| Literature DB >> 30404623 |
Heerajnarain Bulluck1,2, Mervyn H H Chan3,4, Valeria Paradies3, Robert L Yellon5, He H Ho6, Mark Y Chan7, Calvin W L Chin4, Jack W Tan4, Derek J Hausenloy5,3,8,9,10,11.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: The incidence of left ventricular (LV) thrombus formation in ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) patients in the current era of primary percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) is not well established. We performed a meta-analysis to assess the actual incidence and predictors of LV thrombus by cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) in STEMI treated by primary PCI.Entities:
Keywords: Cardiovascular magnetic resonance; Left ventricular thrombus; Primary percutaneous coronary intervention; ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30404623 PMCID: PMC6222991 DOI: 10.1186/s12968-018-0494-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cardiovasc Magn Reson ISSN: 1097-6647 Impact factor: 5.364
Fig. 1PRISMA flow diagram of the study selection process. This is the PRISMA flow diagram showing how studies were identified, screening and included in this meta-analysis
Characteristics of included studies
| Study | Patients | Clinical characteristics | CMR | Technique | Findings | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Delewi 2012 [ | 194 STEMI (123 anterior) | Age: 56 ± 9 years | 1.5 T | Cine + LGE imaging | 17 (8.8%) early LV thrombus and 12 late LV thrombus | 8/17 patients with LV thrombus treated with anticoagulation |
| Lanzillo 2013 [ | 36 STEMI (19 anterior) | Age: 59 ± 10 years | 1.5 T | LGE imaging | 7 (19%) LV thrombus | All resolved by 1 month |
| Pöss 2015 [ | 738 STEMI (339 anterior) | Age: 62 (51–71) years | 1.5 T and 3 T | Cine + LGE imaging | 26/738 (3.5%) LV thrombus 24/26 (92%) we in anterior STEMI | LV thrombus was associated with larger MI size, lower LVEF and increased rate of MACE (Death, re-infarction and new HF) |
| Weinsaft 2016 [ | 201 STEMI (108 anterior) | Age: 56 ± 12 years | 1.5 T | Long inversion time LGE | 17/201 (8%) LV thrombus | LV thrombus was associated with apical LV dysfunction |
| Bière 2016 [ | 329 STEMI | Age: 58 ± 11 years | 1.5 T and 3 T | First pass perfusion | 22 (6.7%) early LV thrombus and 9 (2.9%) late LV thrombus | FFP improved detection of LV thrombus over cine and LGE images |
| Cambronero-Cortinas 2017 [ | 574 STEMI patients had the acute CMR only. 392 STEMI (207 anterior) had paired acute and follow-up CMR | Age: 58 ± 12 years | 1.5 T | LGE imaging | 574 with CMR at 1 week (LV thrombus 28–5%) | LVEF< 50% and anterior STEMI independently predicted LV thrombus (c-statistic 0.82) |
| Gellen 2017 [ | 265 anterior STEMI | Age: 58 ± 12 years | CMR within 21 days | LGE imaging | 34/265 (12.8%) with LV thrombus CMR ≤ 5 days: 13/160 | The highest LV thrombus detection rate was in patients with CMR performed 9 to 12 days after STEMI |
| Weir 2009 [ | 100 Acute MI (90 STEMI, 10 NSTEMI) with LVEF< 40% | Age: 59 ± 12 years | CMR at a mean of 4.2 days (range 2–11 days) | First-pass perfusion + LGE | 15/100 (15%) with LV thrombus | All patients with LV thrombus were formally anticoagulated. |
| Surder 2015 [ | Substudy of SWISS-AMI study | Age: 57 ± 10 years | CMR at a median of 6 (4–8)days | Cine + LGE imaging | 11/177 (6.2%) with LV thrombus | All patients with LV thrombus were anticoagulated. |
| Meurin 2015 [ | 100 anterior STEMI with LVEF< 45% | Age: 59 ± 12 years | CMR at a median of 30 days (range 20–40 days) | Cine + LGE imaging | 26/100 (26%) with LV thrombus | All patients with LV thrombus were started on anticoagulation |
STEMI ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction, DM diabetes mellitus, MI myocardial infarct, CMR cardiovascular magnetic resonance, RCT randomized controlled trial, LGE late gadolinium enhancement, LV left ventricular, LVEF left ventricular ejection fraction, MACE major adverse cardiovascular event, CCF congestive cardiac failure, FFP first pass perfusion
Fig. 2Forest plot of incidence of left ventricular (LV) thrombus by cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) in ST elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) patients treated by primary percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI). Forest plot showing the overall incidence of LV thrombus in STEMI and those with an anterior STEMI
Fig. 3Early post-contrast CMR images of LV thrombus from 3 patients with acute STEMI treated by primary PCI. These 4-chamber views from 3 different patients illustrate LV thrombus of different sizes (red arrow) identified from the early post-contrast images acquired at high inversion time to null the avascular thrombus and MVO as black
Fig. 4Algorithm for the detection of LV thrombus in reperfused STEMI patients in the clinical setting. This algorithm provides guidance on how STEMI patients at risk could be identified and how TTE and CMR could be integrated in the clinical setting to optimize the detection of LV thrombus
Fig. 5Differences in appearance between LV thrombus and microvascular obstruction (MVO). These are the early and late post-contrast short-axis images from a patient with LV thrombus and MVO. The red arrows show the LV thrombus and the blue arrows delineate the MVO