Patient with ischemic heart failure: Ischemia and viability assessment and management


KEY POINTS

  • In HF patients, CAD may be causal, contributory, or coincidental. The determination of the role of CAD in the patient’s cardiomyopathy is essential to determine the potential additive role of revascularization or device therapy over optimal medical therapy.

  • The assessment of ischemia and viability helps differentiate when CAD is causal, contributory, or coincidental in a patient with HF and reduced LVEF.

  • The assessment of stress-induced ischemia should be a key part of the evaluation of a patient with suspected ischemic cardiomyopathy and routinely performed if there are no clinical contraindications or safety concerns.

  • There is no clear ideal noninvasive test for all clinical scenarios, and all approaches have strengths and weaknesses.

  • SPECT and PET imaging have been central to the management of IHF and have reasonable accuracy to predict functional and clinical recovery after revascularization.

  • Quantification of myocardial blood flow with PET provides an additional powerful tool to help define the contribution of ischemia to the patient’s cardiomyopathy.

  • In some patients, multimodality imaging provides important complementary information for identification of potential revascularization candidates.

  • The available evidence suggest that imaging of ischemia and viability may not be essential in patients with severe angina, adequate coronary targets for revascularization, and reasonable perioperative risk. Nevertheless, noninvasive imaging is a helpful aid for the determination of risk versus potential benefit and to define management strategies in higher-risk individuals.

  • The role of multivessel PCI versus CABG in patients with IHF requires additional research.

Introduction

Nuclear cardiology imaging techniques are frequently employed to guide clinical decision making in patients with ischemic heart failure (IHF). Perhaps surprisingly, it is not always straightforward to distinguish whether coronary artery disease (CAD) is indeed causal, coincidental, or a contributor to IHF. Diagnosing the cause of heart failure (HF) is an important step to determining the management strategy, potential urgency, and need for revascularization. Nuclear cardiology—single photon computed tomography (SPECT) and cardiac positron emission tomography (PET)—applications can help determine the presence of ischemia, scar, hibernating myocardium, or sympathetic denervation abnormalities, all of which may help both in diagnosis, prognostication, and prediction of a response to therapy. Despite the clinical observation that cardiac PET and SPECT are useful imaging tools in IHF, clinical evidence to support their use has not been consistent. Although the routine use of viability imaging has been questioned in some clinical studies, there may be specific clinical scenarios where viability and ischemia imaging may aid in decision making. In this chapter, we will consider how ischemia and viability imaging remain valuable techniques to identify those patients in whom CAD is the cause or major contributor to their HF and how this can help in decisions for revascularization therapies. We will consider some of the foundational evidence of the importance of imaging in this area and highlight more recent controversial evidence, some of which supports and some of which is ambivalent toward their utility. We will also provide case vignettes to illustrate graphically how ischemia and viability imaging is used in this patient demographic.

Ischemic heart failure

The burden of ischemic heart disease (IHD) has increased within the past 30 years. Despite the fact that the prevalence of fatal myocardial infarction (MI) has decreased since the 1990s, there is a higher prevalence of IHD. This has been attributed to improvements in the treatment of acute coronary syndrome and stable coronary disease in combination with the increasing aging of the population. IHD is the main cause of HF, a major public health problem with a growing estimated prevalence of over 37 million cases worldwide. , HF affects up to 2% of the adult population in the developed world, with estimates of increasing prevalence over time. By 2030, the prevalence of HF is estimated to increase by 46% in the United States. The burden to patients and providers is significant, with an estimated annual cost of treatment exceeding $30 billion in the United States alone, equivalent to more than 10% of the total cardiovascular disease health expenditure, half of which is attributed to hospitalization. Interestingly, the increase in prevalence contrasts with a decline in incidence worldwide, partially attributed to advances in therapy and improvement in diagnostic technologies. In the United States, however, there are still 915,000 new cases of HF per year, corresponding to an incidence of 10 per 1000 subjects after 65 years of age. ,

