Myocardial Contraction Fraction for Risk Stratification in Low-Gradient Aortic Stenosis With Preserved Ejection Fraction
Dan Ruşinaru, Yohann Bohbot, Maciej Kubala, Momar Diouf, Alexandre Altes, Agnès Pasquet, Sylvestre Maréchaux, Jean‐Louis Vanoverschelde, Christophe Tribouilloy
Abstract
Background: Myocardial contraction fraction (MCF) is a volumetric measure of myocardial shortening independent of left ventricular size and geometry. This multicenter study investigates the usefulness of MCF for risk stratification in low-gradient severe aortic stenosis with preserved ejection fraction. Methods: We included 643 consecutive patients with low-gradient severe aortic stenosis with preserved ejection fraction in whom MCF was computed at baseline and analyzed mortality during follow-up. Results: Throughout follow-up with medical and surgical management (34.9 [16.1–65.3] months), lower MCF tertiles had higher mortality than the highest tertile. Eighty-month survival was 56±4% for MCF>41%, 41±4% for MCF 30% to 41%, and 40±4% for MCF<30% ( P <0.001). After comprehensive adjustment, mortality risk remained high for MCF 30% to 41% (adjusted hazard ratio, 1.53 [1.08–2.18]) and for MCF<30% (adjusted hazard ratio, 1.82 [1.24–2.66]) versus MCF>41%. The optimal MCF cutoff point for mortality prediction was 41%. Age, body mass index, Charlson index, peak aortic velocity, and ejection fraction were independently associated with mortality. MCF (χ 2 to improve 10.39; P =0.001), provided greater additional prognostic value over the baseline parameters than stroke volume (SV) index (χ 2 to improve 5.41; P =0.042), left ventricular mass index (χ 2 to improve 2.15; P =0.137), or global longitudinal strain (χ 2 to improve 3.67; P =0.061). MCF outperformed ejection fraction for mortality prediction. When patients were classified by SV index and MCF, mortality risk was low when SV index was ≥30 mL/m 2 and MCF>41%, higher for patients with SV index ≥30 mL/m 2 and MCF≤41% (adjusted hazard ratio, 1.47 [1.05–2.07]) and extremely high for patients with SV index <30 mL/m 2 (adjusted hazard ratio, 2.29 [1.45–3.62]). Conclusions: MCF is a valuable marker of risk in low-gradient severe aortic stenosis with preserved ejection fraction and could improve decision-making, especially in normal-flow low-gradient severe aortic stenosis with preserved ejection fraction.