4.2 Article

Increased myocardial oxygen consumption rates are associated with maladaptive right ventricular remodeling and decreased event-free survival in heart failure patients

Journal

JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR CARDIOLOGY
Volume 28, Issue 6, Pages 2784-2795

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s12350-020-02144-x

Keywords

Heart Failure; PET; RV function; Metabolism imaging agents

Funding

  1. Ontario Research Fund [RE07-021]
  2. University of Ottawa Cardiac Endowment Fund at the Heart Institute
  3. Heart and Stroke Foundation of Ontario (HSFO)
  4. University of Ottawa Tier 2 Research Chair in Heart Failure Research
  5. HFSO
  6. University of Ottawa Tier 1 Chair in Cardiac Imaging Research
  7. Ottawa Heart Institute Vered Chair in Cardiology
  8. Vanier Scholarship

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Right ventricular dysfunction is associated with increased oxygen consumption (also characterized by a higher risk for cardiac events) and impaired right ventricular sympathetic function.
Background Reduced left ventricular (LV) function is associated with increased myocardial oxygen consumption rate (MVO2) and altered sympathetic activity, the role of which is not well described in right ventricular (RV) dysfunction. Methods and results 33 patients with left heart failure were assessed for RV function/size using echocardiography. Positron emission tomography (PET) was used to measure C-11-acetate clearance rate (k(mono)), C-11-hydroxyephedrine (C-11-HED) standardized uptake value (SUV), and retention rate. RV MVO2 was estimated from k(mono). C-11-HED SUV and retention indicated sympathetic neuronal function. A composite clinical endpoint was defined as unplanned cardiac hospitalization within 5 years. Patients with (n = 10) or without (n = 23) RV dysfunction were comparable in terms of sex (male: 70.0 vs 69.5%), LV ejection fraction (39.6 +/- 9.0 vs 38.6 +/- 9.4%), and systemic hypertension (70.0 vs 78.3%). RV dysfunction patients were older (70.9 +/- 13.5 vs 59.4 +/- 11.5 years; P = .03) and had a higher prevalence of pulmonary hypertension (60.0% vs 13.0%; P = .01). RV dysfunction was associated with increased RV MVO2 (.106 +/- .042 vs .068 +/- .031 mL/min/g; P = .02) and decreased C-11-HED SUV and retention (6.05 +/- .53 vs 7.40 +/- 1.39 g/mL (P < .001) and .08 +/- .02 vs .11 +/- .03 mL/min/g (P < .001), respectively). Patients with an RV MVO2 above the median had a shorter event-free survival (hazard ratio = 5.47; P = .01). Patients who died within the 5-year follow-up period showed a trend (not statistically significant) for higher RV MVO2 (.120 +/- .026 vs .074 +/- .038 mL/min/g; P = .05). Conclusions RV dysfunction is associated with increased oxygen consumption (also characterized by a higher risk for cardiac events) and impaired RV sympathetic function.

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