Myocardial ischemia results from an imbalance between oxygen supply and demand. It can manifest as an acute coronary syndrome (ACS) or chronic IHD. The severity of inadequate flow will determine myocardial adaptations and the extent of reversibility once flow is restored. In patients with IHD, persistent ventricular dysfunction can result from repeated episodes of stress-induced ischemia with postischemic stunning (repetitive stunning), myocardial hibernation, or scar. Such persistent dysfunctional myocardium is considered viable when the ischemia-related injury (repetitive stunning or hibernation) is not severe or prolonged enough to cause cell death. In this case, cardiomyocyte dysfunction can be reversed (or partly reversed) if flow is restored with revascularization. Prolonged ischemic-related injury results in cell death with attendant scar tissue formation that replaces healthy myocardium. The recovery of is chemically injured myocardium that contains scar depends on the transmural extent of infarcted myocardium ( Table 20.1 ).

TABLE 20.1
Characteristics of Viable and Nonviable Myocardium and Their Clinical Relevance
From Kandolin RM, Wiefels CC, Mesquita CT, et al. The current role of viability imaging to guide revascularization and therapy decisions in patients with heart failure and reduced left ventricular function. Can J Cardiol. 2019;35(8):1015-1029.
Myocardium Flow/Perfusion Glucose Metabolism (FDG) Function/Contractile Reserve Structural Changes Potential to Recover/Clinical Relevance
Viable
Stunning Preserved at rest (after transient ischemic insult) Viable (normal, increased, or reduced) Reduced No Likely to recover if ischemic injury does not persist or become repetitive; revascularization can prevent recurrent stunning
Hibernation Reduced Preserved or increased (= perfusion-metabolism mismatch) Reduced Yes, some May have partial/delayed or full recovery if adequate revascularization achieved
Nonviable
Scar Reduced Reduced Absent Fibrosis Unlikely to recover with or without revascularization
FDG , fluorodeoxyglucose.

Myocardial ischemia, viability, and scar can be identified and quantified with different noninvasive tests, such as echocardiography, cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR), and radionuclide imaging. Each can evaluate different aspects of cellular and myocardial physiology, including perfusion, contractile reserve, cell membrane and mitochondrial integrity, cell metabolism, and fibrosis.

Despite the fact that assessment of ischemia and/or viability in patients with CAD and HF seems to be important, at least one recent report suggests that the use of these tests may be underutilized.

Principles of management

The treatment landscape for ischemic HF has changed considerably over the past 30 years and especially in the past decade, thereby contributing to significant reductions in morbidity and mortality. This includes advances in medical management and revascularization approaches. Indeed, the 12-month mortality has been reduced from over 50% to 10%. Optimal guideline-directed medical therapy remains the cornerstone of management for patients with HF, including those with CAD. In selected patients, the addition of high-risk revascularization improves clinical outcomes. , In this chapter, we will review the utility of noninvasive imaging for assisting in decisions regarding optimal patient management, especially the decision of when revascularization and potentially device therapy can help improve functional outcomes or prognosis.

Imaging techniques for the evaluation of ischemia and viability

IHF represents the impairment in contractility of (principally) the left ventricle (LV) due to obstructive CAD. Whether revascularization will improve contractility and/or outcome is determined by the balance of myocardial ischemia and scar to viable cardiomyocytes as well as other factors discussed later in this chapter. Unless stress testing is deemed too high of a risk because of the patient clinical status or coronary anatomy (e.g., critical left main or three-vessel CAD), it is generally reasonable to first assess the presence and magnitude of stress-induced ischemia. Please refer to Chapter 4 for a detailed discussion of radionuclide imaging techniques and protocols for stress radionuclide imaging. In patients without significant inducible ischemia and large apparent areas of scarring, there is a need to determine whether these regions may, in fact, contain significant viable myocardium. Methods to assess viability have nevertheless been established with echocardiography, SPECT or PET imaging, and cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (CMR).

Echocardiography

Echocardiography uses functional and morphologic appearances to help determine the presence of predominant scar versus viable myocardium ( Table 20.2 ). , LV end-diastolic wall thickness less than 6 mm on echocardiography is associated with scar as is a lack of response to dobutamine stress in segments with impaired wall motion at rest. Classically, patients with ischemic LV impairment demonstrate a biphasic response to dobutamine stress in viable segments with an initial improvement in segment function, but with increasing dobutamine doses the initial improvement typically deteriorates.

