Echocardiographic functional determinants of survival in heart failure with abnormal ejection fraction

Front Cardiovasc Med. 2023 Nov 21:10:1290366. doi: 10.3389/fcvm.2023.1290366. eCollection 2023.

Abstract

Background and aims: Patients with heart failure (HF) with reduced left ventricular (LV) ejection fraction (EF) have a heterogeneous prognosis, and assessment of coronary physiology with coronary flow velocity (CFV) and coronary flow velocity reserve (CFVR) may complement established predictors based on wall motion and EF.

Methods and results: In a prospective multicenter study design, we enrolled 1,408 HF patients (age 66 ± 12 years, 1,035 men), with EF <50%, 743 (53%) with coronary artery disease, and 665 (47%) with normal coronary arteries. Recruitment (years 2004-2022) involved 8 accredited laboratories, with inter-observer variability <10% for CFV measurement. Baseline CFV (abnormal value >31 cm/s) was obtained by pulsed-wave Doppler in mid-distal LAD. CFVR (abnormal value ≤2.0) was assessed with exercise (n = 99), dobutamine (n = 100), and vasodilator stress (dipyridamole in 1,149, adenosine in 60). Inducible myocardial ischemia was identified with wall motion score index (WMSI) stress > rest (cut-off Δ ≥ 0.12). LV contractile reserve (CR) was identified with WMSI stress < rest (cutoff Δ ≥ 0.25). Test response ranged from score 0 (EF > 30%, CFV ≥ 32 cm/s, CFVR > 2.0, LVCR present, ischemia absent) to score 5 (all steps abnormal). All-cause death was the only endpoint. Results. During a median follow-up of 990 days, 253 patients died. Independent predictors of death were EF (HR: 0.956, 95% CI: 0.943-0.968, p < 0.0001), CFV (HR: 2.407, 95% CI: 1.871-3.096, p < 0.001), CFVR (HR: 3.908, 95% CI: 2.903-5.260, p < 0.001), stress-induced ischemia (HR: 2.223, 95% CI: 1.642-3.009, p < 0.001), and LVCR (HR: 0.524, 95% CI: 0.324-.647, p = 0.008). The annual mortality rate was lowest (1.2%) in patients with a score of 0 (n = 61) and highest (31.9%) in patients with a score of 5 (n = 15, p < 0.001).

Conclusion: High resting CFV is associated with worse survival in ischemic and nonischemic HF with reduced EF. The value is independent and additive to resting EF, CFVR, LVCR, and inducible ischemia.

Keywords: contractile reserve; coronary flow reserve; dilated cardiaomypothy; heart failiure; infrastructural funding from società italiana di ecocardiografia e cardiovascular imaging (SIECVI); publication; stress echo; travel.

Grants and funding

The author(s) declare financial support was received for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.