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1.
Clin Res Cardiol ; 113(2): 288-300, 2024 Feb.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37966670

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: Patients with acute venous thromboembolism associated with cancer have an increased risk of recurrences and bleeding in the long term. RESEARCH QUESTION: To describe the clinical features and short-term course of patients with acute pulmonary embolism (PE) and active cancer, previous cancer or no cancer. STUDY DESIGN AND METHODS: Patients with acute PE included in COPE-prospective, multicentre study of adult patients with acute, symptomatic, objectively diagnosed PE-were classified as having active cancer, previous cancer, or no cancer. RESULTS: Overall, 832 patients had active cancer, 464 with previous cancer and 3660 patients had no cancer at the time of acute PE. The most prevalent primary sites of active cancer were urogenital (23.0%), gastrointestinal (21.0%), and lung (19.8%), with a high prevalence of metastatic disease (57.6%) and ongoing anticancer treatment (16.2%). At discharge, a direct oral anticoagulant was used in 43.1%, 78.8%, and 82.0% of patients with active cancer, previous cancer, and no cancer, respectively. Rates of death in-hospital and at 30 days were higher in patients with active cancer compared to patients with previous cancer and no cancer (7.9% vs. 4.3% vs. 2.2% and 13.8% vs. 5.2% vs. 2.6%, respectively). Rates of major bleeding were 4.8%, 2.6%, and 2.4%, respectively. Among patients with active cancer, lung or metastatic cancer were independent predictors of death; brain, hematological or gastrointestinal cancer had the highest risk of major bleeding. INTERPRETATION: Among patients with acute PE, those with active cancer have high risks for death or major bleeding within 30 days. These risks vary based on primary site of cancer. CLINICAL TRIAL REGISTRATION: clinicaltrial.gov identifier: NCT03631810.


Asunto(s)
Neoplasias , Embolia Pulmonar , Adulto , Humanos , Enfermedad Aguda , Anticoagulantes , Hemorragia/epidemiología , Hemorragia/inducido químicamente , Neoplasias/complicaciones , Neoplasias/diagnóstico , Neoplasias/epidemiología , Estudios Prospectivos , Embolia Pulmonar/diagnóstico , Embolia Pulmonar/epidemiología , Embolia Pulmonar/terapia
2.
Eur J Prev Cardiol ; 28(7): 738-746, 2021 07 10.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34247225

RESUMEN

AIMS: Remodelling of the cardiovascular system (including heart and vasculature) is a dynamic process influenced by multiple physiological and pathological factors. We sought to understand whether remodelling in response to a stimulus, exercise training, altered with healthy ageing. METHODS: A total of 237 untrained healthy male and female subjects volunteering for their first time marathon were recruited. At baseline and after 6 months of unsupervised training, race completers underwent tests including 1.5T cardiac magnetic resonance, brachial and non-invasive central blood pressure assessment. For analysis, runners were divided by age into under or over 35 years (U35, O35). RESULTS: Injury and completion rates were similar among the groups; 138 runners (U35: n = 71, women 49%; O35: n = 67, women 51%) completed the race. On average, U35 were faster by 37 minutes (12%). Training induced a small increase in left ventricular mass in both groups (3 g/m2, P < 0.001), but U35 also increased ventricular cavity sizes (left ventricular end-diastolic volume (EDV)i +3%; left ventricular end-systolic volume (ESV)i +8%; right ventricular end-diastolic volume (EDV)i +4%; right ventricular end-systolic volume (ESV)i +5%; P < 0.01 for all). Systemic aortic compliance fell in the whole sample by 7% (P = 0.020) and, especially in O35, also systemic vascular resistance (-4% in the whole sample, P = 0.04) and blood pressure (systolic/diastolic, whole sample: brachial -4/-3 mmHg, central -4/-2 mmHg, all P < 0.001; O35: brachial -6/-3 mmHg, central -6/-4 mmHg, all P < 0.001). CONCLUSION: Medium-term, unsupervised physical training in healthy sedentary individuals induces measurable remodelling of both heart and vasculature. This amount is age dependent, with predominant cardiac remodelling when younger and predominantly vascular remodelling when older.


