cmr of non-ischemic dilated and restrictive cardiomyopathies frederick l. ruberg, md director,...

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CMR of Non-ischemic Dilated and Restrictive Cardiomyopathies Frederick L. Ruberg, MD Director, Advanced Cardiac Imaging Program Section of Cardiology, Department of Medicine Department of Radiology Boston University School of Medicine Boston Medical Center March 2, 2009

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Page 1: CMR of Non-ischemic Dilated and Restrictive Cardiomyopathies Frederick L. Ruberg, MD Director, Advanced Cardiac Imaging Program Section of Cardiology,

CMR of Non-ischemic Dilated and Restrictive Cardiomyopathies

Frederick L. Ruberg, MDDirector, Advanced Cardiac Imaging Program

Section of Cardiology, Department of Medicine

Department of Radiology

Boston University School of Medicine

Boston Medical Center

March 2, 2009

Page 2: CMR of Non-ischemic Dilated and Restrictive Cardiomyopathies Frederick L. Ruberg, MD Director, Advanced Cardiac Imaging Program Section of Cardiology,

Utility of CMR in LV systolic dysfunction

Diagnosis Ischemic vs. Non-ischemic Etiology

Prognosis Functional recovery with treatment Morbidity and mortality

Page 3: CMR of Non-ischemic Dilated and Restrictive Cardiomyopathies Frederick L. Ruberg, MD Director, Advanced Cardiac Imaging Program Section of Cardiology,

Case Presentation 58 year old woman with class II-III HF

symptoms referred for echo

Page 4: CMR of Non-ischemic Dilated and Restrictive Cardiomyopathies Frederick L. Ruberg, MD Director, Advanced Cardiac Imaging Program Section of Cardiology,

Case Presentation

Page 5: CMR of Non-ischemic Dilated and Restrictive Cardiomyopathies Frederick L. Ruberg, MD Director, Advanced Cardiac Imaging Program Section of Cardiology,

Why obtain CMR next? Precise quantification of LV and RV function

and volumes from cine images Permit detection of improvement or decrement with

treatment Quantification of associated valvular

regurgitation Visualization of fibrosis or infarction (DE/LGE)

Pattern of DE important to differentiate etiology Afford predictors of recovery Afford predictors of CRT efficacy

Page 6: CMR of Non-ischemic Dilated and Restrictive Cardiomyopathies Frederick L. Ruberg, MD Director, Advanced Cardiac Imaging Program Section of Cardiology,

LGE Imaging: Initially for scar

Kim RJ et al., Circulation 1999

Page 7: CMR of Non-ischemic Dilated and Restrictive Cardiomyopathies Frederick L. Ruberg, MD Director, Advanced Cardiac Imaging Program Section of Cardiology,

Fibrosis Imaging by DE/LGE Imaging 10-20 min after gadolinium (0.1 to 0.2 mmol/kg) Retained contrast in regions of fibrosis or infarction No contrast in normal myocardium

Marholdt EHJ 2005

Page 8: CMR of Non-ischemic Dilated and Restrictive Cardiomyopathies Frederick L. Ruberg, MD Director, Advanced Cardiac Imaging Program Section of Cardiology,

Ischemic DE Pattern by CMR

Marholdt EHJ 2005

Page 9: CMR of Non-ischemic Dilated and Restrictive Cardiomyopathies Frederick L. Ruberg, MD Director, Advanced Cardiac Imaging Program Section of Cardiology,

Differentiation of Ischemic vs. Non-ischemic CMP 90 patients with CHF and LV dysfunction

obtained cardiac cath and CMR 70% without CAD by cath

59% no DE 28% mid-wall DE 13% sub-endocardial DE (mis-assigned)

30% with CAD and history of MI 100% with sub-endocardial DE

McCrohon et al. Circ 2003

Page 10: CMR of Non-ischemic Dilated and Restrictive Cardiomyopathies Frederick L. Ruberg, MD Director, Advanced Cardiac Imaging Program Section of Cardiology,

Ischemic vs. non-ischemic

McCrohon et al. Circ 2003

Ischemic Non-ischemic

Page 11: CMR of Non-ischemic Dilated and Restrictive Cardiomyopathies Frederick L. Ruberg, MD Director, Advanced Cardiac Imaging Program Section of Cardiology,

Case Example – Ischemic or Non- 35 year old male with severe LV

dysfunction TSH > 120

Page 12: CMR of Non-ischemic Dilated and Restrictive Cardiomyopathies Frederick L. Ruberg, MD Director, Advanced Cardiac Imaging Program Section of Cardiology,

