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Cardiac Catheterization versus Echocardiography for Monitoring Pulmonary Pressure: A Prospective Study in Patients with Connective Tissue Disease-Associated Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension.

Authors :
Bournia, Vasiliki Kalliopi
Tsangaris, Iraklis
Rallidis, Loukianos
Konstantonis, Dimitrios
Frantzeskaki, Frantzeska
Anthi, Anastasia
Orfanos, Stylianos E.
Demerouti, Eftychia
Karyofillis, Panagiotis
Voudris, Vassilis
Laskari, Katerina
Panopoulos, Stylianos
Vlachoyiannopoulos, Panayiotis G.
Sfikakis, Petros P.
Source :
Diagnostics (2075-4418). Mar2020, Vol. 10 Issue 1, p49. 1p.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Standard echocardiography is important for pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) screening in patients with connective tissue disease (CTD), but PAH diagnosis and monitoring require cardiac catheterization. Herein, using cardiac catheterization as reference, we tested the hypothesis that follow-up echocardiography is adequate for clinical decision-making in these patients. We prospectively studied 69 consecutive patients with CTD-associated PAH. Invasive baseline pulmonary artery systolic pressure (PASP) was 60.19 ± 16.33 mmHg (mean ± SD) and pulmonary vascular resistance (PVR) was 6.44 ± 2.95WU. All patients underwent hemodynamic and echocardiographic follow-up after 9.47 ± 7.29 months; 27 patients had a third follow-up after 17.2 ± 7.4 months from baseline. We examined whether clinically meaningful hemodynamic deterioration of follow-up catheterization-derived PASP (i.e., > 10% increase) could be predicted by simultaneous echocardiography. Echocardiography predicted hemodynamic PASP deterioration with 59% sensitivity, 85% specificity, and 63/83% positive/negative predictive value, respectively. In multivariate analysis, successful echocardiographic prediction correlated only with higher PVR in previous catheterization (p = 0.05, OR = 1.235). Notably, in patients having baseline PVR > 5.45 WU, echocardiography had both sensitivity and positive predictive values of 73%, and both specificity and negative predictive value of 91% for detecting hemodynamic PASP deterioration. In selected patients with CTD-PAH echocardiography can predict PASP deterioration with high specificity and negative predictive value. Additional prospective studies are needed to confirm that better patient selection can increase the ability of standard echocardiography to replace repeat catheterization. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20754418
Volume :
10
Issue :
1
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Diagnostics (2075-4418)
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
141518279
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics10010049