Abstract

Right ventricular (RV) dysfunction in sarcoidosis is associated with adverse outcomes. Assessment of RV function by conventional transthoracic echocardiography (TTE) is challenging due to the complex RV geometry. Knowledge-based reconstruction (KBR) combines TTE measurements with three-dimensional coordinates to determine RV volumes. The aim of this study was to investigate the accuracy of TTE-KBR compared to the gold standard cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (CMR) in determining RV dimensions in pulmonary sarcoidosis. Pulmonary sarcoidosis patients prospectively received same-day TTE and TTE-KBR. If performed, CMR within 90 days after TTE-KBR was used as reference standard. Outcome parameters included RV end-diastolic volume (RVEDV), end-systolic volume (RVESV), stroke volume (RVSV) and ejection fraction (RVEF). 281 patients underwent same day TTE and TTE-KBR. In total, 122 patients received a CMR within 90 daysof TTE and were included. TTE-KBR measured RVEDV and RVESV showed strong correlation with CMR measurements (R = 0.73, R = 0.76), while RVSV and RVEF correlated weakly (R = 0.46, R = 0.46). Bland-Altman analyses (mean bias ± 95% limits of agreement), showed good agreement for RVEDV (ΔRVEDVKBR-CMR, 5.67 ± 55.4mL), while RVESV, RVSV and RVEF showed poor agreement (ΔRVESVKBR-CMR, 21.6 ± 34.1mL; ΔRVSVKBR-CMR, -16.1 ± 42.9mL; ΔRVEFKBR-CMR, -12.9 ± 16.4%). The image quality and time between CMR and TTE-KBR showed no impact on intermodality differences and there was no sign of a possible learning curve. TTE-KBR is convenient and shows good agreement with CMR for RVEDV. However, there is poor agreement for RVESV, RVSV and RVEF. The use of TTE-KBR does not seem to provide additional value in the determination of RV dimensions in pulmonary sarcoidosis patients.

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