Establishing minimally important differences for cardiac MRI end-points in pulmonary arterial hypertension

Author:

Alabed SamerORCID,Garg Pankaj,Alandejani FaisalORCID,Dwivedi Krit,Maiter Ahmed,Karunasaagarar Kavita,Rajaram Smitha,Hill Catherine,Thomas Steven,Gossling Rebecca,Sharkey Michael J.ORCID,Salehi Mahan,Wild Jim M.,Watson Lisa,Hameed AbdulORCID,Charalampopoulos Athanasios,Lu Haiping,Rothman Alex M.K.,Thompson A.A. RogerORCID,Elliot Charlie A.,Hamilton Neil,Johns Christopher S.,Armstrong Iain,Condliffe RobinORCID,van der Geest Rob J.,Swift Andrew J.,Kiely David G.ORCID

Abstract

BackgroundCardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) is the gold standard technique to assess biventricular volumes and function, and is increasingly being considered as an end-point in clinical studies. Currently, with the exception of right ventricular (RV) stroke volume and RV end-diastolic volume, there is only limited data on minimally important differences (MIDs) reported for CMR metrics. Our study aimed to identify MIDs for CMR metrics based on US Food and Drug Administration recommendations for a clinical outcome measure that should reflect how a patient “feels, functions or survives”.MethodsConsecutive treatment-naïve patients with pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) between 2010 and 2022 who had two CMR scans (at baseline prior to treatment and 12 months following treatment) were identified from the ASPIRE registry. All patients were followed up for 1 additional year after the second scan. For both scans, cardiac measurements were obtained from a validated fully automated segmentation tool. The MID in CMR metrics was determined using two distribution-based (0.5sdand minimal detectable change) and two anchor-based (change difference and generalised linear model regression) methods benchmarked to how a patient “feels” (emPHasis-10 quality of life questionnaire), “functions” (incremental shuttle walk test) or “survives” for 1-year mortality to changes in CMR measurements.Results254 patients with PAH were included (mean±sdage 53±16 years, 79% female and 66% categorised as intermediate risk based on the 2022 European Society of Cardiology/European Respiratory Society risk score). We identified a 5% absolute increase in RV ejection fraction and a 17 mL decrease in RV end-diastolic or end-systolic volumes as the MIDs for improvement. Conversely, a 5% decrease in RV ejection fraction and a 10 mL increase in RV volumes were associated with worsening.ConclusionsThis study establishes clinically relevant CMR MIDs for how a patient “feels, functions or survives” in response to PAH treatment. These findings provide further support for the use of CMR as a clinically relevant clinical outcome measure and will aid trial size calculations for studies using CMR.

Funder

NIHR Sheffield Biomedical Research Centre

National Institute for Health and Care Research

Wellcome Trust

Publisher

European Respiratory Society (ERS)

Subject

Pulmonary and Respiratory Medicine

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