%0 Journal Article %T Prognostic value of tricuspid valve regurgitation in patients with pulmonary arterial hypertension and CTEPH: A longitudinal study. %A Veen KM %A Koudstaal T %A Hendriks PM %A Takkenberg JJ %A Boomars KA %A van den Bosch AE %J Int J Cardiol Heart Vasc %V 51 %N 0 %D 2024 Apr %M 38389829 暂无%R 10.1016/j.ijcha.2024.101342 %X UNASSIGNED: The prognostic value of functional tricuspid valve regurgitation (TR) in patients with pulmonary arterial hypertension and chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension (CTEPH) remains undetermined. This study primarily aims to quantify the prognostic role of TR in relation to right ventricle (RV) dysfunction on clinical outcomes and secondarily the evolution of TR and RV dysfunction over time.
UNASSIGNED: Adult PAH or CTEPH patients diagnosed by right heart catheterization were included. Exclusion criteria were prevalent patients and age < 18 years.The primary endpoint was a composite of death or lung transplantation. Longitudinal evolution of TR and RV dysfunction were modelled with generalized mixed-effect models, which were inserted in a cox model under the joint-modelling framework in order to investigate the association of TR and RV dysfunction with the endpoint.
UNASSIGNED: We included 76 PAH and 44 CTEPH patients (median age:59, females:62 %), with a mean follow-up of 3.2 ± 2.1 years. 31 patients reached the endpoint (2 transplant, 29 mortality). On average the probability of moderate-to-severe TR decreased during follow-up, whereas the probability of moderate-to-severe RV dysfunction remained stable. The cumulative effect of moderate-to-severe TR (HRper day 1.01 95 %CI[1.00-1.01],P < 0.001) and moderate-to-severe RV dysfunction (HRper day: 1.01 95 %CI[1.00-1.01],P < 0.001) was associated with the endpoint in univariable joint-models. In a multivariable joint-model with both the evolutions of TR and RV dysfunction only TR remained significant (HR per day: 1.01 95 %CI[1.00-1.01],P < 0.001).
UNASSIGNED: Persistent moderate-to-severe tricuspid valve regurgitation during follow-up predicts adverse outcomes and might be a better predictor of lung transplantation and mortality compared to right ventricle dysfunction.