Abstract

Right ventricle-pulmonary artery (RV-PA) coupling describes the energetic relationship between RV contractility and its afterload. The gold standard for assessment of this relationship requires invasive pressure-volume (PV) loop measurements. Non-invasive surrogates of RV-PA coupling have been developed, such as the echocardiographic tricuspid annular plane systolic excursion to pulmonary artery systolic pressure ratio (TAPSE/PASP), but their performance has not been systematically assessed. We sought to assess performance of TAPSE/PASP ratio compared to PV loop-defined RV-PA coupling. A systematic search was conducted. Studies were included if PV loop derived RV-PA coupling metrics were compared to echocardiographic or magnetic resonance imaging surrogates. We conducted a meta-analysis of TAPSE/PASP correlation to PV loop-defined RV-PA coupling. 1452 studies were identified in the initial search, of which ten met inclusion criteria. Five studies allowed for pooled analysis of TAPSE/PASP to Ees/Ea correlation (r = 0.52, 95% confidence interval 0.36-0.65). There was moderate heterogeneity across the pooled studies. Despite the common use of Non-invasive surrogates of RV-PA coupling, there is only moderate correlation with gold standard measurements. These metrics do not inform on the individual components of RV-PA coupling, limiting their use in the management of patients with RV dysfunction.

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