Additional prognostic value of echocardiographic follow-up in pulmonary hypertension—role of 3D right ventricular area strain

European Heart Journal - Cardiovascular Imaging

22 November 2021
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ESC Journals

Abstract

AbstractAims

Outcomes in pulmonary hypertension (PH) are related to right ventricular (RV) function and remodelling. We hypothesized that changes in RV function and especially area strain (AS) could provide incremental prognostic information compared to the use of baseline data only. We therefore aimed to assess RV function changes between baseline and 6-month follow-up and evaluate their prognostic value for PH patients using 3D echocardiography.

Methods and results

Ninety-five PH patients underwent a prospective longitudinal study including ESC/ERS guidelines prognostic assessment and 3D RV echocardiographic imaging at baseline and 6-month follow-up. Semi-automatic software tracked the RV along the cycle, and its output was post-processed to extract 3D deformation patterns. Over a median follow-up of 24.8 (22.1–25.7) months, 21 patients died from PH or were transplanted. Improvements in RV global AS were associated with stable or improving clinical condition as well as survival free from transplant (P < 0.001). The 3D deformation patterns confirmed that the most significant regional changes occurred within the septum. RV global AS change over 6-month by +3.5% identifies patients with a 3.7-fold increased risk of death or transplant. On multivariate COX analysis, changes in WHO class, BNP, and RV global AS were independent predictors of outcomes. Besides, the combination of these three parameters was of special interest to identify high-risk patients [HR 11.5 (1.55–86.06)].

Conclusion

Changes in RV function and especially changes in 3D RV AS are of prognostic importance. Our study underlines that assessing such changes from baseline to follow-up is of additional prognostic value for PH patients.

Clinical Trial Registration

http://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT02799979

Contributors

Pamela Moceri
Pamela Moceri

Author

University Hospital Pasteur of Nice Nice , France

Maxime Sermesant
Maxime Sermesant

Author

Inria Sophia-Antipolis , France