# Incremental Value of Biventricular Strain in Patients with Severe Aortic Stenosis

**Authors:** Camille Sarrazyn, Xavier Galloo, Maria Chiara Meucci, Steele C. Butcher, Kensuke Hirsawa, Rinchyenkhand Myagmardorj, Frank van der Kley, Tine De Backer, Jeroen J. Bax, Nina Ajmone Marsan

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/jcdd11030090 · 2024-03-13

## TL;DR

This study shows that combining left and right ventricular strain measurements improves risk prediction in patients with severe aortic stenosis.

## Contribution

The novel contribution is demonstrating that biventricular strain provides incremental prognostic value beyond individual ventricular strain in severe aortic stenosis patients.

## Key findings

- Biventricular-impaired strain group had 55% 5-year survival compared to 77% in preserved strain group.
- Both single-ventricle and biventricular-impaired strain groups showed increased mortality risk in multivariable analysis.
- Findings held true even when focusing on patients with preserved left ventricular ejection fraction.

## Abstract

(1) Background: Left ventricular global longitudinal (LVGLS) and right ventricular free wall strain (RVFWS) demonstrated separate prognostic values in patients with severe aortic stenosis (AS). However, studies evaluating the combined assessment of LVGLS and RVFWS have shown contradictory results. This study explored the prognostic value of combining LVGLS and RVFWS in a large group of severe AS patients referred for transcatheter aortic valve implantation. (2) Methods: Patients were classified into three groups: preserved (LVGLS ≥ 15% AND RVFWS > 20%), single-ventricle impaired (LVGLS < 15% OR RVFWS ≤ 20%), or biventricular-impaired strain group (LVGLS < 15% AND RVFWS ≤ 20%). The cut-off values were based on previously published data and spline analyses. The endpoint was all-cause mortality. (3) Results: Of the 712 patients included (age 80 ± 7 years, 53% men), 248 (35%) died. The single-ventricle impaired and biventricular-impaired (vs. preserved) strain groups showed significantly lower 5-year survival rates (68% and 55% vs. 77%, respectively, p < 0.001). Through multivariable analysis, single-ventricle impaired (HR 1.762; 95% CI: 1.114–2.788; p = 0.015) and biventricular-impaired strain groups (HR 1.920; 95% CI: 1.134–3.250; p = 0.015) were independently associated with all-cause mortality. These findings were confirmed with a sensitivity analysis in patients with preserved LV ejection fraction. (4) Conclusions: In patients with severe AS, biventricular strain allows better risk stratification, even if LV ejection fraction is preserved.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** aortic stenosis (MONDO:0042981)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** died (MESH:D003643), AS (MESH:D001024)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

6 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC10971233/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC10971233