Abstract

Abstract Background right-ventricular (RV)-pulmonary arterial (PA) uncoupling expressed by Tricuspid Annular Plane Systolic Excursion (TAPSE)/Pulmonary Artery Systolic Pressure (PAPs) ratio is associated with poor outcomes in patients with heart failure (HF). TAPSE/PAPs ratio has been poorly investigated in patients with tricuspid regurgitation (TR) with related volume overload and progressive right chambers remodeling. Purpose to assess the effectiveness of other estimation methods of RV-PA coupling in different TR severity groups compared to the classic TAPSE/PAPs ratio. Material and Methods 116 stable patients with TR were enrolled at the time of echocardiography (43 men, 37%; mean age 74±13 years). TR severity was quantified by means of proximal isovelocity surface area (PISA) derived effective regurgitant orifice area (EROA) and regurgitant volume (RVol). RV function was assessed by RV Free Wall Longitudinal Strain (FWLS). PAPs was obtained using the following formula: 4*(peak tricuspid regurgitation velocity)2 + right atrial pressure (RAP); meanPAP was estimated using TR continuous wave signal mean gradient (PAPmIT) and pulmonary artery regurgitation peak gradient (PAPmIP), adding RAP for both. RV-PA coupling was evaluated by TAPSE/PAPs ratio, TAPSE/PAPmIT and TAPSE/PAPmIP ratios. Result TR was quantified mild in 23 patients, moderate in 49, severe and torrential in 29 and 15 patients respectively. Mean RV-FWLS was -26.4±6.9% in mild, -21.8±7.4% in moderate, -18±7% and -18.3±4.2% in severe and torrential TR respectively (p<0.0001). Mean TAPSE/PAPs ratio was 0.6±0.23 mm/mmHg, 0.44±0.19, 0.38±0.19 and 0.37±0.12 mm/mmHg in mild, moderate, severe and torrential TR respectively, with a statistically significant difference between the 4 groups (p<0.0001). Mean TAPSE/PAPmIP ratio was 1.08±0.5 mm/mmHg in mild TR, 0.68±0.34 in moderate, 0.67±0.5 in severe TR and 0.47±0.13 mm/mmHg in torrential TR with a statistically significant difference between distinct TR grades (p=0.004). Mean TAPSE/PAPmIT in mild TR was 0.92±0.5 mm/mmHg, 0.63±0.29 in moderate, 0.53±0.29 and 0.51±0.16 mm/mmHg in severe and torrential TR respectively with a statistically significant difference between the groups (p<0.0001). Finally, an analysis of covariance with RV-FWLS as potential confounder was performed: only the adjusted means of TAPSE/PAPmIP and TAPSE/PAPmIT ratios preserved a statistically significant difference between distinct TR groups (p=0.01 and p=0.019 respectively). Conclusion TAPSE/PAPmIP and TAPSE/PAPmIT ratios seem to preserve a stronger relation with increasing TR grade and worsening of RV disfunction, suggesting it as a more powerful index in this subset of patients. The progression of TR grade leading to a right chamber remodeling could influence the reliability of RV-PA uncoupling expressed by standard TAPSE/PAPs ratio.

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