1. 6067Right ventricular global longitudinal strain predicts cardiovascular mortality and heart failure hospitalization in patients with functional tricuspid regurgitation
- Author
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Marco Previtero, Denisa Muraru, Roberto C. Ochoa-Jimenez, Luigi P. Badano, C Palermo, A C Guta, and Patrizia Aruta
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,business.industry ,Diastole ,medicine.disease ,Comorbidity ,Blood pressure ,Functional tricuspid regurgitation ,medicine.artery ,Internal medicine ,Heart failure ,Pulmonary artery ,medicine ,Cardiology ,Systole ,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine ,business ,Survival analysis - Abstract
Background Functional tricuspid regurgitation (FTR) and its increasing severity are well-known factors associated with increased morbidity and mortality in patients with pulmonary artery hypertension or left heart diseases. Purpose To assess the main clinical and echocardiographic determinants of outcome in patients with various causes of FTR. Methods A total of 140 patients (pts) (72±14 years, 40% men) with FTR of diverse etiologies underwent complete 2D and additional 3D echocardiography acquisitions and were followed for a median of 5.2 years (interquartile range 2.1 - 6.7 years). Severe FTR was defined by ≥2 parameters: (1) coaptation defect; (2) vena contract ≥7; (3) PISA radius >9 mm; (4) hepatic vein systolic flow reversal. The primary composite outcome was defined as death from cardiovascular causes and hospitalization due to right-sided heart failure (HF). Results 74 pts (53%) developed the primary composite outcome. Death occurred in 31 pts (22%), while hospitalization due to right-sided HF occurred in 66 pts (47%). At baseline, patients who developed the primary composite outcome, compared to those who did not, had more symptoms, more severe FTR, higher pulmonary systolic pressure (60±27 vs 43±16 mmHg), larger right atrium (69±34 vs 51±22 mL/mm2), right ventricular (RV) basal diameter (29±6 vs 24±4 mm/m2), larger RV end-diastolic (102±45 vs 76±25 mL/m2) and end-systolic (62±37 vs 43±17 mL/m2) volumes, larger tricuspid annulus area (7.7±1.8 vs 6.8±1.8 cm2/m2), lower RV systolic function (RVEF [42±11 vs 46±8%], TAPSE [18±4 vs 21±4], S' [11±3 vs 12±2], RV global longitudinal strain (RVGLS) [16±5 vs 19±4], RV free wall longitudinal strain [19±7 vs 23.5]); all p-values Kaplan-Meier curve of outcome by RVGLS Conclusions In patients with FTR, a decreased RVGLS, with a cutoff of −17.5, proved to be an independent prognostic factor for the development of HF hospitalizations and death from cardiovascular causes.
- Published
- 2019