Left atrial emptying fraction assessed by CMR was an independent predictor of heart failure admission and all-cause mortality in patients with diastolic dysfunction (HR 1.04 per 1% change).
Cohort (n=164)
No
Do left atrial indices assessed by CMR predict adverse clinical outcomes in patients with left ventricular diastolic dysfunction?
Effect estimate: HR 1.04 (95% CI 1.02-1.06)
p-value: p=<0.001
Abstract Left atrial (LA) features are altered when diastolic dysfunction (DD) is present. The relations of LA features to the DD severity and to adverse outcomes remain unclear using CMR images. We sought to compare LA features including volumes, emptying fraction, and strains as predictors of left ventricular (LV) DD and adverse outcomes. We compared four groups including normal controls (n = 32), grade I DD (n = 69), grade II DD (n = 42), and grade III DD (n = 21). DD was graded by echocardiography following the current ASE guidelines. Maximum LA volume (LAV max ), minimum LA volume (LAV min ), and LA emptying fraction (LAEF) were assessed using CMR cine images. Phasic LA strains including reservoir, conduit, and booster pump strain were assessed by feature tracking. The outcome was a composite of hospital admissions for heart failure and all-cause mortality analyzed using Cox proportional hazard models. LAV max and LAV min were progressively larger while LAEF and LA strain measures were lower with worsening degree of DD (all p < 0.001). Among 132 patients with DD, 61 reached the composite outcome after on average 36-months of follow-up. Each of the LA parameters except for LA conduit strain was an independent predictor of the outcome in the adjusted Cox proportional hazard models (all p < 0.001). They remained significant outcome predictors after the model additionally adjusted for LV longitudinal strain. The AUC of outcome prediction was highest by LAEF (0.760) followed by LA reservoir strain (0.733) and LAV min (0.725). Among all the LA features, increased LA volumes, reduced LAEF, reduced LA reservoir and booster pump strains were all associated with DD and DD severity. While LA strains are valuable, conventional parameters such as LAEF and LAV min remain to be highly effective in outcome prediction with comparable performance.
Nguyen et al. (Fri,) conducted a cohort in Left ventricular diastolic dysfunction (n=164). Cardiac magnetic resonance imaging of left atrial parameters vs. Normal controls was evaluated on Composite of hospital admissions for heart failure and all-cause mortality (HR 1.04, 95% CI 1.02-1.06, p=<0.001). Left atrial emptying fraction assessed by CMR was an independent predictor of heart failure admission and all-cause mortality in patients with diastolic dysfunction (HR 1.04 per 1% change).
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