Association of right atrial strain and long-term outcome in severe secondary tricuspid regurgitation

Author:

Galloo XavierORCID,Fortuni FedericoORCID,Meucci Maria Chiara,Butcher Steele C,Dietz Marlieke F,Prihadi Edgard A,Cosyns Bernard,Delgado VictoriaORCID,Bax Jeroen J,Ajmone Marsan NinaORCID

Abstract

ObjectiveSevere secondary tricuspid regurgitation (STR) causes significant right atrial (RA) volume overload, resulting in structural and functional RA-remodelling. This study evaluated whether patients with severe STR and reduced RA function, as assessed by RA-reservoir-strain (RASr), show lower long-term prognosis.MethodsConsecutive patients, from a single centre, with first diagnosis of severe STR and RASr measure available, were included. Extensive echocardiographic analysis comprised measures of cardiac chamber size and function, assessed also by two-dimensional speckle-tracking strain analysis. Primary outcome was all-cause mortality, analysed from inclusion until death or last follow-up. The association of RASr with the outcome was evaluated by Cox regression analysis and Akaike information criterion.ResultsA total of 586 patients with severe STR (age 68±13 years; 52% male) were included. Patients presented with mild right ventricular (RV) dilatation (end-diastolic area 13.8±6.5 cm2/m2) and dysfunction (free-wall strain 16.2±7.2%), and with moderate-to-severe RA dilatation (max area 15.0±5.3 cm2/m2); the median value of RASr was 13%. In the overall population, 10-year overall survival was low (40%, 349 deaths), and was significantly lower in patients with lower RASr (defined by the median value): 36% (195 deaths) for RASr ≤13% compared with 45% (154 deaths) for RASr >13% (log-rank p=0.016). With a median follow-up of 6.6 years, RASr was independently associated with all-cause mortality (HR per 5% RASr increase:0.928; 95% CI 0.864 to 0.996; p=0.038), providing additional value over relevant clinical and echocardiographic covariates (including RA size and RV function/size).ConclusionsPatients with severe STR presented with significant RA remodelling, and lower RA function, as measured by RASr, was independently associated with all-cause mortality, potentially improving risk stratification in these patients.

Funder

Edwards Lifesciences

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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