Journal of Cardiovascular Development and Disease (Sep 2023)

Cardiac Magnetic Resonance, Electromechanical Activation, Kidney Function, and Natriuretic Peptides in Cardiac Resynchronization Therapy Upgrades

  • Derek J. Bivona,
  • Pim J. A. Oomen,
  • Yu Wang,
  • Frances L. Morales,
  • Mohamad Abdi,
  • Xu Gao,
  • Rohit Malhotra,
  • Andrew Darby,
  • Nishaki Mehta,
  • Oliver J. Monfredi,
  • J. Michael Mangrum,
  • Pamela K. Mason,
  • Wayne C. Levy,
  • Sula Mazimba,
  • Amit R. Patel,
  • Frederick H. Epstein,
  • Kenneth C. Bilchick

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcdd10100409
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 10
p. 409

Abstract

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As the mechanism for worse prognosis after cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) upgrades in heart failure patients with RVP dependence (RVP-HF) has clinical implications for patient selection and CRT implementation approaches, this study’s objective was to evaluate prognostic implications of cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) findings and clinical factors in 102 HF patients (23.5% female, median age 66.5 years old, median follow-up 4.8 years) with and without RVP dependence undergoing upgrade and de novo CRT implants. Compared with other CRT groups, RVP-HF patients had decreased survival (p = 0.02), more anterior late-activated LV pacing sites (p = 0.002) by CMR, more atrial fibrillation (p = 0.0006), and higher creatinine (0.002). CMR activation timing at the LV pacing site predicted post-CRT LV functional improvement (p p < 0.0001); however, only the higher pre-CRT creatinine partially mediated (37%) the decreased survival in RVP-HF patients. In conclusion, RVP-HF had a distinct CMR phenotype, which has important implications for the selection of LV pacing sites in CRT upgrades, and only chronic kidney disease mediated the decreased survival after CRT in RVP-HF.

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