Prognostic association supports indexing size measures in echocardiography by body surface area

被引:3
|
作者
Fung A.S.Y. [1 ,2 ]
Soundappan D. [1 ,2 ]
Loewenstein D.E. [3 ]
Playford D. [4 ]
Strange G. [5 ]
Kozor R. [1 ]
Otton J. [2 ,6 ]
Ugander M. [1 ,2 ,3 ]
机构
[1] Kolling Institute, Royal North Shore Hospital, and University of Sydney, Kolling Building, Level 12, St Leonards, Sydney, 2065, NSW
[2] St Vincent’s Clinical School, University of New South Wales, Sydney
[3] Department of Clinical Physiology, Karolinska University Hospital, and Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm
[4] School of Medicine, University of Notre Dame, Fremantle
[5] Faculty of Medicine and Health, University of Sydney, Sydney
[6] Department of Cardiology, Liverpool Hospital, University of New South Wales, Liverpool
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D O I
10.1038/s41598-023-46183-z
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摘要
Body surface area (BSA) is the most commonly used metric for body size indexation of echocardiographic measures, but its use in patients who are underweight or obese is questioned (body mass index (BMI) < 18.5 kg/m2 or ≥ 30 kg/m2, respectively). We aim to use survival analysis to identify an optimal body size indexation metric for echocardiographic measures that would be a better predictor of survival than BSA regardless of BMI. Adult patients with no prior valve replacement were selected from the National Echocardiography Database Australia. Survival analysis was performed for echocardiographic measures both unindexed and indexed to different body size metrics, with 5-year cardiovascular mortality as the primary endpoint. Indexation of echocardiographic measures (left ventricular end-diastolic diameter [n = 230,109] and mass [n = 224,244], left atrial volume [n = 150,540], aortic sinus diameter [n = 90,805], right atrial area [n = 59,516]) by BSA had better prognostic performance vs unindexed measures (underweight: C-statistic 0.655 vs 0.647; normal weight/overweight: average C-statistic 0.666 vs 0.625; obese: C-statistic 0.627 vs 0.613). Indexation by other body size metrics (lean body mass, height, and/or weight raised to different powers) did not improve prognostic performance versus BSA by a clinically relevant magnitude (average C-statistic increase ≤ 0.02), with smaller differences in other BMI subgroups. Indexing measures of cardiac and aortic size by BSA improves prognostic performance regardless of BMI, and no other body size metric has a clinically meaningful better performance. © 2023, The Author(s).
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