Detection of myocardial damage in patients with sarcoidosis

Manesh R Patel, Peter J Cawley, John F Heitner, Igor Klem, Michele A Parker, Wael A Jaroudi, Trip J Meine, James B White, Michael D Elliott, Han W Kim, Robert M Judd, Raymond J Kim, Manesh R Patel, Peter J Cawley, John F Heitner, Igor Klem, Michele A Parker, Wael A Jaroudi, Trip J Meine, James B White, Michael D Elliott, Han W Kim, Robert M Judd, Raymond J Kim

Abstract

Background: In patients with sarcoidosis, sudden death is a leading cause of mortality, which may represent unrecognized cardiac involvement. Delayed-enhancement cardiovascular magnetic resonance (DE-CMR) can detect minute amounts of myocardial damage. We sought to compare DE-CMR with standard clinical evaluation for the identification of cardiac involvement.

Methods and results: Eighty-one consecutive patients with biopsy-proven extracardiac sarcoidosis were prospectively recruited for a parallel and masked comparison of cardiac involvement between (1) DE-CMR and (2) standard clinical evaluation with the use of consensus criteria (modified Japanese Ministry of Health [JMH] guidelines). Standard evaluation included 12-lead ECG and at least 1 dedicated non-CMR cardiac study (echocardiography, radionuclide scintigraphy, or cardiac catheterization). Patients were followed for 21+/-8 months for major adverse events (death, defibrillator shock, or pacemaker requirement). Patients were predominantly middle-aged (46+/-11 years), female (62%), and black (73%) and had chronic sarcoidosis (median, 7 years) and preserved left ventricular ejection fraction (median, 56%). DE-CMR identified cardiac involvement in 21 patients (26%) and JMH criteria in 10 (12%, 8 overlapping), a >2-fold higher rate for DE-CMR (P=0.005). All patients with myocardial damage on DE-CMR had coronary disease excluded by x-ray angiography. Pathology evaluation in 15 patients (19%) identified 4 with cardiac sarcoidosis; all 4 were positive by DE-CMR, whereas 2 were JMH positive. On follow-up, 8 had adverse events, including 5 cardiac deaths. Patients with myocardial damage on DE-CMR had a 9-fold higher rate of adverse events and an 11.5-fold higher rate of cardiac death than patients without damage.

Conclusions: In patients with sarcoidosis, DE-CMR is more than twice as sensitive for cardiac involvement as current consensus criteria. Myocardial damage detected by DE-CMR appears to be associated with future adverse events including cardiac death, but events were few, and this needs confirmation in a larger cohort.

Conflict of interest statement

Conflicts of Interests Disclosures

Drs Kim and Judd are inventors of a US patent on Delayed Enhancement MRI, which is owned by Northwestern University. There are no other conflicts of interest or financial relationships to disclose.

Figures

Figure 1. Enrollment and Protocol
Figure 1. Enrollment and Protocol
Panel A outlines the enrollment criteria and the four separate steps of the study protocol. Panel B outlines the modified Japanese Ministry of Health (JMH) guidelines for the diagnosis of cardiac sarcoidosis in those with biopsy proven extra-cardiac sarcoidosis. See text for further details.
Figure 2. Patterns of Hyperenhancement in DE-CMR…
Figure 2. Patterns of Hyperenhancement in DE-CMR Positive Patients
Images from five patients positive for cardiac involvement by DE-CMR are shown. A variety of hyperenhancement patterns are demonstrated, and these were classified as CAD-type or non-CAD-type depending on whether the left ventricular subendocardium was involved (see text for further details). Cartoon representations of the DE-CMR images are shown immediately adjacent. White (hyperenhanced) regions depict areas of cardiac involvement. The right-most column shows images from repeat DE-CMR scans performed during the follow-up period. These demonstrate the persistence of hyperenhancement.
Figure 3. Comparison of DE-CMR to Autopsy…
Figure 3. Comparison of DE-CMR to Autopsy Findings in One Patient
Antemortem DE-CMR study showed two regions of hyperenhancement (orange arrows). The patient died 6 months after DE-CMR. Gross examination of the heart demonstrated aneurysmal dilatation of the LV apex with wall thinning and macroscopically visible scarring. A smaller region of scar tissue was also observed in the lateral wall. These regions matched the areas of involvement seen on DE-CMR. Histological sections prepared from these 2 regions demonstrated dense fibrosis (top, masson trichrome stain) and granulomatous inflammation within patchy fibrosis (bottom, hematoxylin-eosin stain). Examination of the coronary arteries demonstrated the absence of obstructive atherosclerotic disease.
Figure 4. Summary of Cardiac Pathology Evaluation
Figure 4. Summary of Cardiac Pathology Evaluation
Cardiac sarcoidosis was diagnosed by pathology evaluation in 4 patients. All 4 had cardiac involvement by DE-CMR. Of the 2 patients with positive endomyocardial biopsy, both had widespread hyperenhancement of the RV side of the interventricular septum (involvement of all 5 septal segments; example, Patient G). Conversely, of 11 patients with negative endomyocardial biopsy, 6 had cardiac involvement by DE-CMR. These 6 had no or limited involvement of the RV side of the interventricular septum (example, Patient H). See text for further details.
Figure 5. Events According to DE-CMR and…
Figure 5. Events According to DE-CMR and JMH Status
Panel A outlines adverse events according to DE-CMR and JMH status. Kaplan-Meier curves in Panel B demonstrate event-free and cardiac survival was reduced in patients positive for cardiac involvement by DE-CMR. See text for further details.

Source: PubMed

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