Abstract
Accurate assessment of pulmonary artery (PA) pressures is integral to diagnosis, follow-up and therapy selection in pulmonary hypertension (PH). Despite wide utilization, the accuracy of echocardiography to estimate PA pressures has been debated. We aimed to evaluate echocardiographic accuracy to estimate right heart catheterization (RHC) based PA pressures in a large, dual-centre hemodynamic database. Consecutive PH referrals that underwent comprehensive echocardiography within 3 h of clinically indicated right heart catheterization were enrolled. Subjects with absent or severe, free-flowing tricuspid regurgitation (TR) were excluded. Accuracy was defined as mean bias between echocardiographic and invasive measurements on Bland–Altman analysis for the cohort and estimate difference within ± 10 mmHg of invasive measurements for individual diagnosis. In 419 subjects, echocardiographic PA systolic and mean pressures demonstrated minimal bias with invasive measurements (+ 2.4 and + 1.9 mmHg respectively) but displayed wide limits of agreement (− 20 to + 25 and − 14 to + 18 mmHg respectively) and frequently misclassified subjects. Recommendation-based right atrial pressure (RAP) demonstrated poor precision and was falsely elevated in 32% of individual cases. Applying a fixed, median RAP to echocardiographic estimates resulted in relatively lower bias between modalities when assessing PA systolic (+ 1.4 mmHg; 95% limits of agreement + 25 to − 22 mmHg) and PA mean pressures (+ 1.4 mmHg; 95% limits of agreement + 19 to − 16 mmHg). Echocardiography accurately represents invasive PA pressures for population studies but may be misleading for individual diagnosis owing to modest precision and frequent misclassification. Recommendation-based estimates of RAPmean may not necessarily contribute to greater accuracy of PA pressure estimates.
Highlights
Accurate hemodynamic evaluation of pulmonary hypertension (PH) is essential for early disease identification, selection for potential therapy and during follow-up
T RVmax was measured with Continuous wave Doppler, considering the most optimal signal obtained from multiple echocardiographic windows. RAPmean was estimated by evaluating inferior vena cava (IVC) size and collapsibility with patients in a supine position, taking care to maximize IVC diameter both during relaxed respiration and with rapid inspiration
An important observation was that recommended echocardiographic estimates of RAPmean were falsely elevated in more than 1 in 3 subjects and incorporation of these estimates to calculate PAPsystolic and PAPmean resulted in relatively higher mean bias with right heart catheterization (RHC) than when the median estimate was considered for all subjects
Summary
Accurate hemodynamic evaluation of pulmonary hypertension (PH) is essential for early disease identification, selection for potential therapy and during follow-up. Multiple earlier studies suggest that echocardiographic estimates of PA pressures are frequently innacurate [3,4,5,6], while more recent publications suggest good diagnostic accuracy [7,8,9]. These paradoxical observations may be attributed to diverse methodological. D’Alto and colleagues demonstrated high echocardiographic accuracy to estimate both PA mean (PAPmean) and systolic pressures (PAPsystolic) employing Bland–Altman analysis, suggesting appropriate utility in population studies [9]. Modest precision represented by wide limits of agreement in that study advocates greater caution when employing echocardiography to estimate PH severity on an individual basis
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More From: The International Journal of Cardiovascular Imaging
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