These data show a significant incidence of AKI after PMVR that must be taken into account in periprocedural care. Nevertheless, our data suggest that SMVR carries an even higher risk of AKI, which should be considered when a decision has to be made between the two therapies.
Background
Late gadolinium enhancement (LGE) cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) represents the gold standard for assessment of myocardial viability. The purpose of this study was to investigate the clinical potential of Compressed SENSE (factor 5) accelerated free-breathing three-dimensional (3D) whole heart LGE with high isotropic spatial resolution (1.4 mm3 acquired voxel size) compared to standard breath-hold LGE imaging.
Methods
This was a retrospective, single-center study of 70 consecutive patients (45.8 ± 18.1 years, 27 females; February–November 2019), who were referred for assessment of left ventricular myocardial viability and received free-breathing and breath-hold LGE sequences at 1.5 T in clinical routine. Two radiologists independently evaluated global and segmental LGE in terms of localization and transmural extent. Readers scored scans regarding image quality (IQ), artifacts, and diagnostic confidence (DC) using 5-point scales (1 non-diagnostic—5 excellent/none). Effects of heart rate and body mass index (BMI) on IQ, artifacts, and DC were evaluated with ordinal logistic regression analysis.
Results
Global LGE (n = 33) was identical for both techniques. Using free-breathing LGE (average scan time: 04:33 ± 01:17 min), readers detected more hyperenhanced lesions (28.2% vs. 23.5%, P < .05) compared to breath-hold LGE (05:15 ± 01:23 min, P = .0104), pronounced at subepicardial localization and for 1–50% of transmural extent. For free-breathing LGE, readers graded scans with good/excellent IQ in 80.0%, with low-impact/no artifacts in 78.6%, and with good/high DC in 82.1% of cases. Elevated BMI was associated with increased artifacts (P = .0012) and decreased IQ (P = .0237). Increased heart rate negatively influenced artifacts (P = .0013) and DC (P = .0479) whereas IQ (P = .3025) was unimpaired.
Conclusions
In a clinical setting, free-breathing Compressed SENSE accelerated 3D high isotropic spatial resolution whole heart LGE provides good to excellent image quality in 80% of scans independent of heart rate while enabling improved depiction of small and particularly non-ischemic hyperenhanced lesions in a shorter scan time than standard breath-hold LGE.
Background: Patients undergoing transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) are mostly elderly patients with substantial comorbidities. Established risk scores are not validated for TAVR and collectives with elderly patients making periprocedural risk stratification difficult. Serum albumin is known to be an indicator for malnutrition and frailty and is simple to measure, independent of physician's bias. Using serum albumin as a preoperative marker for postoperative complications might help estimating morbidity and mortality of these patients. Methods: A total of 457 patients with severe symptomatic aortic stenosis undergoing TAVR at our institution in a period from January 2014 to December 2015 were included in this retrospective study.Baseline characteristics as well as preoperative laboratory parameters were registered. Postoperative morbidity and 30-day mortality were analyzed as primary end points. Enrolled patients with preoperative low serum albumin (<3.5 g/dL) were compared with those revealing normal serum albumin (≥3.5 g/dL). Results: Among 457 patients, 51 (11%) presented pre-procedural low serum albumin and 406 (89%) had normal serum albumin. Patients' mean age was 81±6 years and 50% of them were male. Postoperative complications such as requirement of blood transfusions (63% versus 33%, P<0.001), infection (53% versus 24%, P<0.001), acute kidney injury (41% versus 19%, P=0.001) and 30-day mortality (10% versus 3%, P=0.045) showed significant differences between preoperative low and normal albumin groups.Conclusions: Preoperative low serum albumin might be an indicator for higher morbidity and mortality in patients undergoing TAVR.
Concerning intraprocedural complications, CPB support for hemodynamic stabilization is a safe treatment option. Therefore, the heart team approach with CPB standby represents a life-saving option. Attention should also be drawn to specialized and individual postoperative care, because nonprocedure-specific complications clearly affect postoperative short- and long-term outcome. In addition, the risk-stratification model might facilitate preoperative decision making.
Background
Improved imaging modalities contributed to increasing awareness of cardiac amyloidosis. Contemporary data on frequency trends in Germany are lacking.
Methods
In a retrospective study using health claims data of a German statutory health insurance, patients with diagnostic codes of amyloidosis and concomitant heart failure between 2009 and 2018 were identified.
Results
Prevalence increased from 15.5 to 47.6 per 100,000 person-years, and incidence increased from 4.8 to 11.6 per 100,000 person-years, with a continuous steepening in the slope of incidence trend. In patients with amyloidosis and heart failure age and proportion of men significantly increased, whereas the frequency of myeloma and nephrotic syndrome significantly decreased over time. Median (IQR) survival time after first diagnosis was 2.5 years (0.5–6 years), with a 9% (95% CI 2–15%, p = 0.008) reduced risk of death in the second compared to the first 5 years of observation. In the 2 years prior and 1 year after diagnosis, mean total health care costs were 6568 €, 11,872 € and 21,955 € per person and year.
Conclusion
The rise in cardiac amyloidosis has continuously accelerated in the last decade. Considering the adverse outcome and high health care burden, further effort should be put on early detection of the disease to implement available treatment.
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