| Literature DB >> 31509951 |
Emilija Miskinyte1, Paulius Bucius1,2, Jennifer Erley1, Seyedeh Mahsa Zamani1, Radu Tanacli1, Christian Stehning3, Christopher Schneeweis4, Tomas Lapinskas2, Burkert Pieske1,5,6, Volkmar Falk5,7, Rolf Gebker1, Gianni Pedrizzetti8, Natalia Solowjowa7, Sebastian Kelle9,10,11.
Abstract
In this study, we used a single commercially available software solution to assess global longitudinal (GLS) and global circumferential strain (GCS) using cardiac computed tomography (CT) and cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) feature tracking (FT). We compared agreement and reproducibility between these two methods and the reference standard, CMR tagging (TAG). Twenty-seven patients with severe aortic stenosis underwent CMR and cardiac CT examinations. FT analysis was performed using Medis suite version 3.0 (Leiden, The Netherlands) software. Segment (Medviso) software was used for GCS assessment from tagged images. There was a trend towards the underestimation of GLS by CT-FT when compared to CMR-FT (19.4 ± 5.04 vs. 22.40 ± 5.69, respectively; p = 0.065). GCS values between TAG, CT-FT, and CMR-FT were similar (p = 0.233). CMR-FT and CT-FT correlated closely for GLS (r = 0.686, p < 0.001) and GCS (r = 0.707, p < 0.001), while both of these methods correlated moderately with TAG for GCS (r = 0.479, p < 0.001 for CMR-FT vs. TAG; r = 0.548 for CT-FT vs. TAG). Intraobserver and interobserver agreement was excellent in all techniques. Our findings show that, in elderly patients with severe aortic stenosis (AS), the FT algorithm performs equally well in CMR and cardiac CT datasets for the assessment of GLS and GCS, both in terms of reproducibility and agreement with the gold standard, TAG.Entities:
Keywords: cardiac computed tomography; cardiac magnetic resonance; feature tracking; myocardial deformation; strain; systemic disease; tagging
Year: 2019 PMID: 31509951 PMCID: PMC6780556 DOI: 10.3390/jcm8091423
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
Demographic and clinical data of the study population.
| Variables. | |
|---|---|
| Age | 22.40 ± 5.69 |
| Male | 18.91 ± 5.97 |
| Body mass index (kg/m2) | 26.60 ± 3.60 |
| Heart rate | 67.59 ± 10.27 |
| Clinical history | |
| Hypertension | 25 (92.56%) |
| CAD | 16 (59.25%) |
| Myocardial infarction | 6 (22.22%) |
| History of CABG | 5 (18.51%) |
| Stroke | 4 (14.81%) |
| Diabetes mellitus type 2 | 6 (22.22%) |
| COPD | 5 (18.51%) |
Abbreviations: CAD: coronary artery disease; CABG: coronary artery bypass graft; COPD: chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
Values of volumetric assessment of the LV by CMR and CCT.
| Measurement | CMR | CCT | |
|---|---|---|---|
| LVEF (%) | 64.57 ± 14.55 | 59.15 ± 14.82 | 0.181 |
| LVEDVi (mL/m2) | 72.60 ± 27.22 | 80.35 ± 26.42 | 0.374 |
| LVESVi (mL/m2) | 28.62 ± 21.21 | 35.79 ± 23.39 | 0.293 |
| LVSVi (mL/m2) | 43.98 ± 11.65 | 44.56 ± 8.13 | 0.933 |
| LVMi (g/m2) | 62.13 ± 20.51 | 66.04 ± 19.42 | 0.471 |
Values are expressed as mean ± SD. Abbreviations: CCT: cardiac computed tomography; CMR: cardiac magnetic resonance; LVEF: left ventricular ejection fraction; LVEDVi: left ventricular end-diastolic volume index; LVESVi: left ventricular end-systolic volume index; LVMi: left ventricular mass index; LVSVi: left ventricular stroke volume index.
Figure 1Bland–Altman analyses of (a) LVEDVi, (b) LVESVi, (c) LVSVi, and (d) LVEF assessment between CMR and CCT. Abbreviations: CCT: cardiac computed tomography; CMR: cardiac magnetic resonance; LVEF: left ventricular ejection fraction; LVEDVi: left ventricular end-diastolic volume index; LVESVi: left ventricular end-systolic volume index; LVSVi: left ventricular stroke volume index.