Case Example – DE images

Page 13: CMR of Non-ischemic Dilated and Restrictive Cardiomyopathies Frederick L. Ruberg, MD Director, Advanced Cardiac Imaging Program Section of Cardiology,

Mid-wall enhancement Not subendocardial, does not follow

infarction pattern Most frequently septal Lower signal intensity vs. MI Etiology and significance is controversial

Page 14: CMR of Non-ischemic Dilated and Restrictive Cardiomyopathies Frederick L. Ruberg, MD Director, Advanced Cardiac Imaging Program Section of Cardiology,

Mid-wall enhancement: Morbidity and Mortality 101 patients with dilated CMR underwent

CMR and were followed for 685 days 35% had mid-wall enhancement

Increased risk of death or hospitalization (OR 3.4)

No difference in mortality Increased likelihood of SCD/VT (OR 5.2)

Persisted after correcting for LVEF

Assomoul et al. JACC 2006

Page 15: CMR of Non-ischemic Dilated and Restrictive Cardiomyopathies Frederick L. Ruberg, MD Director, Advanced Cardiac Imaging Program Section of Cardiology,

Mid-wall enhancement: Morbidity and Mortality

Assomoul et al. JACC 2006

Page 16: CMR of Non-ischemic Dilated and Restrictive Cardiomyopathies Frederick L. Ruberg, MD Director, Advanced Cardiac Imaging Program Section of Cardiology,

Histologic correlate of mid-wall

Assomoul et al. JACC 2006

Page 17: CMR of Non-ischemic Dilated and Restrictive Cardiomyopathies Frederick L. Ruberg, MD Director, Advanced Cardiac Imaging Program Section of Cardiology,

Mid-wall enhancement: Morbidity and Mortality

Assomoul et al. JACC 2006

A. Mortality or hospitalization for CV causeB. Adjusted for age, LV/RV EF, LV volumes, digoxin

A. VT B. VT Adjusted for LVEF

Page 18: CMR of Non-ischemic Dilated and Restrictive Cardiomyopathies Frederick L. Ruberg, MD Director, Advanced Cardiac Imaging Program Section of Cardiology,

DE confers increased risk 65 patients with non-ischemic dilated CMP,

EF < 35%, underwent CMR at baseline, followed for 17 months 42% showed LGE at baseline

Non-ischemic pattern 44% of those with LGE had adverse event vs.

8% without (HF, ICD discharge, death)

Wu, JACC 2008

Page 19: CMR of Non-ischemic Dilated and Restrictive Cardiomyopathies Frederick L. Ruberg, MD Director, Advanced Cardiac Imaging Program Section of Cardiology,

DE and risk in non-ischemic CMP

Wu, JACC 2008

Page 20: CMR of Non-ischemic Dilated and Restrictive Cardiomyopathies Frederick L. Ruberg, MD Director, Advanced Cardiac Imaging Program Section of Cardiology,

Functional Recovery with Medical Treatment

45 patients with CHF treated with beta-blocker, CMR with DE at baseline and 6 month follow-up 62% ischemic (of those 100% with DE) 38% non-ischemic (of those only 2% with DE)

Transmurality of DE predicted contractile improvement, change in EDV and ESV

Bello et al. Circ 2003

Page 21: CMR of Non-ischemic Dilated and Restrictive Cardiomyopathies Frederick L. Ruberg, MD Director, Advanced Cardiac Imaging Program Section of Cardiology,

Functional Recovery with Medical Treatment

Bello et al. Circ 2003

Page 22: CMR of Non-ischemic Dilated and Restrictive Cardiomyopathies Frederick L. Ruberg, MD Director, Advanced Cardiac Imaging Program Section of Cardiology,

Prediction of CRT outcome by CMR 23 patients who qualified for CRT

underwent CMR at baseline, follow-up at 3 months for wall motion, 6 min walk, QOL 50% history of MI 57% demonstrated response

DE amount lower in responders <15% of LV mass – 85% sens., 90% spec. Septal transmurality of < 40% - 100% sens/spec.

