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Exercise stress echocardiography with tissue Doppler imaging in risk stratification of mild to moderate aortic stenosis. | LitMetric

Exercise stress echocardiography with tissue Doppler imaging in risk stratification of mild to moderate aortic stenosis.

Int J Cardiovasc Imaging

Department of Cardiology, Ospedale San Giuseppe Multimedica, Via San Vittore 12, 20123, Milan, Italy.

Published: December 2015

Background: Patients with mild to moderate aortic stenosis (AS) seem to have a worse outcome than commonly expected. Early identification of subjects who may develop a rapid disease progression or cardiovascular events is critical in order to apply adequate risk management.

Study Design: Observational prospective single-centre study.

Objective: To determine the prognostic role of exercise stress echocardiography (ESE) in patients with mild and moderate asymptomatic AS.

Patients: Ninety consecutive patients (mean age 74 ± 12 years) with isolated mild and moderate AS were enrolled into the study protocol over a 20 months period. Follow-up time was 12 months.

Methods: A complete echocardiographic study with tissue Doppler imaging (TDI) was performed at baseline and during semi-supine symptom-limited exercise test to evaluate: (1) the occurrence of symptoms, (2) ST segment changes, (3) transaortic pressure gradient, (4) the E/A ratio, (5) the E/e' ratio and (6) the systolic pulmonary artery pressure.

Main Outcome Measures: During the 1 year follow-up time, we evaluated the occurrence of adverse cardiac events, defined as any of the following: (1) cardio-vascular hospitalization; (2) requirement for aortic valve replacement; (3) cardiac death.

Results: During follow-up, three patients died, 11 underwent aortic valve replacement and 26 had cardiovascular hospitalizations. On univariate analysis, patients who exhibited symptoms during exercise (HR 2.93, p = 0.003); the occurrence of a ≥ 2 mm exercise-induced ST segment depression (HR 3.12, p = 0.001); a ≥ 15 mmHg increase in mean transaortic pressure gradient during exercise (HR 2.77, p = 0.001); a ≥ 50 mmHg exercise-induced increase in systolic pulmonary artery pressure (HR 2.90, p = 0.009); an exercise-induced pseudo-normalization of the E/A ratio (E/A ≥ 1) (HR 7.50, p = 0.0001) and, particularly, a ≥ 15 exercise-induced increase in the E/e' ratio (HR 7.69, p = 0.0001) had a significantly higher risk of cardiac events during the follow-up time. On multivariate analysis, only the latter covariate (HR 6.04, p = 0.009) was independently associated with adverse cardiac events.

Conclusions: A ≥ 15 stress-induced increase in E/e' ratio is highly predictive of cardiac events in patients with mild to moderate AS. Assessment of diastolic function using TDI during ESE provides additional prognostic information in such patients.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10554-015-0724-9DOI Listing

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