
MPR was associated with symptom-onset in initially asymptomatic patients with AS, but with moderate accuracy and was not superior to symptom-limited exercise testing. ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT01658345).
Contributors

Anvesha Singh
Author

John P. Greenwood
Author

Colin Berry
Author

Dana K. Dawson
Author

Kai Hogrefe
Author

Damian J. Kelly
Author

Vijay Dhakshinamurthy
Author

Chim C. Lang
Author

Jeffrey P. Khoo
Author

David Sprigings
Author

Richard P. Steeds
Author

Michael Jerosch-Herold
Author

Stefan Neubauer
Author

Bernard Prendergast
Author

Bryan Williams
Author

Ruiqi Zhang
Author

Ian Hudson
Author

Iain B. Squire
Author

Ian Ford
Author

Nilesh J. Samani
Author

Gerry P. McCann
Author
University of Leicester Leicester , United Kingdom of Great Britain & Northern Ireland
