Literature DB >> 8001359

Echocardiography in multicenter clinical trials: experience from the Treatment of Mild Hypertension Study.

G A Grandits1, P R Liebson, S Dianzumba, R J Prineas.   

Abstract

Echocardiography is becoming commonplace in clinical trials relating to hypertension for assessing changes in left ventricular mass (LVM). Factors affecting variability need to be considered in the design and management of such studies. These include (1) standardization of recordings and readings, (2) quality of recordings, (3) choice of sonographer vs. cardiologist readers, and (4) reader and temporal variability in measurements. The Treatment of Mild Hypertension Study (TOMHS) provides data and experience concerning these issues. TOMHS was a randomized trial of 902 participants, men and women, conducted in four clinical centers comparing six treatments for mild hypertension. M-mode echocardiograms were recorded at baseline and follow-up by centrally trained sonographers for assessment of LVM. Initial study design specified that each tracing be read by two sonographers with a study cardiologist adjudicating major differences in measurements. Poor agreement between sonographer readings prompted a change in design requiring one of two study cardiologists to read all tracings, with the same cardiologist reading all serial studies for a participant. Common tracings were read to assess interreader variability. The percentage of unreadable tracings varied by center (0.4-14.2%) and increased over follow-up. Reader agreement between the two cardiologists for LVM was greater (r = 0.83) than between sonographers (r = 0.68) or between sonographers and cardiologists (r = 0.64). The agreement between sonographer and cardiologist readings varied by center (range of r = 0.54-0.81), the highest correlations being in the two centers with physician echocardiographers. The intraclass correlation across visits for LVM was 0.66, being similar for all visit pairs. The standard deviation of the difference between baseline and follow-up LVM was 46 g using cardiologist readings, 51 g for readings made by the same sonographer, and 68 g for readings made by different sonographers, a difference that is large enough to appreciably affect sample size and power for studies. High-quality echocardiographic data can be obtained in multicenter trials, but this requires the continued training of sonographers and readers and ongoing monitoring of quality of tracings and measurements.

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Year:  1994        PMID: 8001359     DOI: 10.1016/0197-2456(94)90035-3

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Control Clin Trials        ISSN: 0197-2456


  5 in total

1.  Reliability of multicenter pediatric echocardiographic measurements of left ventricular structure and function: the prospective P(2)C(2) HIV study.

Authors:  S E Lipshultz; K A Easley; E J Orav; S Kaplan; T J Starc; J T Bricker; W W Lai; D S Moodie; G Sopko; M D Schluchter; S D Colan
Journal:  Circulation       Date:  2001-07-17       Impact factor: 29.690

2.  Low agreement between cardiologists diagnosing left ventricular hypertrophy in children with end-stage renal disease.

Authors:  Nikki J Schoenmaker; Johanna H van der Lee; Jaap W Groothoff; Gabrielle G van Iperen; Ingrid M E Frohn-Mulder; Ronald B Tanke; Jaap Ottenkamp; Irene M Kuipers
Journal:  BMC Nephrol       Date:  2013-08-02       Impact factor: 2.388

3.  Automated Left Ventricular Dimension Assessment Using Artificial Intelligence Developed and Validated by a UK-Wide Collaborative.

Authors:  James P Howard; Catherine C Stowell; Graham D Cole; Kajaluxy Ananthan; Camelia D Demetrescu; Keith Pearce; Ronak Rajani; Jobanpreet Sehmi; Kavitha Vimalesvaran; G Sunthar Kanaganayagam; Eleanor McPhail; Arjun K Ghosh; John B Chambers; Amar P Singh; Massoud Zolgharni; Bushra Rana; Darrel P Francis; Matthew J Shun-Shin
Journal:  Circ Cardiovasc Imaging       Date:  2021-05-17       Impact factor: 7.792

4.  Reproducibility in echocardiographic assessment of diastolic function in a population based study (the STANISLAS Cohort study).

Authors:  Zied Frikha; Nicolas Girerd; Olivier Huttin; Pierre Yves Courand; Erwan Bozec; Arnaud Olivier; Zohra Lamiral; Faiez Zannad; Patrick Rossignol
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2015-04-08       Impact factor: 3.240

5.  Comparison of m-mode echocardiographic left ventricular mass measured using digital and strip chart readings: the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities (ARIC) study.

Authors:  Donna K Arnett; Thomas N Skelton; Philip R Liebson; Emelia Benjamin; Richard G Hutchinson
Journal:  Cardiovasc Ultrasound       Date:  2003-06-27       Impact factor: 2.062

  5 in total

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