Journal of Clinical Medicine (Aug 2020)

Global Longitudinal Strain at Rest as an Independent Predictor of Mortality in Liver Transplant Candidates: A Retrospective Clinical Study

  • Mare Mechelinck,
  • Bianca Hartmann,
  • Sandra Hamada,
  • Michael Becker,
  • Anne Andert,
  • Tom Florian Ulmer,
  • Ulf Peter Neumann,
  • Theresa Hildegard Wirtz,
  • Alexander Koch,
  • Christian Trautwein,
  • Anna Bettina Roehl,
  • Rolf Rossaint,
  • Marc Hein

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm9082616
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 8
p. 2616

Abstract

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Speckle tracking echocardiography enables the detection of subclinical left ventricular dysfunction at rest in many heart diseases and potentially in severe liver diseases. It could also possibly serve as a predictor for survival. In this study, 117 patients evaluated for liver transplantation in a single center between May 2010 and April 2016 with normal left ventricular ejection fraction were included according to clinical characteristics of their liver disease: (1) compensated (n = 29), (2) clinically significant portal hypertension (n = 49), and (3) decompensated (n = 39). Standard echocardiography and speckle tracking echocardiography were performed at rest and during dobutamine stress. Follow-up amounted to three years to evaluate survival and major cardiac events. Altogether 67% (78/117) of the patients were transplanted and 32% (31/96 patients) died during the three-year follow-up period. Global longitudinal strain (GLS) at rest was significantly increased (became more negative) with the severity of liver disease (p −17/female: >−18%) could predict patient survival in a multivariate Cox regression analysis (p = 0.002). GLS proved valuable in identifying transplant candidates with latent systolic dysfunction.

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