Abstract

BackgroundRight ventricular (RV) strain is a useful predictor of prognosis in various cardiovascular diseases, including those traditionally believed to impact only the left ventricle. We aimed to determine inter-modality and inter-technique agreement in RV longitudinal strain (LS) measurements between currently available cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) and echocardiographic techniques, as well as their reproducibility and the impact of layer-specific strain measurements.MethodsRV-LS was determined in 62 patients using 2D speckle tracking echocardiography (STE, Epsilon) and two CMR techniques: feature tracking (FT) and strain-encoding (SENC), and in 17 healthy subjects using FT and SENC only. Measurements included global and free-wall LS (GLS, FWLS). Inter-technique agreement was assessed using linear regression and Bland-Altman analysis. Reproducibility was quantified using intraclass correlation (ICC) and coefficients of variation (CoV).ResultsWe found similar moderate agreement between both CMR techniques and STE in patients: r = 0.57–0.63 for SENC; r = 0.50–0.62 for FT. The correlation between SENC and STE was better for GLS (r = 0.63) than for FWLS (r = 0.57). Conversely, the correlation between FT and STE was higher for FWLS (r = 0.60–0.62) than GLS (r = 0.50–0.54). FT-midmyocardial strain correlated better with SENC and STE than FT-subendocardial strain. The agreement between SENC and FT was fair (r = 0.36–0.41, bias: − 6.4 to − 10.4%) in the entire study group. All techniques except FT showed excellent reproducibility (ICC: 0.62–0.96, CoV: 0.04–0.30).ConclusionsWe found only moderate inter-modality agreement with STE in RV-LS for both FT and SENC and poor agreement when comparing between the CMR techniques. Different modalities and techniques should not be used interchangeably to determine and monitor RV strain.

Highlights

  • Myocardial strain is a useful diagnostic measurement to assess ventricular function

  • Recent studies demonstrated the value of right ventricular (RV) strain in diseases such as pulmonary hypertension [4] and pulmonary embolism [5], which primarily impact the Right ventricular (RV), and in heart failure [6,7,8] and congenital heart disease [9], RV strain was found to have independent additional prognostic value when compared to Left ventricular (LV) strain alone [6]

  • The best correlation was found between SENC and speckle tracking echocardiography (STE)-Global longitudinal strain (GLS), reflected by a very low bias

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Summary

Introduction

Myocardial strain is a useful diagnostic measurement to assess ventricular function. RV strain can be determined using cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) and speckle tracking echocardiography (STE) [10, 11]. Feature tracking (FT) is one of the currently available CMR techniques to measure strain. Similar to STE, FT uses cine images to track points in the myocardium over the entirety of the cardiac cycle [16] by a dedicated algorithm, in order to measure myocardial strain within the imaging plane. We aimed to determine inter-modality and inter-technique agreement in RV longitudinal strain (LS) measurements between currently available cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) and echocardiographic techniques, as well as their reproducibility and the impact of layer-specific strain measurements

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