Echocardiographic pressure–strain loop‐derived stroke work of the right ventricle: validation against the gold standard

Author:

Richter Manuel J.1ORCID,Douschan Philipp12,Fortuni Federico34,Gall Henning1,Ghofrani Hossein A.156,Keranov Stanislav7,Kremer Nils1,Kriechbaum Steffen D.8,Rako Zvonimir A.1,Rieth Andreas J.8,da Rocha Bruno Brito1,Seeger Werner1,Zedler Daniel1,Yildiz Selin1,Yogeswaran Athiththan1,Tello Khodr1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Internal Medicine Justus‐Liebig‐University Giessen, Universities of Giessen and Marburg Lung Center (UGMLC), Member of the German Center for Lung Research (DZL) Klinikstrasse 32 35392 Giessen Germany

2. Division of Pulmonology, Department of Internal Medicine Medical University of Graz Graz Austria

3. Department of Cardiology San Giovanni Battista Hospital Foligno Italy

4. Department of Cardiology Leiden University Medical Center Leiden The Netherlands

5. Department of Pneumology Kerckhoff Heart, Rheuma and Thoracic Center Bad Nauheim Germany

6. Department of Medicine Imperial College London London UK

7. Department of Cardiology and Angiology University of Giessen Giessen Germany

8. Department of Cardiology Heart and Thorax Center, Campus Kerckhoff, University of Giessen Bad Nauheim Germany

Abstract

AbstractAimsCommercially available integrated software for echocardiographic measurement of stroke work (SW) is increasingly used for the right ventricle, despite a lack of validation. We sought to assess the validity of this method [echo‐based myocardial work (MW) module] vs. gold‐standard invasive right ventricular (RV) pressure–volume (PV) loops.Methods and resultsFrom the prospectively recruiting EXERTION study (NCT04663217), we included 42 patients [34 patients with pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) or chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension (CTEPH) and 8 patients with absence of cardiopulmonary disease] with RV echocardiography and invasive PV catheterization. Echocardiographic SW was assessed as RV global work index (RVGWI) generated via the integrated pressure–strain MW software. Invasive SW was calculated as the area bounded by the PV loop. An additional parameter derived from the MW module, RV global wasted work (RVGWW), was correlated with PV loop measures. RVGWI significantly correlated with invasive PV loop‐derived RV SW in the overall cohort [rho = 0.546 (P < 0.001)] and the PAH/CTEPH subgroup [rho = 0.568 (P < 0.001)]. Overall, RVGWW correlated with invasive measures of arterial elastance (Ea), the ratio of end‐systolic elastance (Ees)/Ea, and end‐diastolic elastance (Eed) significantly.ConclusionsIntegrated echo measurement of pressure–strain loop‐derived SW correlates with PV loop‐based assessment of RV SW. Wasted work correlates with invasive measures of load‐independent RV function. Given the methodological and anatomical challenges of RV work assessment, evolution of this approach by incorporating more elaborated echo analysis data and an RV reference curve might improve its reliability to mirror invasively assessed RV SW.

Funder

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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