International Journal of Cardiology: Heart & Vasculature (Oct 2024)

Clinical determinants and biomarkers associated with cardiac fibrosis after heart transplantation as assessed by magnetic resonance: Size matters

  • Anne Vorlat,
  • Jeroen van Eijk,
  • Sjoerd Wiersma,
  • Leroy Smid,
  • Sofie Depooter,
  • Bernard Paelinck,
  • Khadija Guerti,
  • Bart Peeters,
  • Nicole Sturkenboom,
  • Emeline Van Craenenbroeck,
  • Hein Heidbuchel,
  • Caroline Van De Heyning

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 54
p. 101479

Abstract

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Background: Cardiac fibrosis is increasingly recognized as a marker of worse outcomes in long-term follow-up after heart transplantation (HTX). We investigated the clinical determinants and biomarkers of focal and interstitial cardiac fibrosis as assessed with cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR). Methods: Consecutive HTX recipients underwent CMR with late gadolinium enhancement for focal myocardial fibrosis and T1 mapping for interstitial fibrosis. We calculated the correlations of these findings with clinical parameters, history, biomarkers of fibrosis (B-type natriuretic peptide (BNP), growth differentiation factor-15, galectin-3 and soluble ligand ST2) and echocardiography. Results: Forty-eight HTX patients were included: median age 63 ± 13 years, 11 ± 6 years after heart transplantation. Only donor weight (p 0.044) and the rate of a > 30 % mismatch between donor and recipient weight (p 0.02) were significantly different in patients with vs. without late LGE. Extracellular volume (ECV) was correlated with the weight mismatch between donor and recipient (r = 0.32, p 0.04), resulting in a higher ECV for oversized donors. BNP was the only biomarker of the four studied that was correlated with interstitial fibrosis as assessed by ECV (r = 0.35, p 0.04). T1 relaxation time was correlated with treated acute cellular rejection grade ≥ 2 (ISHLT grading) (r = 0.34, p 0.02). Conclusion: Both focal and interstitial fibrosis, as determined by CMR, after heart transplantation are correlated with donor and recipient weight mismatch. BNP was the only biomarker clinically relevant to interstitial cardiac fibrosis.

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