T1 mapping in severe aortic stenosis: insights into LV remodeling

  • Treibel T
  • Fontana M
  • Reant P
  • et al.
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Abstract

Background: Aortic stenosis (AS) appears to be not just a disease of the valve, with adaptive and maladaptive myocardial remodeling playing a key role. Left ventricular (LV) remodeling in AS is characterized by cellular hypertrophy and diffuse myocardial fibrosis. Macroscopic patterns differ between patients: as hypertrophy increases, the pattern changes from normal to concentric remodeling, concentric hypertrophy and finally decompensation. T1 mapping allows non-invasive estimation of diffuse myocardial fibrosis (native T1 and extracellular volume fraction; ECV). We use this methodology to investigate and correlate macroscopic and tissue level patterns of LV remodeling in AS patients prior to aortic valve replacement (AVR) as part of a larger outcome study (RELIEF-AS Study: NCT 02174471). Methods: 135 patients (Age 70±10 years; 53% male) with severe, symptomatic AS (AVA 0.76±0.26cm2; Vmax 4.3±0.6m/sec) were recruited prior to AVR. CMR with T1 mapping using ShMOLLI was performed, in addition to the standard pre-operative echocardiographic assessment. LV remodeling was categorized into the 4 patterns (above, Figure 1), defined by LV mass index and the mass:volume ratio as previously described (Dweck MR JCMR 2012). Results: Patterns of macroscopic LV remodeling were different between genders (Table 1): normal geometry (16% of total; 81% female), concentric remodeling (34% of total; 76% female) concentric hypertrophy (62% of total, 69% male) and decompensation (23% of total; 78% male). Native T1 and ECV increased with more abnormal patterns of remodeling (ANOVA, p=0.016 and p=0.028; Table 1), however T1 and ECV levels were gender independent (male vs female 982±37ms vs 989±39ms, p=0.3; ECV 28±3% vs 28±3%, p=0.7). Native T1 and ECV correlated with NT-pro-BNP (R=0.51 and R=0.48, p<0.001), although native T1 was a better univariate predictor (R=0.45, p<0.001 vs R=0.33, p<0.001). On multivariant analysis, only LVEF, creatinine and native T1 (in order of importance) predicted NT-pro-BNP level: (R2=0.75, p<0.001); neither LV mass, EDV, left atrial area nor markers of afterload, diastolic function or AS severity were predictors. Conclusions: Patients with severe AS remodel differently and the patterns of remodeling appear to be influenced by gender with males more likely to have a hypertrophic response. Both native T1 and ECV track the prognostic markers NT-pro-BNP, with native T1 mapping the better predictor. Native T1 adds prognostic information over traditional echocardiographic markers of AS, suggesting that both macroscopic and microscopic changes contribute to the assessment of AS. We await 1-year post-AVR data from the RELIEF-AS study (due next year). (Figure Presented).

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Treibel, T. A., Fontana, M., Reant, P., Espinosa, M. A., Castelletti, S., Herrey, A. S., … Moon, J. (2015). T1 mapping in severe aortic stenosis: insights into LV remodeling. Journal of Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance, 17, O89. https://doi.org/10.1186/1532-429x-17-s1-o89

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