Echocardiographic response to CRT (≥15% reduction in LV end-systolic volume) was independently associated with superior long-term survival (HR 0.38; 95% CI 0.27-0.50; P<0.001).
Cohort (n=679)
Does echocardiographic response to CRT predict long-term survival better than clinical response in heart failure patients?
Echocardiographic reverse remodeling (LVESV reduction ≥15%) at 6 months is a stronger independent predictor of long-term survival than clinical symptom improvement in heart failure patients receiving CRT.
Effect estimate: HR 0.38 (95% CI 0.27-0.50)
p-value: p=< 0.001
BACKGROUND: Clinical or echocardiographic mid-term responses to cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) may have a different influence on a long-term prognosis of heart failure patients treated with CRT. The aim of the evaluation was to establish which definition of response to CRT, clinical or echocardiographic, best predicts long-term prognosis. METHODS AND RESULTS: A total of 679 heart failure patients treated with CRT were included. All the patients underwent a complete history and physical examination and transthoracic echocardiogram prior to CRT implantation and at 6-month follow-up. The clinical and echocardiographic responses to CRT were defined based on clinical improvement (≥1 NYHA class) and LV reverse remodelling (reduction in LV end-systolic volume ≥15%) at 6-month follow-up, respectively. All the patients were prospectively followed up for the occurrence of death. The mean age was 65 ± 11 years and 79% of the patients were male. At 6-month follow-up, 510 (77%) patients showed clinical response to CRT and 412 (62%) patients showed echocardiographic response to CRT. During a mean follow-up of 37 ± 22 months, 140 (21%) patients died. Clinical and echocardiographic responses to CRT were both significantly related to all-cause mortality on univariable analysis. However, on multivariable Cox-regression analysis only echocardiographic response to CRT was independently associated with superior survival (hazard ratio: 0.38; 95% CI: 0.27-0.50; P < 0.001). CONCLUSION: In a large population of heart failure patients treated with CRT, the reduction in LV end-systolic volume at the mid-term follow-up demonstrated to be a better predictor of long-term survival than improvement in the clinical status.
Bertini et al. (Fri,) conducted a cohort in Heart failure (n=679). Echocardiographic response to CRT vs. Clinical response to CRT was evaluated on All-cause mortality (HR 0.38, 95% CI 0.27-0.50, p=< 0.001). Echocardiographic response to CRT (≥15% reduction in LV end-systolic volume) was independently associated with superior long-term survival (HR 0.38; 95% CI 0.27-0.50; P<0.001).
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