1. Clinical Significance of Exercise Pulmonary Hypertension With a Negative Diastolic Stress Test for Suspected Heart Failure With Preserved Ejection Fraction
- Author
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Jan Verwerft, Jan Stassen, Maarten Falter, Youri Bekhuis, Sarah Hoedemakers, Tin Gojevic, Sara Moura Ferreira, Simon Vanhentenrijk, Sarah Stroobants, Siddharth Jogani, Dominique Hansen, Ruta Jasaityte, Bernard Cosyns, Alexander Van De Bruaene, Philippe B. Bertrand, Rudolf A. de Boer, Andreas B. Gevaert, Frederik H. Verbrugge, Lieven Herbots, and Guido Claessen
- Subjects
diastolic heart failure ,dyspnea ,exercise testing ,HFpEF ,pulmonary hypertension ,stress echocardiography ,Diseases of the circulatory (Cardiovascular) system ,RC666-701 - Abstract
Background Half of patients with heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF) remain undiagnosed by resting evaluation alone. Therefore, exercise testing is proposed. The diastolic stress test (DST), however, has limited sensitivity. We aimed to determine the clinical significance of adding the mean pulmonary artery pressure over cardiac output (mPAP/CO) slope to the DST in suspected HFpEF. Methods and Results In this prospective cohort study, consecutive patients (n=1936) with suspected HFpEF underwent exercise echocardiography with simultaneous respiratory gas analysis. These patients were stratified by exercise E over e′ (exE/e′) and mPAP/CO slope, and peak oxygen uptake, natriuretic peptides (NT‐proBNP [N‐terminal pro‐B‐type natriuretic peptide]), and score‐based HFpEF likelihood were compared. Twenty‐two percent of patients (n=428) had exE/e′3 mm Hg/L per min, 24% (n=464) had a positive DST (exE/e′≥15), and 54% (n=1044) had a normal DST and slope. Percentage of predicted oxygen uptake was similar in the group with exE/e′3 mm Hg/L per min despite a negative DST. These patients had HFpEF characteristics and a peak oxygen uptake as low as patients with a positive DST. Therefore, an elevated mPAP/CO slope might indicate HFpEF irrespective of the DST result.
- Published
- 2024
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