White et al. JACC 2006

Page 23: CMR of Non-ischemic Dilated and Restrictive Cardiomyopathies Frederick L. Ruberg, MD Director, Advanced Cardiac Imaging Program Section of Cardiology,

Prediction of CRT outcome by CMR

White et al. JACC 2006

Page 24: CMR of Non-ischemic Dilated and Restrictive Cardiomyopathies Frederick L. Ruberg, MD Director, Advanced Cardiac Imaging Program Section of Cardiology,

Conclusions for dilated CMR Absence of any DE is good (non-ischemic)

Predicts likelihood of recovery Better outcomes with CRT Lower likelihood of events

Page 25: CMR of Non-ischemic Dilated and Restrictive Cardiomyopathies Frederick L. Ruberg, MD Director, Advanced Cardiac Imaging Program Section of Cardiology,

Case Example – cine CMR

Page 26: CMR of Non-ischemic Dilated and Restrictive Cardiomyopathies Frederick L. Ruberg, MD Director, Advanced Cardiac Imaging Program Section of Cardiology,

Case Example – DE CMR

Page 27: CMR of Non-ischemic Dilated and Restrictive Cardiomyopathies Frederick L. Ruberg, MD Director, Advanced Cardiac Imaging Program Section of Cardiology,

Case Example Symptomatic improvement with ARB, beta

blocker Referred for CRT

Page 28: CMR of Non-ischemic Dilated and Restrictive Cardiomyopathies Frederick L. Ruberg, MD Director, Advanced Cardiac Imaging Program Section of Cardiology,

Case Example

58 year old woman with class II-III HF symptoms referred for echo

Page 29: CMR of Non-ischemic Dilated and Restrictive Cardiomyopathies Frederick L. Ruberg, MD Director, Advanced Cardiac Imaging Program Section of Cardiology,

Case Example

HF with preserved LV function, grade II-III diastolic dysfunction

Page 30: CMR of Non-ischemic Dilated and Restrictive Cardiomyopathies Frederick L. Ruberg, MD Director, Advanced Cardiac Imaging Program Section of Cardiology,

Differential Diagnosis Etiology in this case is more important Hypertensive remodeling Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy Infiltrative Cardiomyopathy

Amyloidosis Storage disease (Anderson Fabry) Heavy metal deposition (hemochromatosis)

Page 31: CMR of Non-ischemic Dilated and Restrictive Cardiomyopathies Frederick L. Ruberg, MD Director, Advanced Cardiac Imaging Program Section of Cardiology,

Utility of CMR Not necessary to define LV volumes,

although mass quantification useful DE CMR

Etiology Prognosis

Page 32: CMR of Non-ischemic Dilated and Restrictive Cardiomyopathies Frederick L. Ruberg, MD Director, Advanced Cardiac Imaging Program Section of Cardiology,

Does LVH from HTN have DE? 83 patients with LVH from AS (25%), HTN

(31%), and HCM (44%) underwent CMR DE seen in all etiologies

AS 62%, HTN 50%, HCM 72% Only distinctive pattern from HCM Generally associated with increased mass

Rudolph, JACC 2009

Page 33: CMR of Non-ischemic Dilated and Restrictive Cardiomyopathies Frederick L. Ruberg, MD Director, Advanced Cardiac Imaging Program Section of Cardiology,

CMR in LVH

Rudolph, JACC 2009

Page 34: CMR of Non-ischemic Dilated and Restrictive Cardiomyopathies Frederick L. Ruberg, MD Director, Advanced Cardiac Imaging Program Section of Cardiology,

LVH with CHF

Page 35: CMR of Non-ischemic Dilated and Restrictive Cardiomyopathies Frederick L. Ruberg, MD Director, Advanced Cardiac Imaging Program Section of Cardiology,

CMR in Amyloidosis Abnormally long myocardial T1 after Gd Normal ≈ 1100 ms, amyloid ≈ 1400 ms Rapid clearance of gadolinium from blood

pool, abnormal distribution kinetics Render blood pool dark

Challenging to obtain optimal myocardial nulling

Global, sub-endocardial pattern described

Maceira et al. Circ 2005, Krombach, JMRI 2007

Page 36: CMR of Non-ischemic Dilated and Restrictive Cardiomyopathies Frederick L. Ruberg, MD Director, Advanced Cardiac Imaging Program Section of Cardiology,

CMR in Amyloidosis

Maceira: Circulation 2005

Page 37: CMR of Non-ischemic Dilated and Restrictive Cardiomyopathies Frederick L. Ruberg, MD Director, Advanced Cardiac Imaging Program Section of Cardiology,

CMR in Amyloidosis Normal protocol

0.1 to 0.2 mmol/kg wait 15-20 mins

Modified amyloid protocol 0.1 mmol/kg wait 5 mins

Diffuse DE, poor myocardial nulling

Page 38: CMR of Non-ischemic Dilated and Restrictive Cardiomyopathies Frederick L. Ruberg, MD Director, Advanced Cardiac Imaging Program Section of Cardiology,

