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Ischemia-Mediated Dysfunction in Subpapillary Myocardium as a Marker of Functional Mitral Regurgitation

Authors :
Chaya S. Moskowitz
Han W. Kim
Afshin Farzaneh-Far
Dipan J. Shah
Preston Cargile
Mark B. Ratcliffe
William A. Zoghbi
Robert A. Levine
Martin B. Leon
Raymond J. Kim
Razia Sultana
Venkateshwar Polsani
Chetan Shenoy
Ramsey Kalil
Michele Parker
Jiwon Kim
John F. Heitner
Dimitrios Karmpaliotis
Omar K. Khalique
Richard B. Devereux
Igor Klem
Robert M. Judd
Jonathan D. Kochav
Lakshmi Nambiar
Pablo Villar-Calle
Jonathan W. Weinsaft
Source :
JACC: Cardiovascular Imaging. 14:826-839
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2021.

Abstract

The goal of this study was to test whether ischemia-mediated contractile dysfunction underlying the mitral valve affects functional mitral regurgitation (FMR) and the prognostic impact of FMR.FMR results from left ventricular (LV) remodeling, which can stem from myocardial tissue alterations. Stress cardiac magnetic resonance can assess ischemia and infarction in the left ventricle and papillary muscles; relative impact on FMR is uncertain.Vasodilator stress cardiac magnetic resonance was performed in patients with known or suspected coronary artery disease at 7 sites. Images were centrally analyzed for MR etiology/severity, mitral apparatus remodeling, and papillary ischemia.A total of 8,631 patients (mean age 60.0 ± 14.1 years; 55% male) were studied. FMR was present in 27%, among whom 16% (n = 372) had advanced (moderate or severe) FMR. Patients with ischemia localized to subpapillary regions were more likely to have advanced FMR (p = 0.003); those with ischemia localized to other areas were not (p = 0.17). Ischemic/dysfunctional subpapillary myocardium (odds ratio: 1.24/10% subpapillary myocardium; confidence interval: 1.17 to 1.31; p 0.001) was associated with advanced FMR controlling for infarction. Among a subgroup with (n = 372) and without (n = 744) advanced FMR matched (1:2) on infarct size/distribution, patients with advanced FMR had increased adverse mitral apparatus remodeling, paralleled by greater ischemic/dysfunctional subpapillary myocardium (p 0.001). Although posteromedial papillary ischemia was more common with advanced FMR (p = 0.006), subpapillary ischemia with dysfunction remained associated (p 0.001), adjusting for posteromedial papillary ischemia (p = 0.074). During follow-up (median 5.1 years), 1,473 deaths occurred in the overall cohort; advanced FMR conferred increased mortality risk (hazard ratio: 1.52; 95% confidence interval: 1.25 to 1.86; p 0.001) controlling for left ventricular ejection fraction, infarction, and ischemia.Ischemic and dysfunctional subpapillary myocardium provides a substrate for FMR, which predicts mortality independent of key mechanistic substrates.

Details

ISSN :
1936878X
Volume :
14
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
JACC: Cardiovascular Imaging
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....66a1f576212231fb92f2feb89f81392f