CMR demonstration of multiple morphological phenotypes in Anderson-Fabry disease

  • Deva D
  • Hanneman K
  • Li Q
  • et al.
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Abstract

Background: We conducted a review of cardiovascular magnetic resonance studies performed in patients with Anderson-Fabry disease (AFD) at our institution aiming to describe the spectrum of imaging findings in this rare disease. Methods: All patients with confirmed AFD who had cardiac MRI at our center were included. Short-axis steady state free precession cines and segmented inversion recovery late gadolinium enhancement (LGE) images were acquired using standard parameters. Offline analysis was performed for LV volumes and maximum end-diastolic wall thickness (EDWTmax). Patients were categorized into 4 groups: 1) no wall thickening (EDWT≤12mm); 2) concentric hypertrophy (EDWTmax>12mm with septal to lateral wall thickness ratio <1.3); 3) asymmetric hypertrophy (EDWTmax >12mm with septal to lateral wall thickness ratio ≥1.3); and 4) apical hypertrophy. LGE was quantified using a semi-automated technique with thresholds of 2SD, 4SD and 6SD. Charts were reviewed for clinical information. Results: Forty-one patients were included (53.6% male, n=22), median age 45.3 years (range 22.3-68.1). Morphological MR findings are summarized in Table 1. Males were more likely to have increased LV wall thickness and LV mass. The 4-SD threshold for LGE demonstrated the best agreement with manual threshold quantification (k=0.62). 6-SD and 2-SD demonstrated lower agreement with manual threshold quantification k=0.55 and k=0.05 respectively. Just over two thirds of patients had late gadolinium enhancement (LGE), but only half of these had typical lateral wall mid-myocardial scar. Only a quarter of patients had both concentric wall thickening and typical lateral wall scar. Only 11 of 25 patients with wall thickening had elevated LVMI. There was significantly more myocardial scar (as a percentage of total myocardium) in patients with elevated LVMI (n=10, 10.97%, IQR 7.57- 17.43%) than in patients with normal LVMI (n=19, 1.87%, IQR 1.15-4.37%, p<0.001), and significantly more scar in patients with wall thickening (n=21, 7.1%, IQR 2.35-11.71%) than those without wall thickening(n=8, 1.19%, IQR 0.83-2.23%, p=0.003). Patients with elevated LVMI had higher incidence of arrhythmia (atrial fibrillation & ventricular tachycardia[VT]) than those without elevated LVMI (8/13 vs. 3/28, p=0.001). Patients with elevated LVMI had higher incidence of VT than those without elevated LVMI (4/13 vs. 1/28, p=0.028). Conclusions: Concentric thickening and lateral wall mid-myocardial scar are the most common manifestations of AFD, but the spectrum includes cases identical to apical and asymmetric septal hypertrophy subtypes of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. (Figure Presented).

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Deva, D. P., Hanneman, K., Li, Q., Thavendiranathan, P., Morel, C., Iwanochko, R. M., & Crean, A. (2015). CMR demonstration of multiple morphological phenotypes in Anderson-Fabry disease. Journal of Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance, 17, Q68. https://doi.org/10.1186/1532-429x-17-s1-q68

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