Hepatic T1-Time Predicts Cardiovascular Risk in All-Comers Referred for Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance: A Post-Hoc Analysis

Liver damage is frequently observed in patients with cardiovascular disease but infrequently quantified. We hypothesized that in patients with cardiovascular disease undergoing cardiac magnetic resonance, liver T1-times indicate liver damage and are associated with cardiovascular outcome. We measure...

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Veröffentlicht in:Circulation. Cardiovascular imaging 2022-10, Vol.15 (10), p.e014716-e014716
Hauptverfasser: Mascherbauer, Katharina, Donà, Carolina, Koschutnik, Matthias, Dannenberg, Varius, Nitsche, Christian, Duca, Franz, Heitzinger, Gregor, Halavina, Kseniya, Steinacher, Eva, Kronberger, Christina, Bardach, Constanze, Beitzke, Dietrich, Loewe, Christian, Waldmann, Elisabeth, Trauner, Michael, Barkto, Philipp, Goliasch, Georg, Mascherbauer, Julia, Hengstenberg, Christian, Kammerlander, Andreas
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Liver damage is frequently observed in patients with cardiovascular disease but infrequently quantified. We hypothesized that in patients with cardiovascular disease undergoing cardiac magnetic resonance, liver T1-times indicate liver damage and are associated with cardiovascular outcome. We measured hepatic T1-times, displayed on standard cardiac T1-maps, in an all-comer cardiac magnetic resonance-cohort. At the time of cardiac magnetic resonance, we assessed validated general liver fibrosis scores. Kaplan-Meier estimates and Cox-regression models were used to investigate the association between hepatic T1-times and a composite endpoint of non-fatal myocardial infarction, heart failure hospitalization, and death. One thousand seventy-five participants (58±18 year old, 47% female) were included (972 patients, 50 controls, 53 participants with transient elastography). Hepatic T1-times were 590±89 ms in patients and 574±45 ms in controls ( =0.052). They were significantly correlated with cardiac size and function, presence of atrial fibrillation, NT-pro-BNP levels, and gamma-glutamyl-transferase levels (
ISSN:1942-0080
1941-9651
1942-0080
DOI:10.1161/CIRCIMAGING.122.014716