2Department of Cardiology, Health Sciences University, Dr. Siyami Ersek Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery Training and Research Hospital, İstanbul, Türkiye
3Department of Cardiology, Marmara University, Pendik Training and Research Hospital, İstanbul, Türkiye
Abstract
Background: Although high left ventricular filling pressures [left ventricular (LV) end-diastolic pressure or pulmonary capillary wedge pressure (PCWP)] are widely taken as surrogates for LV diastolic dysfunction, the actual distending pressure that governs LV diastolic stretch is transmural pressure difference (∆PTM). Clinically, preferring ∆PTM over PCWP may improve diagnostic and therapeutic decision-making. We aimed to compare the clinical implications of diastolic function characterization based on PCWP or ∆PTM.
Methods: We retrospectively screened our hospital database for adult patients with a clinical diagnosis of heart failure who underwent right heart catheterization. Echocardiographic diastolic dysfunction was graded according to the current guidelines. LV end-diastolic properties were assessed with construction of complete end-diastolic pressure–volume relationship (EDPVR) curves using the single-beat method. Survival status was checked via the electronic national health-care system.
Results: A total of 693 cases were identified in our database; the final study population comprised 621 cases. ∆PTM-based, but not PCWP-based, EDPVR diastolic stiffness constants were significantly predictive of advanced diastolic dysfunction. PCWP-based diastolic stiffness constants were not able to predict 5-year mortality, whereas ∆PTM-based EDPVR stiffness constants and volumes all turned out to have significant predictive power for 5-year mortality.
Conclusion: Left ventricular diastolic function assessment can be improved using ∆PTM instead of PCWP. As ∆PTM ultimately linked to right-sided functions, this approach emphasizes the limitations of taking LV diastolic function as an isolated phenomenon and underlines the need for a complete hemodynamic assessment involving the right heart in therapeutic and prognostic decision-making processes.
Highlights
- Left ventricular (LV) diastolic function is usually assessed by LV filling pressures.
- High LV filling pressures (LV end-diastolic pressure or pulmonary capillary wedge pressure) are used as a surrogate for diastolic dysfunction.
- However, LV diastolic function is also strongly influenced by right-heart pressures.
- Left ventricular diastolic function should be assessed using LV transmural pressure instead of isolated LV filling pressures.
- This perspective underlines the need for a complete assessment involving right heart in the therapeutic and prognostic decision-making processes about LV diastolic disorders.
Introduction
End-diastolic wall stretch is an important hemodynamic variable that governs left ventricular (LV) systolic and diastolic functions and their integration.1 According to the FrankStarling law, LV stroke volume (SV) increases with increasing end-diastolic wall stretch.2,
It is generally overlooked, however, that LVEDP or its more frequently used surrogate; pulmonary capillary wedge pressure (PCWP), is not the sole force acting on LV. There is also an outside pressure that prevents the distention of the LV and decreases its end-diastolic stretch. This external force is pericardial pressure for the LV free wall and right ventricular (RV) end-diastolic pressure for the interventricular septum. Since RV end-diastolic pressure is the same as right atrial (RA) pressure, and pericardial pressure is very close to8-
In this study, we aimed to compare these two approaches using a complete EDPVR analysis.
Methods
Study Protocol
The study was conducted at Dr. Siyami Ersek Thoracic and Cardiovascular Surgery Training and Research Hospital, a tertiary center for heart failure (HF) and heart transplantation. A Local Ethical Committee approval was obtained, and the study was undertaken in accordance with the Declaration of Helsinki. We retrospectively screened our hospital database for adult patients with a clinical diagnosis of HF who underwent right heart catheterization (RHC) between 2015 and 2022. Exclusion criteria included incomplete RHC data, a PCWP less than 15 mm Hg, congenital heart disease with uncorrected shunts, and chronic kidney disease requiring dialysis.
The demographics and laboratory results were obtained via chart review and included complete blood count, kidney function tests, serum N-terminal pro-brain natriuretic peptide (NT pro-BNP) levels, echocardiographic, and RHC measurements. Echocardiographic data were obtained using ultrasound machines of the EPIQ series (Philips Medical Systems, Bothell, Wash, USA). Left atrial and LV volumes, and LV ejection fraction (LVEF) were calculated using the biplane Simpson’s method. Mitral inflow pulsed-wave Doppler and lateral mitral annular tissue Doppler measurements were taken from the apical four-chamber view. Echocardiographic diastolic dysfunction was graded according to the guidelines,6 using E to A wave ratio, e’ velocity, Mitral E wave to e’ velocity, LA volume index, and maximum tricuspid regurgitation velocity. Only the patients with a complete set of these variables were included in the comparison with EDPVR parameters.
Right heart catheterization was performed via the right jugular or femoral vein using a 7F balloon-tipped Swan-Ganz catheter (Edwards Lifesciences, Irvine, Calif, USA). Cardiac output was measured using the indirect Fick method. Pressure system calibration was checked with a square-wave test before the recordings were acquired. All pressure tracings were evaluated by visual exploration for physiological accuracy, and end-expiratory pressure values were taken. The LV transmural pressure difference (∆PTM) was calculated as PCWP minus RA pressure.
