# A prospective study on prognostic value of ventilatory efficiency in asymptomatic patients with severe primary mitral regurgitation

**Authors:** Johannes Bergsten, Tomasz Baron, Eva-Maria Hedin, Nermin Hadziosmanovic, Andrei Malinovschi, Frank A. Flachskampf

PMC · DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0326418 · 2025-07-09

## TL;DR

This study shows that measuring ventilatory efficiency during exercise can predict the need for surgery in patients with severe heart valve issues who have no symptoms.

## Contribution

The study demonstrates that ventilatory efficiency during CPET is a novel independent predictor of mitral valve surgery in asymptomatic severe PMR patients.

## Key findings

- Impaired ventilatory efficiency predicted surgical treatment in asymptomatic PMR patients.
- The VE/VCO2 ratio at anaerobic threshold was an independent predictor after adjusting for other factors.
- Ventilatory efficiency may serve as a new tool for risk stratification in PMR.

## Abstract

Patients with severe primary mitral regurgitation (PMR) remain asymptomatic at first. In the long term, however, severe PMR leads to cardiac decompensation. Exercise testing in asymptomatic PMR is recommended in selected patients by guidelines. Cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPET), which additionally measures ventilation (VE), oxygen consumption (VO2) and carbon dioxide production (VCO2), has been scarcely studied in PMR. We hypothesized that CPET might have prognostic value in asymptomatic PMR and therefore studied if CPET, including assessment of ventilation efficiency, has prognostic value for asymptomatic patients with severe PMR.

Asymptomatic patients with severe PMR were prospectively recruited between 2013 and 2018. Exclusion criteria were coronary artery disease, chronic kidney disease, diabetes mellitus, concomitant valve disease, symptomatic lung disease or class 1 recommendation for valvular surgery. Echocardiography and serial CPET were conducted at one university hospital in Sweden. Primary outcome was mitral valve intervention.

Forty-eight patients were recruited to the study. Median follow-up period was 4.4 (2.1–6.9) years, during which 28 (58%) patients underwent mitral valve surgery. Ventilation efficiency, the relationship of VE to VCO2 during CPET, predicted surgical treatment of the mitral valve. Increased VE/VCO2 ratio at the anaerobic threshold had the highest predictive value, remaining an independent predictor after adjusting for impaired VO2 at peak exercise (HR 4.42 (1.52–12.92), p = 0.007) and echocardiographic thresholds for left ventricular and atrial remodelling, as defined by current guideline-based recommendation for intervention (HR 3.72 (1.41–9.82), p = 0.008).

Impaired ventilatory efficiency, but not peak VO2, predicted surgical treatment of the mitral valve in asymptomatic patients with severe PMR. Ventilatory efficiency, a CPET index less dependent on peak exercise performance, may be a new useful tool in risk stratification.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** coronary artery disease (MONDO:0005010), chronic kidney disease (MONDO:0005300), diabetes mellitus (MONDO:0005015)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** cardiac decompensation (MESH:D006333), diabetes mellitus (MESH:D003920), valve disease (MESH:D006349), PMR (MESH:D008944), chronic kidney disease (MESH:D051436), lung disease (MESH:D008171), impaired VO2 (MESH:D060825), left ventricular and atrial remodelling (MESH:D020257), coronary artery disease (MESH:D003324)
- **Chemicals:** carbon dioxide (MESH:D002245), oxygen (MESH:D010100)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

9 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12240333/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12240333