Correlation between septal midwall late gadolinium enhancement on CMR and conduction delay on ECG in patients with nonischemic dilated cardiomyopathy

Int J Cardiol Heart Vasc. 2020 Jan 25:26:100474. doi: 10.1016/j.ijcha.2020.100474. eCollection 2020 Feb.

Abstract

Background: Septal midwall late gadolinium enhancement (LGE) on cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (CMR) is a characteristic finding in nonischemic dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) and is associated with adverse cardiac events. QRS-prolongation in DCM is also frequently present and a predictor of arrhythmic events and mortality. Since the His-Purkinje fibres are located in the interventricular septum, QRS-prolongation may directly result from septal fibrosis, visualized by LGE. Our aim was to study the correlation of the presence and extent of septal midwall LGE and QRS-duration.

Methods: DCM-patients with left ventricular (LV) dysfunction (LVEF < 50%) were included. LV volumes, systolic function and nonischemic septal midwall LGE, defined as patchy or stripe-like LGE in the septal segments, were quantified. QRS-duration on standard 12-lead ECG was measured.

Results: 165 DCM-patients were included (62% male, mean age 59 ± 15 years) with a median LVEF of 36% [24-44]. Fifty-one patients (31%) demonstrated septal midwall LGE with a median extent of 8.1 gram [4.3-16.8]. Patients with midwall LGE had increased LV end-diastolic volumes (EDV) 248 mL [193-301] vs. 193 mL [160-239], p < 0.001) and lower LVEF (26% [18-35] vs. 40% [32-45], p < 0.001). Median QRS-duration was 110 ms [95-146] without a correlation to the presence nor extent of midwall LGE. QRS-duration was moderately correlated with LV-dilation and mass (respectively r = 0.35, p < 0.001 and r = 0.30, p < 0.001).

Conclusion: In DCM-patients, QRS-prolongation and septal midwall LGE are frequently present and often co-exist. However, they are not correlated. This suggests that the assessment of LGE-CMR has complementary value to ECG evaluation in the clinical assessment and risk stratification of DCM-patients.

Keywords: Conduction delay; Nonischemic dilated cardiomyopathy; QRS duration; Septal midwall LGE.