Background: A maximal negative stress echo identifies a low-risk subset for coronary events. However, the potentially prognostically relevant information on cardiovascular hemodynamics for heart-failure-related events is unsettled. Aim of this study was to assess the prognostic value of stress-induced variation in cardiovascular hemodynamics in patients with negative stress echocardiography.
Methods: We enrolled 891 patients (593 males mean age 63 ± 12, ejection fraction 48 ± 17%), with negative (exercise 172, dipyridamole 482, and dobutamine 237) stress echocardiography result. During stress we assessed left ventricular end-systolic elastance index (E(LV)I), ventricular arterial coupling (VAC) indexed by the ratio of the E(LV)I to arterial elastance index (E aI), systemic vascular resistance (SVR), and pressure-volume area (PVA). Changes from rest to peak stress (reserve) were tested as predictors of main outcome measures: combined death and heart failure hospitalization.
Results: During a median followup of 19 months (interquartile range 8-36), 50 deaths and 84 hospitalization occurred. Receiver-operating-characteristic curves identified as best predictors E(LV)I reserve for exercise (AUC = 0.871) and dobutamine (AUC = 0.848) and VAC reserve (AUC = 0.696) for dipyridamole.
Conclusions: Patients with negative stress echocardiography may experience an adverse outcome, which can be identified by assessment of E(LV)I reserve and VAC reserve during stress echo.