Journal of Clinical Medicine (Mar 2024)

Retinal Vascular Changes in Heart Failure with Preserved Ejection Fraction Using <i>Optical Coherence Tomography Angiography</i>

  • Jerremy Weerts,
  • Anne G. Raafs,
  • Birgit Sandhoefner,
  • Frank C. T. van der Heide,
  • Sanne G. J. Mourmans,
  • Nicolas Wolff,
  • Robert P. Finger,
  • Peyman Falahat,
  • Maximilian W. M. Wintergerst,
  • Vanessa P. M. van Empel,
  • Stephane R. B. Heymans

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm13071892
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 7
p. 1892

Abstract

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Background: Systemic microvascular regression and dysfunction are considered important underlying mechanisms in heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF), but retinal changes are unknown. Methods: This prospective study aimed to investigate whether retinal microvascular and structural parameters assessed using optical coherence tomography angiography (OCT-A) differ between patients with HFpEF and control individuals (i.e., capillary vessel density, thickness of retina layers). We also aimed to assess the associations of retinal parameters with clinical and echocardiographic parameters in HFpEF. HFpEF patients, but not controls, underwent echocardiography. Macula-centered 6 × 6 mm volume scans were computed of both eyes. Results: Twenty-two HFpEF patients and 24 controls without known HFpEF were evaluated, with an age of 74 [68–80] vs. 68 [58–77] years (p = 0.027), and 73% vs. 42% females (p = 0.034), respectively. HFpEF patients showed vascular degeneration compared to controls, depicted by lower macular vessel density (p p = 0.025), and a trend towards lower total retinal volume (p = 0.050) on OCT-A. In HFpEF, a lower total retinal volume was associated with markers of diastolic dysfunction (septal e’, septal and average E/e’: R2 = 0.38, 0.36, 0.25, respectively; all p Conclusions: Patients with HFpEF showed clear levels of retinal vascular changes compared to control individuals, and retinal alterations appeared to be associated with markers of more severe diastolic dysfunction in HFpEF. OCT-A may therefore be a promising technique for monitoring systemic microvascular regression and cardiac diastolic dysfunction.

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