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American Heart Association

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Final ID: MP328

Use of Stress Cardiac Magnetic Resonance to Evaluate Prognosis in Patients with Cardiac Implantable Electronic Devices

Abstract Body (Do not enter title and authors here): Background
The prevalence of cardiac implantable electronic devices (CIED) is increasing, with over 300,000 new implants annually in the U.S. Stress cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) has proven as a powerful modality for myocardial characterization, enabling accurate diagnosis of different cardiac conditions. In patients without devices, CMR findings have also demonstrated prognostic value for major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE) and guide clinical decision-making. However, its use in CIED patients has historically been limited due to safety and image quality concerns.
Hypothesis
We aimed to evaluate the prognostic value of CMR imaging using wideband sequences in CIED patients.
Methods
CIED patients referred for clinical CMR were included prospectively and retrospectively between January 2020 and February 2025. All patients underwent a stress CMR protocol, which included cine, wideband late gadolinium enhancement (LGE), wideband T1 mapping, and wideband stress/rest perfusion imaging. Clinical follow-up is ongoing. The primary endpoint was the occurrence of MACE, defined as the composite of myocardial infarction, heart failure hospitalization, implantable cardioverter defibrillator (ICD) therapy, cardiac death, revascularization, or heart transplant.
Results
A total of 89 patients were included (median age 69.0 [58.0–75.5] years; 62.9% male). Device types included pacemakers (33.7%), ICDs (48.3%), and cardiac resynchronization therapy devices (16.9%). Over a median of follow-up of 613 days [355-991], 21 patients experienced a MACE. In unadjusted models, higher left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) (per 5%) was significantly associated with a lower risk of MACE (odds ratio [OR] 0.80, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.65–0.95; p=0.016), as was higher stress myocardial blood flow (MBF) (per 0.25 mL/g/min increase: OR 0.78, 95% CI 0.60–0.98; p=0.05). In contrast, greater LV myocardial mass (per 10 g) was significantly associated with a higher risk of MACE (OR 1.27, 95% CI 1.08–1.52; p = 0.006), figure 1.
Conclusion
The use of wideband sequences enabled the assessment of prognostic imaging value in CIED patients. LVEF remains a strong and consistent predictor of MACE in this population and LV mass was significantly associated with higher rates of MACE reflecting the influence of underlying cardiomyopathy. While stress perfusion CMR imaging showed promising trends, further studies with longer follow-up are needed to clarify its prognostic value in this population.
  • Davo Jimenez, Maria  ( Northwestern University , Chicago , Illinois , United States )
  • Collins, Jeremy  ( Mayo Clinic , Rochester , Minnesota , United States )
  • Patel, Amit  ( University of Virginia , Charlottesville , Virginia , United States )
  • Knight, Bradley  ( Northwestern University , Chicago , Illinois , United States )
  • Kim, Daniel  ( Northwestern University , Chicago , Illinois , United States )
  • Lee, Daniel  ( Northwestern University , Chicago , Illinois , United States )
  • Fan, Lexiaozi  ( Northwestern University , Chicago , Illinois , United States )
  • Urban, Jacqueline  ( Northwestern University , Chicago , Illinois , United States )
  • Behnoush, Amir Hossein  ( Northwestern University , Chicago , Illinois , United States )
  • Starrett, Lane  ( Northwestern University , Chicago , Illinois , United States )
  • Topel, Cagdas  ( Northwestern University , Chicago , Illinois , United States )
  • Jaamour, Dania  ( Northwestern University , Chicago , Illinois , United States )
  • Gill, Nathan  ( Northwestern University , Chicago , Illinois , United States )
  • Hong, Kyungpyo  ( Northwestern University , Chicago , Illinois , United States )
  • Author Disclosures:
    Maria Davo Jimenez: DO NOT have relevant financial relationships | Jeremy Collins: DO have relevant financial relationships ; Consultant:Circle CVi:Past (completed) ; Advisor:Varian Medical:Past (completed) ; Consultant:Innoventric:Active (exists now) | Amit Patel: No Answer | Bradley Knight: No Answer | Daniel Kim: DO NOT have relevant financial relationships | Daniel Lee: DO NOT have relevant financial relationships | Lexiaozi Fan: No Answer | Jacqueline Urban: No Answer | Amir Hossein Behnoush: DO NOT have relevant financial relationships | Lane Starrett: DO NOT have relevant financial relationships | Cagdas Topel: No Answer | Dania Jaamour: DO NOT have relevant financial relationships | Nathan Gill: No Answer | KyungPyo Hong: No Answer
Meeting Info:

Scientific Sessions 2025

2025

New Orleans, Louisiana

Session Info:

Stress Matters: Innovations in Physiologic Testing Across Multimodality Imaging

Saturday, 11/08/2025 , 03:15PM - 04:25PM

Moderated Digital Poster Session

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