Association of left ventricular mass with discordant stress cardiac magnetic resonance and coronary angiography
European Heart Journal - Cardiovascular Imaging

Abstract
This study aimed to determine the impact of left ventricular mass (LVM) on discordant stress cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) imaging and invasive coronary angiography (ICA) in patients with suspected coronary artery disease (CAD) at coronary computed tomography angiography (CCTA).
In this substudy of the Dan-NICAD 2 trial (NCT03481712), 354 patients with suspected obstructive CAD on CCTA were examined with both rest and stress CMR and ICA for invasive physiological measurements. An abnormal stress CMR was defined as ≥2 contiguous segments with a stress perfusion defect, late gadolinium enhancement, or wall motion abnormality. CMR-derived LVM was sex-adjusted by conversion from grams to per cent. Haemodynamically obstructive CAD at ICA was defined as visual diameter stenosis >90% or FFR ≤0.80. LVM was higher in patients with an abnormal stress CMR compared to those with a normal CMR (median difference = 8.0%,
In patients with suspected obstructive CAD, increased LVM can potentially confound concordance between stress CMR and ICA. This is due to increased microvascular resistance, which decreases the pressure gradient across an epicardial stenosis, resulting in a false high FFR and thus, normal ICA.
Contributors

Kanyaw Kader
Author

Laust Dupont Rasmussen
Author

Salma Raghad Karim
Author

Jelmer Westra
Author

Christin Isaksen
Author

Lau Brix
Author

Steffen E Petersen
Author
Queen Mary University of London London , United Kingdom of Great Britain & Northern Ireland

Theodore Murphy
Author

Simon Winther
Author

Evald Høj Christiansen
Author

Morten Böttcher
Author
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