Figure 2Bland–Altman analysis of LVMi assessment between CMR and CCT. Abbreviations: CCT: cardiac computed tomography; CMR: cardiac magnetic resonance; LVMi: left ventricular mass index.
Figure 3Assessment of GLS from the four-chamber long-axis (LAX) view in the same subject using CMR-FT (left) and CT-FT (right).
Figure 4Assessment of GCS in the same subject from the mid-ventricular short-axis (SAX) view using CMR-FT (left), CT-FT (middle), and TAG (right).
Values of strain assessment of the LV by CMR and CCT.
| Measurement | CMR-FT | CT-FT | TAG |
|---|---|---|---|
| GLS (%) | 22.40 ± 5.69 | 19.4 ± 5.04 | N/A |
| GCS (%) | 18.91 ± 5.97 | 18.13 ± 4.63 | 16.66 ± 3.38 |
Values are expressed as mean ± SD. Abbreviations: LV: left ventricular; CCT: cardiac computed tomography; GLS: global longitudinal strain, GCS: global circumferential strain, CMR-FT: cardiac magnetic resonance feature tracking, CT-FT: computed tomography feature tracking; TAG: myocardial tagging.
Figure 5Bland–Altman analysis of the (a) GLS assessment between CT-FT and MR-FT; (b) GCS assessment between CT-FT and MR-FT; (c) GCS assessment between MR-FT and TAG; and (d) GCS assessment between CT-FT and TAG. Abbreviations: MR-FT: magnetic resonance feature tracking; CT-FT: computed tomography feature tracking; TAG: myocardial tagging; GLS: global longitudinal strain; GCS: global circumferential strain.
Tabular representation of Bland–Altman and Pearson’s correlation analyses for strain assessment.
| Measurement | Comparison | Bias (%) | LOA (%) | Pearson’s R |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| GLS | CMR-FT vs. CT-FT | 3.003 | ±8.415 | 0.6860 |
| GCS | CMR-FT vs. CT-FT | 0.888 | ±8.16 | 0.7067 |
| CMR-FT vs. TAG | 2.250 | ±10.31 | 0.4799 | |
| CT-FT vs. TAG | 1.468 | ±7.77 | 0.5484 |
Abbreviations: GLS: global longitudinal strain; GCS: global circumferential strain; CMR-FT: cardiac magnetic resonance feature tracking; CT-FT: computed tomography feature tracking; LOA: limits of agreement; TAG: myocardial tagging.
Reproducibility comparison of GLS and GCS between CMR-FT, CT-FT, and TAG.
| Bias (%) | Limits of Agreement (±) | CoV (%) | ICC (95% CI) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
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| GLS | 0.09 | 4.36 | 10.1 | 0.960 (0.837–0.990) |
| GCS | −2.44 | 4.8 | 13.1 | 0.931 (0.439–0.985) |
|
| ||||
| GLS | −0.08 | 2.4 | 6.8 | 0.983 (0.932–0.996) |
| GCS | −0.05 | 5.0 | 14.4 | 0.949 (0.801–0.987) |
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| GCS | −0.08 | 1.26 | 3.9 | 0.992 (0.969–0.998) |
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| GLS | 0.03 | 3.16 | 7.4 | 0.982 (0.926–0.995) |
| GCS | −2.3 | 6.6 | 18.1 | 0.922 (0.629–0.981) |
|
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| GLS | 1.25 | 5.5 | 16.1 | 0.866 (0.501–0.966) |
| GCS | 0.39 | 5.1 | 14.6 | 0.940 (0.759–0.985) |
|
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| GCS | 0.48 | 1.72 | 5.4 | 0.981 (0.918–0.995) |
Abbreviations: GLS: global longitudinal strain; GCS: global circumferential strain; CMR-FT: cardiac magnetic resonance feature tracking; CT-FT: computed tomography feature tracking; TAG: myocardial tagging; CoV: coefficient of variance; ICC: intra-class correlation coefficient.