Background
Cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) improves quality of life, exercise tolerance, and myocardial function in a considerable number of patients with heart failure (HF) and left bundle branch block. In addition, CRT decreases HF hospitalizations and overall mortality. However, structural, morbidity, and mortality improvements after CRT rate between 40 and 60%.
Objective
To compare the role of the cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) and speckle-tracking echocardiography (STE) in expectation of response to CRT.
Patients and methods
We investigated the predictors of CRT response using CMR measurement of left ventricular (LV) volumes and function, CMR-derived mechanical dyssynchrony, scar percentage, and its relation to the site of LV lead implantation, in comparison with STE in prediction of CRT outcomes.
Results
A total of 35 patients with HF planned for CRT were included. Echocardiography was used to define the response to CRT (15% reduction in LV end-systolic volume 6 months after implantation). At follow-up, 18 (51.43%) patients were categorized as responders. Echocardiographic speckle-tracking radial strain analysis showed a significant LV dyssynchrony in responders versus nonresponders (radial mid-anteroseptal and posterior wall delays were 245.1 ms and 80.7 ms, respectively) (P<0.0001). LV radial dyssynchrony, as measured by CMR-feature tracking, was significantly higher in responders versus nonresponders (mean of SDt-16 of radial strain were 232.7 ms vs. 180.4 ms, P<0.0001), and median of radial mid-anteroseptal-to-inferolateral wall delay was 375 vs. 125.4 ms, P<0.0001). Late contrast-enhanced CMR was performed for scar assessment. It was noticed that scar percentage of LV mass was much higher in nonresponders (median 6.2 vs. 0%) (P=0.005).
Conclusion
CMR imaging offers the unique opportunity to predict the CRT outcomes by measurement of LV volumes, LV mechanical dyssynchrony (that well correlated with that of STE), and the total scar percentage and distribution in a single examination.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.