TABLE 20.2
Imaging Modalities and Mechanisms for Viability Detection
Adapted from Erthal F, Chow BJW, Heller GV, Beanlands RS. Nuclear cardiology procedures in the evaluation of myocardial viability. In: Heller GV, Hendel RC, eds. Nuclear Cardiology Practical Applications. 3rd ed. McGraw Hill Medical; 2018.
Imaging Modality Imaging Target Indicator of Viability
18 FDG PET Glucose metabolism
  • Normal perfusion/FDG

  • = viable (not ischemic at rest)

  • Perfusion-metabolism

  • a)

    mismatch = hibernation

  • b)

    match = scar

SPECT ( 201 Tl) Myocardial perfusion/Na/K ATPase activity (membrane integrity)
  • Uptake = viable

  • Redistribution on delayed imaging after stress, rest, or reinjection = ischemia or hibernation

SPECT ( 99m Tc-based) Myocardial perfusion/arterioles vasodilatation
Mitochondrial integrity
  • Uptake = viable

  • Mismatch between rest and postnitro images = hibernating

Dobutamine echocardiography/MRI Contractile reserve Improvement in wall motion with low-dose dobutamine
Delayed enhancement MRI Fibrosis tissue Absence or small amount of scar
Late enhancement CT Fibrosis tissue Absence or small amount of scar
Myocardial contrast echocardiography Microvascular integrity Homogeneous contrast intensity
CT, Computed tomography; FDG, fluorodeoxyglucose; 18 FDG PET , positron emission tomography with 18 fluorodeoxyglucose; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; SPECT, single photon emission computed tomography; 99m Tc , 99m technetium; 201 Tl , 201 thallium.

Cardiac magnetic resonance imaging

Segments with wall thicknesses of 5 mm or less are considered nonviable. A key technique to assess the presence of scars with CMR includes the use of the burden of gadolinium contrast enhancement on delayed imaging (so-called late gadolinium enhancement [LGE]). LV segments with equal to or greater than 50% of their transmural thickness showing LGE are thought to be mostly scar and nonviable. The magnitude of stress-induced ischemia is usually assessed using first-pass perfusion. Like with echocardiography, the wall motion response to dobutamine stress can also be used to assess ischemic burden.

Radionuclide imaging approaches

SPECT imaging

201 Thallium (Tl) and 99m technetium (Tc)-labeled tracers can be used to evaluate myocardial viability versus scar based on the severity of perfusion defects (see Table 20.2 ). As discussed in Chapter 4 , both radiotracers are actively taken up by viable cardiomyocytes and can be used with rest-only and rest-stress protocols as indicators of viable and/or ischemic myocardium.

For rest-stress protocols, the presence of inducible myocardial ischemia in dysfunctional segments reflects viable but jeopardized myocardium. For rest-only protocols, myocardial segments with greater than 50% of peak radiotracer uptake in the LV are considered to be viable. In addition, a regional increase in radiotracer uptake greater than 10% (compared with baseline) in the 4- or 24-hour delayed (redistribution) 201 Tl images or postnitrate administration, most commonly used with 99m Tc-labeled tracers, are also indicators of myocardial viability. The extent of dysfunctional but viable segments is then summed to determine the likelihood of LV ejection fraction (LVEF) improvement after revascularization. In general, the larger the amount of dysfunctional but viable myocardium, the higher the likelihood of improvement in LVEF after revascularization. This concept applies to all imaging methods. Nevertheless, the optimal quantitative threshold of myocardial viability to predict improvement in LVEF after revascularization is reportedly different across imaging methods. Another practical way to predict the likelihood of improvement in LV function after revascularization is to consider the volume of the myocardial scar in the LV. For example, in the P ositron emission tomography A nd R ecovery following R evascularization (PARR-1) study, little improvement in global LV function with revascularization was observed in patients with myocardial scar volume involving equal to or greater than 27.5% of the LV, which is in keeping with findings from cardiac MRI. Conversely, patients with less than 16% scar volume had significant LVEF improvement after revascularization. Functional recovery also depends on other factors, including the degree of LV remodeling and the timing and completeness of revascularization.

You're Reading a Preview

Become a Clinical Tree membership for Full access and enjoy Unlimited articles

Become membership

If you are a member. Log in here