Van den Driesen et al. AJR 2006

Diffuse DE seen in Cardiac Amyloidosis

Page 39: CMR of Non-ischemic Dilated and Restrictive Cardiomyopathies Frederick L. Ruberg, MD Director, Advanced Cardiac Imaging Program Section of Cardiology,

Performance of CMR in Amyloid Sensitivity 80%, specificity 94%, PPV 92%, NPV 85%

Vogelsberg et al, JACC 2008

Page 40: CMR of Non-ischemic Dilated and Restrictive Cardiomyopathies Frederick L. Ruberg, MD Director, Advanced Cardiac Imaging Program Section of Cardiology,

CMR predictors of events Amount or presence of DE does not predict

mortality Amount of DE relative to LV mass does

correspond to heart failure symptoms

Ruberg et al, AJC 2009

Page 41: CMR of Non-ischemic Dilated and Restrictive Cardiomyopathies Frederick L. Ruberg, MD Director, Advanced Cardiac Imaging Program Section of Cardiology,

CMR in Cardiac Amyloidosis

Amyloidosis without cardiac involvementAmyloidosis with cardiac involvement

Ruberg et al,AJC 2009

Page 42: CMR of Non-ischemic Dilated and Restrictive Cardiomyopathies Frederick L. Ruberg, MD Director, Advanced Cardiac Imaging Program Section of Cardiology,

CMR in Cardiac Amyloidosis

Ruberg et al,AJC 2009

Page 43: CMR of Non-ischemic Dilated and Restrictive Cardiomyopathies Frederick L. Ruberg, MD Director, Advanced Cardiac Imaging Program Section of Cardiology,

CMR in Cardiac Amyloidosis Intramyocardial T1

gradient between epi- and endo-cardium predictive of survival

DE/LGE was not

Maceira et al, JCMR 2009

Page 44: CMR of Non-ischemic Dilated and Restrictive Cardiomyopathies Frederick L. Ruberg, MD Director, Advanced Cardiac Imaging Program Section of Cardiology,

CMR in Anderson Fabry 32 Fabry patients treated with -

glactosidase, CMR obtained at baseline, followed for 3 years 63% had fibrosis by DE, 27% did not

Absence of fibrosis associated with improved function, reduced mass, improved exercise capacity

Weidemann et al., Circ 2009

Page 45: CMR of Non-ischemic Dilated and Restrictive Cardiomyopathies Frederick L. Ruberg, MD Director, Advanced Cardiac Imaging Program Section of Cardiology,

CMR in Anderson Fabry

Weidemann et al., Circ 2009

Page 46: CMR of Non-ischemic Dilated and Restrictive Cardiomyopathies Frederick L. Ruberg, MD Director, Advanced Cardiac Imaging Program Section of Cardiology,

CMR in hemochromatosis T2* weighted imaging

T2* abnormally shortened in iron deposition Widely explored for thalassemia

Tanner et al. Circ 2007

With chelation treatment (deferoxamine/deferiprone), T2* increases correlate to functional improvement in LVEF

Page 47: CMR of Non-ischemic Dilated and Restrictive Cardiomyopathies Frederick L. Ruberg, MD Director, Advanced Cardiac Imaging Program Section of Cardiology,

Case Example – DE Images

Page 48: CMR of Non-ischemic Dilated and Restrictive Cardiomyopathies Frederick L. Ruberg, MD Director, Advanced Cardiac Imaging Program Section of Cardiology,

Case example Diagnosis: Amyloidosis LGE present but can tell patient not

predictive of poor outcomes Underwent stem cell transplant in 2005, doing

well today, HF symptoms are controlled

Page 49: CMR of Non-ischemic Dilated and Restrictive Cardiomyopathies Frederick L. Ruberg, MD Director, Advanced Cardiac Imaging Program Section of Cardiology,

Conclusions In dilated CMP, absence of DE portends:

Recovery of LV function with medical treatment Lower likelihood of death or hospitalization for HF Higher likelihood of response to CRT

In dilated CMP, presence of DE Identification of ischemic etiology and provides

information in respect to revascularization recovery Increased risk of adverse event and lower CRT

response

Page 50: CMR of Non-ischemic Dilated and Restrictive Cardiomyopathies Frederick L. Ruberg, MD Director, Advanced Cardiac Imaging Program Section of Cardiology,

Conclusions In CMP with LVH/wall thickening, CMR with

DE imaging can: Identify etiology of CMP Follow response to treatment Associate with clinical outcomes

CMR with DE is useful as baseline exam in all forms of cardiomyopathy