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Estimated Ventricular Size, Asthma Severity, and Exacerbations

Authors :
Samuel Y. Ash
Gonzalo Vegas Sanchez-Ferrero
Mark L. Schiebler
Farbod N. Rahaghi
Ashish Rai
Carolyn E. Come
James C. Ross
Alysha G. Colon
Juan Carlos Cardet
Eugene R. Bleecker
Mario Castro
John V. Fahy
Sean B. Fain
Benjamin M. Gaston
Eric A. Hoffman
Nizar N. Jarjour
Jason K. Lempel
David T. Mauger
Matthew C. Tattersall
Sally E. Wenzel
Bruce D. Levy
George R. Washko
Elliot Israel
Raul San Jose Estepar
Bruce Levy
George Washko
Manuela Cernadas
Wanda Phipatanakul
Sally Wenzel
Merritt Fajt
Benjamin Gaston
James Chmiel
W. Gerald Teague
Anne-Marie Irani
Serpil Erzurum
Sumita Khatri
Suzy Comhair
Raed Dweik
Kristie Ross
Ross Myers
Wendy Moore
Deborah Meyers
Eugene Bleecker
Stephen Peters
Annette Hastie
Victor Ortega
Greg Hawkins
Xingan Li
Anne Fitzpatrick
Nazar Jarjour
Loren Denlinger
Sean Fain
Ronald Sorkness
Leonard Bacharier
David Gierada
Kenneth Schechtman
Jason Woods
John Fahy
Prescott Woodruff
Ngoc Ly
David Mauger
Source :
Chest. 157:258-267
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2020.

Abstract

Background Relative enlargement of the pulmonary artery (PA) on chest CT imaging is associated with respiratory exacerbations in patients with COPD or cystic fibrosis. We sought to determine whether similar findings were present in patients with asthma and whether these findings were explained by differences in ventricular size. Methods We measured the PA and aorta diameters in 233 individuals from the Severe Asthma Research Program III cohort. We also estimated right, left, and total epicardial cardiac ventricular volume indices (eERVVI, eELVVI, and eETVVI, respectively). Associations between the cardiac and PA measures (PA-to-aorta [PA/A] ratio, eERVVI-to-eELVVI [eRV/eLV] ratio, eERVVI, eELVVI, eETVVI) and clinical measures of asthma severity were assessed by Pearson correlation, and associations with asthma severity and exacerbation rate were evaluated by multivariable linear and zero-inflated negative binomial regression. Results Asthma severity was associated with smaller ventricular volumes. For example, those with severe asthma had 36.1 mL/m2 smaller eETVVI than healthy control subjects (P = .003) and 14.1 mL/m2 smaller eETVVI than those with mild/moderate disease (P = .011). Smaller ventricular volumes were also associated with a higher rate of asthma exacerbations, both retrospectively and prospectively. For example, those with an eETVVI less than the median had a 57% higher rate of exacerbations during follow-up than those with eETVVI greater than the median (P = .020). Neither PA/A nor eRV/eLV was associated with asthma severity or exacerbations. Conclusions In patients with asthma, smaller cardiac ventricular size may be associated with more severe disease and a higher rate of asthma exacerbations. Trial Registry ClinicalTrials.gov; No.: NCT01761630; URL: www.clinicaltrials.gov

Details

ISSN :
00123692
Volume :
157
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Chest
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........de0750cac979f09d028b0d385b130fba