PLoS ONE (Jan 2018)

Inter-vendor reproducibility of left and right ventricular cardiovascular magnetic resonance myocardial feature-tracking.

  • Roman Johannes Gertz,
  • Torben Lange,
  • Johannes Tammo Kowallick,
  • Sören Jan Backhaus,
  • Michael Steinmetz,
  • Wieland Staab,
  • Shelby Kutty,
  • Gerd Hasenfuß,
  • Joachim Lotz,
  • Andreas Schuster

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0193746
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 3
p. e0193746

Abstract

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Since cardiovascular magnetic resonance feature-tracking (CMR-FT) has been demonstrated to be of incremental clinical merit we investigated the interchangeability of global left and right ventricular strain parameters between different CMR-FT software solutions.CMR-cine images of 10 patients without significant reduction in LVEF and RVEF and 10 patients with a significantly impaired systolic function were analyzed using two different types of FT-software (TomTec, Germany; QStrain, Netherlands). Global longitudinal strains (LV GLS, RV GLS), global left ventricular circumferential (GCS) and radial strains (GRS) were assessed. Differences in intra- and inter-observer variability within and between software types based on single and up to three repeated and subsequently averaged measurements were evaluated.Inter-vendor agreement was highest for GCS followed by LV GLS. GRS and RV GLS showed lower inter-vendor agreement. Variability was consistently higher in healthy volunteers as compared to the patient group. Intra-vendor reproducibility was excellent for GCS, LV GLS and RV GLS, but lower for GRS. The impact of repeated measurements was most pronounced for GRS and RV GLS on an intra-vendor level.Cardiac pathology has no influence on CMR-FT reproducibility. LV GLS and GCS qualify as the most robust parameters within and between individual software types. Since both parameters can be interchangeably assessed with different software solutions they may enter the clinical arena for optimized diagnostic and prognostic evaluation of cardiovascular morbidity and mortality in various pathologies.