Asunto(s)
Ejercicio Físico , Ventrículos Cardíacos , Adulto , Diástole , Femenino , Corazón , Ventrículos Cardíacos/diagnóstico por imagen , Humanos , Masculino , Persona de Mediana Edad , Volumen Sistólico , Sístole , Función Ventricular Izquierda
3.
JACC Cardiovasc Imaging ; 14(11): 2123-2134, 2021 11.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34147459

RESUMEN

OBJECTIVES: The aim of this study was to define the variability of maximal wall thickness (MWT) measurements across modalities and predict its impact on care in patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM). BACKGROUND: Left ventricular MWT measured by echocardiography or cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) contributes to the diagnosis of HCM, stratifies risk, and guides key decisions, including whether to place an implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD). METHODS: A 20-center global network provided paired echocardiographic and CMR data sets from patients with HCM, from which 17 paired data sets of the highest quality were selected. These were presented as 7 randomly ordered pairs (at 6 cardiac conferences) to experienced readers who report HCM imaging in their daily practice, and their MWT caliper measurements were captured. The impact of measurement variability on ICD insertion decisions was estimated in 769 separately recruited multicenter patients with HCM using the European Society of Cardiology algorithm for 5-year risk for sudden cardiac death. RESULTS: MWT analysis was completed by 70 readers (from 6 continents; 91% with >5 years' experience). Seventy-nine percent and 68% scored echocardiographic and CMR image quality as excellent. For both modalities (echocardiographic and then CMR results), intramodality inter-reader MWT percentage variability was large (range -59% to 117% [SD ±20%] and -61% to 52% [SD ±11%], respectively). Agreement between modalities was low (SE of measurement 4.8 mm; 95% CI 4.3 mm-5.2 mm; r = 0.56 [modest correlation]). In the multicenter HCM cohort, this estimated echocardiographic MWT percentage variability (±20%) applied to the European Society of Cardiology algorithm reclassified risk in 19.5% of patients, which would have led to inappropriate ICD decision making in 1 in 7 patients with HCM (8.7% would have had ICD placement recommended despite potential low risk, and 6.8% would not have had ICD placement recommended despite intermediate or high risk). CONCLUSIONS: Using the best available images and experienced readers, MWT as a biomarker in HCM has a high degree of inter-reader variability and should be applied with caution as part of decision making for ICD insertion. Better standardization efforts in HCM recommendations by current governing societies are needed to improve clinical decision making in patients with HCM.


Asunto(s)
Cardiomiopatía Hipertrófica , Desfibriladores Implantables , Biomarcadores , Cardiomiopatía Hipertrófica/diagnóstico por imagen , Cardiomiopatía Hipertrófica/terapia , Muerte Súbita Cardíaca , Ecocardiografía , Humanos , Valor Predictivo de las Pruebas , Medición de Riesgo
4.
Int J Cardiovasc Imaging ; 35(10): 1893-1901, 2019 Oct.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31104178

RESUMEN

Late gadolinium enhancement (LGE) cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) sequences have evolved. Free-breathing motion-corrected (MOCO) LGE has potential advantages over breath-held (bh) LGE including minimal user input for the short axis (SAX) stack without breath-holds. It has previously been shown that MOCO-LGE delivers high image quality compared to bh-LGE. We sought to conduct an independent validation study to investigate real-world performance of bh-LGE versus MOCO-LGE in a high-throughput CMR center immediately after the introduction of the MOCO-LGE sequence and with elementary staff induction in its use. Four-hundred consecutive patients, referred for CMR and graded by clinical complexity, underwent CMR on either of two scanners (1.5 T, both Siemens) in a UK tertiary cardiac center. Scar imaging was by bh-LGE or MOCO-LGE (both with phase sensitive inversion recovery). Image quality, scan time, reader confidence and report reproducibility were compared between those scanned by bh-LGE versus MOCO-LGE. Readers had > 3 years CMR experience. Categorical variables were compared by χ2 or Fisher's exact tests and continuous variables by unpaired Student's t-test. Inter-rater agreement of LGE reports was by Cohen's kappa. Image quality (low score = better) was better for MOCO-LGE (median, interquartile range [Q1-Q3]: 0 [0-0] vs. 2 [0-3], P < 0.0001). This persisted when just clinically complex patients were assessed (0 [0-1] vs. 2 [1-4] P < 0.0001). Readers were more confident in their MOCO-LGE rulings (P < 0.001) and reports more reproducible [bh-LGE vs. MOCO-LGE: kappa 0.76, confidence interval (CI) 0.7-0.9 vs. 0.82, CI 0.7-0.9]. MOCO-LGE significantly shortened LGE acquisition times compared to bh-LGE (for left ventricle SAX stack: 03:22 ± 01:14 vs 06:09 ± 01:47 min respectively, P < 0.0001). In a busy clinical service, immediately after its introduction and with elementary staff training, MOCO-LGE is demonstrably faster to bh-LGE, providing better images that are easier to interpret, even in the sickest of patients.


