AI Article Synopsis

  • * The research involved 16 participants undergoing a new testing technique (ExeCMR + CPET) to assess various oxygen consumption factors and tested the method's reliability and reproducibility.
  • * Results showed the testing method is safe and reliable, with cancer survivors experiencing lower peak oxygen consumption and cardiac index compared to healthy controls, highlighting potential cardiovascular impairments in fatigued cancer patients.

Article Abstract

Background: Patients treated for hematologic malignancy often experience reduced exercise capacity and increased fatigue; however whether this reduction is related to cardiac dysfunction or impairment of skeletal muscle oxygen extraction during activity is unknown. Cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPET) coupled with stress cardiac magnetic resonance (ExeCMR), may provide a noninvasive method to identify the abnormalities of cardiac function or skeletal muscle oxygen extraction. This study was performed to determine the feasibility and reproducibility of a ExeCMR + CPET technique to measure the Fick components of peak oxygen consumption (VO) and pilot its discriminatory potential in hematologic cancer patients experiencing fatigue.

Methods: We studied 16 individuals undergoing ExeCMR to determine exercise cardiac reserve with simultaneous measures of VO. The arteriovenous oxygen content difference (a-vOdiff) was calculated as the quotient of VO/cardiac index (CI). Repeatability in measurements of peak VO, CI, and a-vOdiff was assessed in seven healthy controls. Finally, we measured the Fick determinants of peak VO in hematologic cancer survivors with fatigue (n = 6) and compared them to age/gender-matched healthy controls (n = 6).

Results: Study procedures were successfully completed without any adverse events in all subjects (N = 16, 100%). The protocol demonstrated good-excellent test-retest reproducibility for peak VO (intraclass correlation coefficient [ICC] = 0.992 [95%CI:0.955-0.999]; P < 0.001), peak CI (ICC = 0.970 [95%CI:0.838-0.995]; P < 0.001), and a-vOdiff (ICC = 0.953 [95%CI:0.744-0.992]; P < 0.001). Hematologic cancer survivors with fatigue demonstrated a significantly lower peak VO (17.1 [13.5-23.5] vs. 26.0 [19.7-29.5] mL·kg·min, P = 0.026) and lower peak CI (5.0 [4.7-6.3] vs. 7.4 [7.0-8.8] L·min/m, P = 0.004) without a significant difference in a-vOdiff (14.4 [11.8-16.9] vs. 13.6 [10.9-15.4] mLO/dL, P = 0.589).

Conclusions: Noninvasive measurement of peak VO Fick determinants is feasible and reliable with an ExeCMR + CPET protocol in those treated for a hematologic malignancy and may offer insight into the mechanisms of exercise intolerance in those experiencing fatigue.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10331991PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40959-023-00182-1DOI Listing

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