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Cardiovascular magnetic resonance predicts all-cause mortality in pulmonary hypertension associated with heart failure with preserved ejection fraction

Authors :
Garg, P.
Lewis, R.A.
Johns, C.S.
Swift, A.J.
Capener, D.
Rajaram, S.
Thompson, A.A.R.
Condliffe, R.
Elliot, C.A.
Charalampopoulos, A.
Hameed, A.G.
Rothman, A.
Wild, J.M.
Kiely, D.G.
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Springer Nature, 2021.

Abstract

This study aimed to determine the prognostic value of cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) in patients with heart failure with preserved ejection fraction and associated pulmonary hypertension (pulmonary hypertension-HFpEF). Patients with pulmonary hypertension-HFpEF were recruited from the ASPIRE registry and underwent right heart catheterisation (RHC) and CMR. On RHC, the inclusion criteria was a mean pulmonary artery pressure (MPAP) ≥ 25 mmHg and pulmonary arterial wedge pressure > 15 mmHg and, on CMR, a left atrial volume > 41 ml/m2 with left ventricular ejection fraction > 50%. Cox regression was performed to evaluate CMR against all-cause mortality. In this study, 116 patients with pulmonary hypertension-HFpEF were identified. Over a mean follow-up period of 3 ± 2 years, 61 patients with pulmonary hypertension-HFpEF died (53%). In univariate regression, 11 variables demonstrated association to mortality: indexed right ventricular (RV) volumes and stroke volume, right ventricular ejection fraction (RVEF), indexed RV mass, septal angle, pulmonary artery systolic/diastolic area and its relative area change. In multivariate regression, only three variables were independently associated with mortality: RVEF (HR 0.64, P

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15695794
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.core.ac.uk....2320c4c59f3e9e81f2dbe7c49c94f03d