Reproducibility of reading echocardiographic parameters to assess severity of mitral regurgitation. Insights from a French multicentre study

authors

  • Coisne Augustin
  • Aghezzaf Samy
  • Edmé Jean-Louis
  • Bernard Anne
  • Ma Iria
  • Bohbot Yohann
  • Di Lena Chloé
  • Nicol Martin
  • Lavie Badie Yoan
  • Eyharts Damien
  • Seemann Aurélien
  • Falaise Claire
  • Ternacle Julien
  • Nguyen A
  • Montier Geraldine
  • Hubert Arnaud
  • Montaigne David
  • Donal Erwan
  • Dreyfus Julien

keywords

  • Agreement
  • Mitral regurgitation
  • Transthoracic echocardiography

abstract

Background - Poor reproducibility in assessment of mitral regurgitation (MR) has been reported. Aim - To investigate the robustness of echocardiographic MR assessment in 2019, based on improvements in technology and the skill of echocardiographists regarding MR quantification. Methods - Reproducibility in parameters of MR severity and global rating were tested using transthoracic echocardiography in 25 consecutive patients independently analysed by 16 junior and senior cardiologists specialized in echocardiography (400 analyses per parameter). Results - Overall interobserver agreement for mechanism definition, effective regurgitant orifice area (EROA) and regurgitant volume (RVol) was moderate, and was lower in secondary MR. Interobserver agreement was substantial for EROA [0.61, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.45-0.75] and moderate for RVol with the PISA method (0.50, 95% CI 0.33-0.56) in senior physicians and was fair in junior physicians (0.33, 95% CI 0.19-0.51 and 0.36, 95% CI 0.36-0.43, respectively). Using a multiparametric approach, overall interobserver agreement for grading MR severity was fair (0.30), was slightly better in senior than in junior physicians (0.31 vs. 0.28, respectively) with substantial or almost perfect agreement more frequently observed in senior versus junior physicians (52% vs. 36%, respectively). Conclusion - Reproducible transthoracic echocardiography MR quantification remains challenging in 2019, despite the expected high skills of echocardiographers regarding MR at the time of dedicated percutaneous intervention. The multiparametric approach does not entirely alleviate the substantial dispersion in measurement of MR severity parameters, whereas reader experience seems to partially address the issue. Our study emphasizes the continuing need for multimodality imaging and education in the evaluation of MR among cardiologists.

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