Abstract

Both the H2FPEF-score and nomogram-score, which consist of simple clinical parameters, can assist in diagnosing "early" heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF) and only exertional dyspnea, but their these usefulness in Japanese remains unclear. We sought to investigate the correlation between these scores and exercise response, including the peak oxygen uptake (V̇O2), the pulmonary artery systolic pressure (PASP), the ratio of early diastolic transmitral flow velocity to early diastolic mitral annular velocity (E/e') and stroke volume (SV) using exercise stress echocardiography (ESE) combined with cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPET).Methods and Results:In this single-center, retrospective cross-sectional study the H2FPEF-score and nomogram-score were calculated in a total of 139 patients who underwent ESE combined with CPET. The scores correlated with peak V̇O2(r=-0.48, r=-0.44), PASP (r=0.23, r=0.29) and SV (r=-0.32, r=-0.19) at peak exercise. The nomogram-score correlated with E/e' (r=0.24). The prevalence of exercise intolerance (percent predicted peak V̇O2<75% and <50%) increased as the H2FPEF-score increased and reached 88.9% and 22.2% among the patients with high H2FPEF-score (6-9 points). The H2FPEF-score may be useful as the initial step to diagnosing 'early' HFpEF. The nomogram-score may be more useful in Japanese because of its more universal association with exercise response than the H2FPEF-score.

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