Native T1 and T2 provide distinctive signatures in hypertrophic cardiac conditions - Comparison of uremic, hypertensive and hypertrophic cardiomyopathy

Luca Arcari, Rocio Hinojar, Juergen Engel, Tilo Freiwald, Steffen Platschek, Hafisyatul Zainal, Hui Zhou, Moises Vasquez, Till Keller, Andreas Rolf, Helmut Geiger, Ingeborg Hauser, Thomas J Vogl, Andreas M Zeiher, Massimo Volpe, Eike Nagel, Valentina O Puntmann, Luca Arcari, Rocio Hinojar, Juergen Engel, Tilo Freiwald, Steffen Platschek, Hafisyatul Zainal, Hui Zhou, Moises Vasquez, Till Keller, Andreas Rolf, Helmut Geiger, Ingeborg Hauser, Thomas J Vogl, Andreas M Zeiher, Massimo Volpe, Eike Nagel, Valentina O Puntmann

Abstract

Aims: Profound left ventricular (LV) hypertrophy with diastolic dysfunction and heart failure is the cardinal manifestation of heart remodelling in chronic kidney disease (CKD). Previous studies related increased T1 mapping values in CKD with diffuse fibrosis. Native T1 is a non-specific readout that may also relate to increased intramyocardial fluid. We examined concomitant T1 and T2 mapping signatures and undertook comparisons with other hypertrophic conditions.

Methods: In this prospective multicentre study, consecutive CKD patients (n = 154) undergoing routine clinical cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) imaging were compared with patients with hypertensive (HTN, n = 163) and hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM, n = 158), and normotensive controls (n = 133).

Results: Native T1 was significantly higher in all patient groups, whereas native T2 in CKD only (p < 0.001 vs. all groups). Native T1 and T2 were interrelated in patient groups and the strength of association was condition-specific (CKD r = 0.558, HTN r = 0.324, both p < 0.001; HCM r = 0.157, p = 0.05). Native T1 and T2 were similarly correlated in all CKD stages (S3 r = 0.501, S4 0.586, S5 r = 0.424, p < 0.001 for all). Native T1 was the strongest myocardial discriminator between patients and controls (area under the curve, AUC HCM: 0.97; CKD: 0.97, HTN 0.98), native T2 between CKD vs HCM (AUC 0.90) and native T1 and T2 between CKD vs HTN (AUC: 0.83 and 0.80 respectively), p < 0.001 for all.

Conclusions: Our findings reveal different CMR signatures of common hypertrophic cardiac phenotypes. Native T1 was raised in all conditions, indicating the presence of pathologic hypertrophic remodelling. Markedly raised native T2 was CKD-specific, suggesting a prominent role of intramyocardial fluid.

Conflict of interest statement

Declaration of competing interest The authors report no relationships that could be construed as a conflict of interest.

Copyright © 2020 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Source: PubMed

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