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J Cardiovasc Magn Reson ; : 101066, 2024 Jul 25.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39067701

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: There is conflicting evidence regarding the response to a fixed dose of regadenoson in patients with high body weight. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effectiveness of regadenoson in patients with varying body weights using novel quantitative CMR perfusion parameters in addition to standard clinical markers. METHODS: Consecutive patients with typical angina and/or risk factors for coronary artery disease (N=217) underwent regadenoson stress CMR perfusion imaging using a dual-sequence quantitative protocol with perfusion parameters generated from an artificial intelligence (AI) based algorithm. CMR was performed on 1.5T scanners using a standard 0.4mg injection of regadenoson. A cohort of consecutive patients undergoing adenosine stress perfusion (N=218) was used as a control group. RESULTS: An inverse association of myocardial perfusion reserve and weight (mean decrease -0.05 per 10Kg increase, 95% CI -0.009/-0.0001, P=0.045) was noted in the regadenoson group but not in patients stressed with adenosine (P=0.77). Adjusted logistic regression analysis revealed a 10Kg increase resulted in 36% increased odds for inadequate stress response (OR= 1.36, 95% CI 1.10-1.69, P=0.005). Moreover, a significant interaction (OR=1.09, 95% CI 1.02-1.16, P=0.012) between stressor type (regadenoson vs adenosine) and weight was noted. This was also confirmed in the propensity matched subgroup (P=0.024) and was not attenuated after adjustment (P=0.041). BSA (P=0.006) but not BMI (P=0.055) was differentially associated with inadequate response conditional to the stressor used, and this association remained significant after adjustment for confounders (P=0.025). Patients in the highest quartile of weight (>93Kg) or BSA (>2.06m2) had substantially increased odds for inadequate response with regadenoson (OR=8.19, 95% CI 2.04-32.97, P=0.003 for increased weight and OR=7.75, 95% CI 1.93- 31.13, P=0.004 for increased BSA). Both weight and BSA had excellent discriminative ability for inadequate regadenoson response (ROC area under curve 0.84 and 0.83 respectively). CONCLUSIONS: Using quantitative perfusion CMR in patients undergoing pharmacological stress with regadenoson, we found an inverse relationship between patient weight and both clinical response and myocardial perfusion parameters. A fixed-dose bolus approach may not be adequate to induce maximal hyperemia in patients with increased weight. Weight-adjusted stressors like adenosine may be considered instead in patients with body weight > 93Kg and BSA > 2.06m2.

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