Impaired RV free wall longitudinal strain identified RV dysfunction in 84.9% of patients and was independently associated with all-cause mortality in tricuspid regurgitation.
Does impaired right ventricular free wall longitudinal strain predict all-cause mortality better than conventional echocardiographic parameters in patients with significant functional tricuspid regurgitation?
896 patients with significant (moderate and severe) functional tricuspid regurgitation, median age 71 years, 51.3% men, from a single center in the Netherlands. Exclusions: age ≤18 years, organic TR, prior tricuspid surgery, active endocarditis, and known congenital heart disease with tricuspid involvement.
Assessment of right ventricular (RV) free wall longitudinal strain using speckle-tracking echocardiography
Conventional 2-dimensional echocardiographic parameters of RV systolic function (tricuspid annular plane systolic excursion [TAPSE] and fractional area change [FAC])
All-cause mortalityhard clinical
In patients with significant functional tricuspid regurgitation, right ventricular free wall longitudinal strain is a more sensitive marker of RV dysfunction and a stronger independent predictor of all-cause mortality than conventional echocardiographic parameters.
Absolute Event Rate: 0% vs 0%
Background In patients with significant functional tricuspid regurgitation, timely detection of right ventricular (RV) dysfunction with conventional 2-dimensional echocardiography is challenging, whereas speckle-tracking echocardiography RV free wall longitudinal strain has been proposed as better prognosticator. We evaluated the prevalence and prognostic value of impaired RV free wall longitudinal strain in patients with significant functional tricuspid regurgitation, in comparison with tricuspid annular plane systolic excursion (TAPSE) and fractional area change (FAC). Methods Eight hundred ninety-six patients (51.3% men, 71 years 62–78 years) with significant functional tricuspid regurgitation were divided according to the presence of RV dysfunction (defined as TAPSE −23%) and were followed for the occurrence of all-cause mortality. Results RV free wall longitudinal strain identified the highest percentage of RV dysfunction (84.9%), in comparison to FAC (48.5%) and TAPSE (71.7%). During a median follow-up of 2.8 years (1.3–5.4 years), 443 (49.4%) patients died. Compared with survivors, nonsurvivors showed worse RV systolic dysfunction (FAC=36.5±12.7% versus 33.9±11.8%, P =0.001; TAPSE=15.4±5.0 versus 14.0±4.5 mm, P <0.001; RV free wall longitudinal strain=−15.9±7.5% versus −12.9±6.8%, P <0.001). Cumulative event-free survival was significantly worse in patients with decreased FAC, decreased TAPSE, and impaired RV free wall longitudinal strain. On multivariate analysis, RV free wall longitudinal strain was independently associated with all-cause mortality and incremental to FAC and TAPSE. Conclusions In significant tricuspid regurgitation, impaired RV free wall longitudinal strain identifies higher rates of RV dysfunction and is associated with worse outcome beyond conventional echocardiographic parameters of RV systolic function.
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Prihadi et al. (Fri,) reported a other. Impaired RV free wall longitudinal strain identified RV dysfunction in 84.9% of patients and was independently associated with all-cause mortality in tricuspid regurgitation.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69737a3e19cc31ad50135715 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1161/circimaging.118.008666
Edgard A. Prihadi
Heart Failure & Transplant
Pieter van der Bijl
Cardiac Imaging
Marlieke F. Dietz
Structural Heart Disease
Circulation Cardiovascular Imaging
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