Asunto(s)
Medios de Contraste/administración & dosificación , Cardiopatías/diagnóstico por imagen , Imagen por Resonancia Cinemagnética , Meglumina/administración & dosificación , Miocardio/patología , Compuestos Organometálicos/administración & dosificación , Función Ventricular Izquierda , Adulto , Anciano , Eficiencia Organizacional , Femenino , Fibrosis , Cardiopatías/patología , Cardiopatías/fisiopatología , Humanos , Masculino , Persona de Mediana Edad , Valor Predictivo de las Pruebas , Reproducibilidad de los Resultados , Centros de Atención Terciaria , Factores de Tiempo , Flujo de Trabajo
5.
JACC Cardiovasc Imaging ; 12(8 Pt 2): 1673-1683, 2019 08.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29778854

RESUMEN

OBJECTIVES: This study sought to explore the Fabry myocardium in relation to storage, age, sex, structure, function, electrocardiogram changes, blood biomarkers, and inflammation/fibrosis. BACKGROUND: Fabry disease (FD) is a rare, x-linked lysosomal storage disorder. Mortality is mainly cardiovascular with men exhibiting cardiac symptoms earlier than women. By cardiovascular magnetic resonance, native T1 is low in FD because of sphingolipid accumulation. METHODS: A prospective, observational study of 182 FD (167 adults, 15 children; mean age 42 ± 17 years, 37% male) who underwent cardiovascular magnetic resonance including native T1, late gadolinium enhancement (LGE), and extracellular volume fraction, 12-lead electrocardiogram, and blood biomarkers (troponin and N-terminal pro-brain natriuretic peptide). RESULTS: In children, T1 was never below the normal range, but was lower with age (9 ms/year, r = -0.78 children; r = -0.41 whole cohort; both p < 0.001). Over the whole cohort, the T1 reduction with age was greater and more marked in men (men: -1.9 ms/year, r = -0.51, p < 0.001; women: -1.4 ms/year, r = -0.47 women, p < 0.001). Left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH), LGE, and electrocardiogram abnormalities occur earlier in men. Once LVH occurs, T1 demonstrates major sex dimorphism: with increasing LVH in women, T1 and LVH become uncorrelated (r = -0.239, p = 0.196) but in men, the correlation reverses and T1 increases (toward normal) with LVH (r = 0.631, p < 0.001), a U-shaped relationship of T1 to indexed left ventricular mass in men. CONCLUSIONS: These data suggest that myocyte storage starts in childhood and accumulates faster in men before triggering 2 processes: a sex-independent scar/inflammation regional response (LGE) and, in men, apparent myocyte hypertrophy diluting the T1 lowering of sphingolipid.


Asunto(s)
Arritmias Cardíacas/diagnóstico por imagen , Cardiomiopatías/diagnóstico por imagen , Enfermedad de Fabry/diagnóstico por imagen , Hipertrofia Ventricular Izquierda/diagnóstico por imagen , Imagen por Resonancia Magnética , Miocardio/patología , Adolescente , Adulto , Factores de Edad , Anciano , Anciano de 80 o más Años , Arritmias Cardíacas/metabolismo , Arritmias Cardíacas/patología , Arritmias Cardíacas/fisiopatología , Cardiomiopatías/metabolismo , Cardiomiopatías/patología , Cardiomiopatías/fisiopatología , Niño , Medios de Contraste/administración & dosificación , Progresión de la Enfermedad , Enfermedad de Fabry/metabolismo , Enfermedad de Fabry/patología , Enfermedad de Fabry/fisiopatología , Femenino , Humanos , Hipertrofia Ventricular Izquierda/metabolismo , Hipertrofia Ventricular Izquierda/patología , Hipertrofia Ventricular Izquierda/fisiopatología , Masculino , Meglumina/administración & dosificación , Persona de Mediana Edad , Miocardio/metabolismo , Compuestos Organometálicos/administración & dosificación , Fenotipo , Valor Predictivo de las Pruebas , Pronóstico , Estudios Prospectivos , Caracteres Sexuales , Factores Sexuales , Esfingolípidos/metabolismo , Función Ventricular Izquierda , Remodelación Ventricular , Adulto Joven
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