Echocardiographic Assessment of Right Ventricular–Pulmonary Arterial Coupling in Heart Failure: Prognostic Insights from a Systematic Review
Andrea Sonaglioni, Michele Lombardo, Giulio Francesco Gramaglia, Gian Luigi Nicolosi, Alessandro Lucidi, Massimo Baravelli, Sergio Harari

TL;DR
This study reviews how the right ventricle and pulmonary artery interaction, measured by TAPSE/sPAP, can predict outcomes in heart failure patients.
Contribution
The study systematically evaluates TAPSE/sPAP as a noninvasive marker of adverse prognosis across diverse heart failure populations.
Findings
Reduced TAPSE/sPAP is consistently linked to higher mortality and heart failure events.
Prognostic thresholds for TAPSE/sPAP cluster around 0.36, showing consistent predictive value.
TAPSE/sPAP demonstrates good discriminative performance for adverse outcomes in HF patients.
Abstract
Background: Prognostic heterogeneity in heart failure (HF) is substantial and not fully captured by conventional left-sided echocardiographic parameters. Growing evidence highlights the importance of right ventricular–pulmonary arterial (RV–PA) interaction in HF pathophysiology and outcomes. The echocardiographic tricuspid annular plane systolic excursion-to-systolic pulmonary artery pressure (TAPSE/sPAP) ratio has been proposed as a simple noninvasive surrogate of RV–PA coupling, yet its prognostic value across the HF spectrum remains incompletely defined. Methods: This systematic review followed PRISMA guidelines and was registered in INPLASY. PubMed, Scopus, and EMBASE were searched from inception through January 2026 for observational studies evaluating the prognostic value of TAPSE/sPAP in adult patients with HF. Study selection, data extraction, and risk-of-bias assessment were…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPulmonary Hypertension Research and Treatments · Cardiovascular Function and Risk Factors · Cardiovascular Disease and Adiposity
