Association between heart failure aetiology and magnitude of echocardiographic remodelling and outcome of cardiac resynchronization therapy

Publication date

2020-04

Authors

Kloosterman, Mariëlle
van Stipdonk, Antonius M.W.
Ter Horst, I. A H
Rienstra, Michiel
Van Gelder, Isabelle C.
Vos, M AISNI 0000000395825015
Prinzen, Frits W.
Meine, MathiasORCID 0000-0002-1102-2155ISNI 0000000369243476
Vernooy, Kevin
Maass, Alexander H.

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article

Collections

Open Access logo

License

Abstract

AIMS: Echocardiographic response after cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) is often lesser in ischaemic cardiomyopathy (ICM) than non-ischaemic dilated cardiomyopathy (NIDCM) patients. We assessed the association of heart failure aetiology on the amount of reverse remodelling and outcome of CRT. METHODS AND RESULTS: Nine hundred twenty-eight CRT patients were retrospectively included. Reverse remodelling and endpoint occurrence (all-cause mortality, heart transplantation, or left ventricular assist device implantation) was assessed. Two response definitions [≥15% reduction left ventricular end systolic volume (LVESV) and ≥5% improvement left ventricular ejection fraction] and the most accurate cut-off for the amount of reverse remodelling that predicted endpoint freedom were assessed. Mean follow-up was 3.8 ± 2.4 years. ICM was present in 47%. ICM patients who were older (69 ± 7 vs. 63 ± 11), more often men (83% vs. 58%), exhibited less LVESV reduction (13 ± 31% vs. 23 ± 32%) and less left ventricular ejection fraction improvement (5 ± 11% vs. 10 ± 12%) than NIDCM patients (all P < 0.001). Nevertheless, every 1% LVESV reduction was associated with a relative reduction in endpoint occurrence: NIDCM 1.3%, ICM 0.9%, and absolute risk reduction was similar (0.4%). The most accurate cut-off of LVESV reduction that predicted endpoint freedom was 17.1% in NIDCM and 13.2% in ICM. CONCLUSIONS: ICM patients achieve less reverse remodelling than NIDCM, but the prognostic gain in terms of survival time is the same for every single percentage of reverse remodelling that does occur. The assessment and expected magnitude of reverse remodelling should take this effect of heart failure aetiology into account.

Keywords

Aetiology, Cardiac resynchronization therapy, Clinical response, Echocardiography, Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine, Journal Article

Citation

Kloosterman, M, van Stipdonk, A M W, ter Horst, I, Rienstra, M, Van Gelder, I C, Vos, M A, Prinzen, F W, Meine, M, Vernooy, K & Maass, A H 2020, 'Association between heart failure aetiology and magnitude of echocardiographic remodelling and outcome of cardiac resynchronization therapy', ESC heart failure, vol. 7, no. 2, pp. 645-653. https://doi.org/10.1002/ehf2.12624