LV end-diastolic properties were assessed with construction of complete EDPVR curves using the single-beat method.13 Briefly, the measured LVEDV was normalized by appropriate scaling, and a normalized EDPVR was constructed using the measured LVEDP pressure. LV volumes at zero pressure (
All patients were managed according to the ESC guidelines for the diagnosis and management of heart failure (HF).4,
Statistical Analysis
The SPSS statistics software (version 29.0; SPSS Inc., Chicago, Ill, USA) was used for all statistical analyses. Continuous variables were expressed as mean ± standard deviation or median (interquartile range [IQR]), while categorical variables were expressed in counts (percentages). The normality of continuous variables was assessed using Shapiro–Wilk’s test and visual inspection of normal Q–Q plots. The diagnostic accuracy of PCWP and ∆PTM, and PCWP- and ∆PTM-based
Results
A total of 693 cases were identified in our database; 72 patients were excluded due to incomplete data (n = 21), a PCWP less than 15 mm Hg (n = 47), congenital heart disease with uncorrected shunts (n = 2), and a history of chronic kidney disease requiring dialysis (n = 2). Therefore, the final study population comprised 621 cases. Baseline characteristics are summarized in
Diastolic grading with a complete set of echocardiographic variables was possible in 39.4% (245/621) of the study cohort. Grade I, II, and III diastolic dysfunction was diagnosed in 93 (37.9%), 61 (24.8%), and 91 (37.1%) patients, respectively. Both PCWP (AUC, 0.702; 95% confidence interval (CI), 0.636-0.768;
Median follow-up was 511 (832) days and 5-year mortality rate was 27.1% (173/621). Both PCWP (AUC, 613; 95% CI, 0.565-0.662;
PCWP-based diastolic stiffness constants,
When the predictive power of PCWP-based and ∆PTM-based parameters were compared in terms of AUC values, ∆PTM-based diastolic stiffness constant
Complete EDPVR curves with both approaches are given in
Discussion
Several previous studies have questioned the interchangeable use of PCWP with end-diastolic myocardial stretch when interpreting LV diastolic function, and suggested the use of ∆PTM instead of PCWP.16-
Our study has several important implications. First, our results indicate that any noninvasive parameter evaluating diastolic function should be tested against ∆PTM, not PCWP. Secondly, the inclusion of RA pressure as an important factor in LV diastolic function adds the maintenance of optimal volume status and right-heart hemodynamics to the list of therapeutic targets in the management of “diastolic” HF. Even lowering ∆PTM without reducing PCWP actually results in better diastolic function and can be coupled with increased contractile performance via an improved systolodiastolic integration, as shown in a sub-study of the Evaluation Study of Congestive Heart Failure and Pulmonary Artery Catheterization Effectiveness (ESCAPE) trial.22 Thirdly, as diastolic stiffness is systematically overestimated when PCWP, instead of ∆PTM, is used, increased right-sided pressures can cause LV diastolic dysfunction to appear exaggerated. Indeed, it has been estimated that the contribution of external constraint to the PCWP can be as high as 50%-80% in HF patients.19 Therefore, diastolic function should be reassessed after adequate decongestion, otherwise, it may unnecessarily trigger a work-up for restrictive etiologies. Fourthly, at the extreme end of the spectrum, very high right-sided pressures can cause apparent diastolic LV dysfunction without any inherent pathology in LV relaxation. Although volume overload due to neurohormonal activation in HF usually causes both PCWP and RA pressure elevation, these can be discordant in one-fourth to one-third of the patients with HF.23,
Lastly, it should be underlined that mechanistic and prognostic meaning of a parameter can be different. For example, the prognostic information contained in PCWP is not limited to diastolic function but also includes total volume status, which reflects neurohormonal activity and disease progression. On the other hand, ∆PTM is at least partly independent of volume status, as both of its determinants, namely PCWP and RA pressure, are influenced by the same vascular volumes and therefore cancel each other.
Thus, ∆PTM can characterize intrinsic diastolic function independent of volume status but does this at the expense of losing some prognostic information. This may explain why ∆PTM-based diastolic stiffness coefficients were superior to PCWP-based ones, while ∆PTM itself seems to be less powerful compared to the PCWP measurement in mortality prediction.
Study Limitations
Our study has several strengths and limitations. To our knowledge, this is the largest mechanistic study in HF evaluating the pathophysiologic background of diastolic hemodynamics with a clinical hard endpoint. Although AUC values for both PCWP-based and ∆PTM-based diastolic variables might seem low at first glance, it should be underlined that the main aim of this study was to prove the presence of a significant difference between these assessment approaches, not to explore their diagnostic powers. Moreover, as these two approaches were compared in the same population, the study design was not influenced by baseline differences and confounding factors. Lastly, we used the whole EDPVR, which characterizes diastolic properties of LV better than a single snapshot pressure measurement such as LVEDP or PCWP. On the other hand, single-beat estimation of EDPVR depends on complex mathematical calculations and several assumptions, which is a limitation. Furthermore, LV volumes and pressure measurements were not done simultaneously. The gold standard for acquiring EDPVR with simultaneous pressure and volume measurements is recording pressure–volume loops using a conductance catheter with changing venous return, but this would virtually be impossible on such a scale because of its prohibitive cost and cumbersome methodology.
Conclusion
Our results indicate that LV diastolic function is better characterized by ∆PTM instead of PCWP. This approach underlines the importance of a complete hemodynamic assessment involving right heart in the therapeutic and prognostic decision-making processes of LV diastolic function evaluation.
Footnotes
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