Improving the diagnosis of heart failure in patients with atrial fibrillation

  • Karina V Bunting
  • Simrat K Gill
  • Alice Sitch
  • Samir Mehta
  • Kieran O'Connor
  • Gregory Yh Lip
  • Paulus Kirchhof
  • Victoria Y Strauss
  • Kazem Rahimi
  • A John Camm
  • Mary Stanbury
  • Michael Griffith
  • Jonathan N Townend
  • Georgios V Gkoutos
  • Andreas Karwath
  • Richard P Steeds
  • Dipak Kotecha
  • RAte control Therapy Evaluation in permanent Atrial Fibrillation (RATE-AF) trial group

Related Research units

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To improve the echocardiographic assessment of heart failure in patients with atrial fibrillation (AF) by comparing conventional averaging of consecutive beats with an index-beat approach, whereby measurements are taken after two cycles with similar R-R interval.

METHODS: Transthoracic echocardiography was performed using a standardised and blinded protocol in patients enrolled in the RATE-AF (RAte control Therapy Evaluation in permanent Atrial Fibrillation) randomised trial. We compared reproducibility of the index-beat and conventional consecutive-beat methods to calculate left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF), global longitudinal strain (GLS) and E/e' (mitral E wave max/average diastolic tissue Doppler velocity), and assessed intraoperator/interoperator variability, time efficiency and validity against natriuretic peptides.

RESULTS: 160 patients were included, 46% of whom were women, with a median age of 75 years (IQR 69-82) and a median heart rate of 100 beats per minute (IQR 86-112). The index-beat had the lowest within-beat coefficient of variation for LVEF (32%, vs 51% for 5 consecutive beats and 53% for 10 consecutive beats), GLS (26%, vs 43% and 42%) and E/e' (25%, vs 41% and 41%). Intraoperator (n=50) and interoperator (n=18) reproducibility were both superior for index-beats and this method was quicker to perform (p<0.001): 35.4 s to measure E/e' (95% CI 33.1 to 37.8) compared with 44.7 s for 5-beat (95% CI 41.8 to 47.5) and 98.1 s for 10-beat (95% CI 91.7 to 104.4) analyses. Using a single index-beat did not compromise the association of LVEF, GLS or E/e' with natriuretic peptide levels.

CONCLUSIONS: Compared with averaging of multiple beats in patients with AF, the index-beat approach improves reproducibility and saves time without a negative impact on validity, potentially improving the diagnosis and classification of heart failure in patients with AF.

Bibliographical data

Original languageEnglish
ISSN1355-6037
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 06.2021
PubMed 33692093