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K Wierzbowska-Drabik, E D Palinkas, J Peteiro Vazquez, M Tesic, F Re, A Palinkas, S Aguiar Rosa, L Cortigiani, M A Losi, C Cotrim, A Nemes, Q Ciampi, P A Pellikka, I Olivotto, E Picano, Stress Echo 2030 Study Group of the Italian Society of Echocardiography and Cardiovascular Imaging , Adverse prognostic implications of increased left ventricular force in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, European Heart Journal, Volume 45, Issue Supplement_1, October 2024, ehae666.871, https://doi.org/10.1093/eurheartj/ehae666.871
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Abstract
The left ventricular (LV) force, also known as elastance, serves as a load-independent indicator of contractility and can be noninvasively assessed through echocardiography. In hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM), the heightened presence of the active state of myosin heads results in an increased LV force.
To assess the prognostic value of increased LV elastance at rest in patients with HCM.
We enrolled 1420 HCM patients (age 50±16 years, 907 males, 64%) with ejection fraction (EF) ≥50%, referred for rest transthoracic echocardiography (TTE) in 10 quality-controlled labs from 7 countries. TTE assessment included peak left ventricular outflow tract gradient (LVOTG), EF, and LV force (systolic blood pressure + LVOTG/LV end-systolic volume assessed with 2-D, mmHg/mL). All patients were followed up. All-cause death was the outcome measure.
At a median follow-up of 83 months, 150 deaths occurred (Group 1). At study entry, Group 1 patients had the same ESC-Sudden cardiac death score compared to survivors (Group 2). In Group 1 compared to Group 2, TTE showed higher values of MR severity, E/e’ , left atrial volume index, estimated systolic pulmonary artery pressure, and force (see table). At multivariable Cox analysis, only age (HR =1.08, 95% CI=1.03-1.14, p=0.001) and force > median value of 5.3 mmHg/mL (HR = 2.14, 95% CI 1.53-2.99, p=0.020) were independent predictors of mortality. Ten-year survival was 95% in the pooled first (<3.8 mmHg/mL) and second (3.8-5.2 mmHg/mL) quartiles vs 80% in the pooled third (5.3-7.8 mmHg/mL) and fourth quartiles (>7.8 mmHg/mL), see figure.
HCM patients with higher values of resting LV elastance show a worse survival, highlighting the dark prognostic side of an excess of force in these patients.


Author notes
Funding Acknowledgements: None.
- hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
- left ventricular ejection fraction
- mitral valve insufficiency
- echocardiography
- sudden cardiac death
- ventricular end-systolic volume
- systolic blood pressure
- left ventricle
- myosins
- follow-up
- laboratory techniques and procedures
- survivors
- systole
- heart
- mortality
- patient prognosis
- echocardiography, transthoracic
- ejection fraction
- pulmonary artery pressure
- left ventricular outflow tract gradient
- new york heart association classification
- outcome measures
- anulus fibrosus of mitral orifice
- left ventricular outflow tract
- laboratory test finding
- pulmonary artery systolic pressure
- multiple wake test
- european society of cardiology
- left atrial volume