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Prevalence and Prognostic Impact of Nonischemic Late Gadolinium Enhancement in Stress Cardiac Magnetic Resonance

Abstract

Aim: To assess the prevalence and prognostic significance of NI-LGE in patients undergoing stress-CMR.

Methods: Stress-CMR with either dipyridamole or adenosine was performed in 283 patients (228 men, 81%) including perfusion imaging, wall motion evaluation and LGE. Follow-up was completed in all enrolled patients (median time: 1850 days; interquartile range: 1225-2705 days). Composite endpoint included cardiac death, ventricular tachycardia, myocardial infarction, stroke, hospitalization for cardiac cause and coronary revascularization performed beyond 90 days from stress-CMR scans.

Results: One hundred and twelve patients (40%) had negative LGE (no-LGE), 140 patients (49%) I-LGE and 31 patients (11%) NI-LGE. Twenty-five events occurred in the no-LGE group, 68 in I-LGE and 11 in the NI-LGE group. On survival curves, patients with NI-LGE had worse prognosis than patients with no-LGE regardless of the presence of inducible perfusion defects. No significant prognostic differences were found between I-LGE and NI-LGE.

Conclusion: NI-LGE can be detected in 11% of patients during stress-CMR providing a diagnosis of nonischemic cardiac disease. Patients with NI-LGE have worse prognosis than those with no-LGE.

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The additive prognostic value of end-systolic pressure-volume relation by stress CMR in patients with known or suspected coronary artery disease.

Meloni A, De Luca A, Nugara C, Cavallaro C, Cappelletto C, Barison A Int J Cardiovasc Imaging. 2024; 40(6):1341-1351.

PMID: 38676849 DOI: 10.1007/s10554-024-03104-z.