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Regional left ventricular endocardial strains estimated from low-dose 4DCT: comparison with cardiac magnetic resonance feature tracking.

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BACKGROUND Estimates of regional left ventricular (LV) strains provide additional information to global function parameters such as ejection fraction (EF) and global longitudinal strain (GLS), and are more sensitive in… Click to show full abstract

BACKGROUND Estimates of regional left ventricular (LV) strains provide additional information to global function parameters such as ejection fraction (EF) and global longitudinal strain (GLS), and are more sensitive in detecting abnormal regional cardiac function. The accurate and reproducible assessment of regional cardiac function has implications in the management of various cardiac diseases such as heart failure, myocardial ischemia, and dyssynchrony. PURPOSE To develop a method that yields highly reproducible, high-resolution estimates of regional endocardial strains from 4DCT images. METHODS A method for estimating regional LV endocardial circumferential ( ε c c ) $( {{\epsilon }_{cc}} )$ and longitudinal ( ε l l ${\epsilon }_{ll}$ ) strains from 4DCT was developed. Point clouds representing the LV endocardial surface were extracted for each time frame of the cardiac cycle from 4DCT images. 3D deformation fields across the cardiac cycle were obtained by registering the end diastolic point cloud to each subsequent point cloud in time across the cardiac cycle using a 3D point-set registration technique. From these deformation fields, ε c c and ε l l ${\epsilon }_{cc}\ {\rm{and\ }}{\epsilon }_{ll}$ were estimated over the entire LV endocardial surface by fitting an affine transformation with maximum likelihood estimation. The 4DCT-derived strains were compared with strains estimated in the same subjects by cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR); twenty-four subjects had CMR scans followed by 4DCT scans acquired within a few hours. Regional LV circumferential and longitudinal strains were estimated from the CMR images using a commercially available feature tracking software (cvi42). Global circumferential strain (GCS) and global longitudinal strain (GLS) were calculated as the mean of the regional strains across the entire LV for both modalities. Pearson correlation coefficients and Bland-Altman analyses were used for comparisons. Intra-class correlation coefficients (ICC) were used to assess the inter- and intra-observer reproducibility of the 4DCT-derived strains. RESULTS The 4DCT-derived regional strains correlated well with the CMR-derived regional strains ( ε c c ${\epsilon }_{cc}$ : r = 0.76, p < 0.001 ;: ε l l ${\epsilon }_{ll}$ : r = 0.64, p < 0.001). A very strong correlation was found between 4DCT-derived GCS and 4DCT-derived EF (r = -0.96; p < 0.001). The 4DCT-derived strains were also highly reproducible, with very low inter- and intra-observer variability (intraclass correlation coefficients in the range of [0.92, 0.99]). CONCLUSIONS We have developed a novel method to estimate high-resolution regional LV endocardial circumferential and longitudinal strains from 4DCT images. Except for the definition of the mitral valve and LV outflow tract planes, the method is completely user-independent; thus, yielding highly reproducible estimates of endocardial strain. The 4DCT-derived strains correlated well with those estimated using a commercial CMR feature tracking software. The promising results reported in this study highlight the potential utility of 4DCT in the precise assessment of regional cardiac function for the management of cardiac disease. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.

Keywords: regional left; strains estimated; 4dct derived; left ventricular; feature tracking

Journal Title: Medical physics
Year Published: 2022

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