012 MRI CHARACTERISTICS OR DIFFERENT QRS MORPHOLOGIES IN PATIENTS REFERRED WITH SUSPECTED HEART FAILURE

2013 
Introduction Prolonged QRS duration is an important marker of adverse cardiovascular outcome for patients with heart failure (HF), but the contribution of QRS morphology is unclear. This is important, as QRS duration and morphology are advocated as criteria for the selection of patients for cardiac resynchronisation therapy. Methods Out-patients attending a community HF service between 2000 and 2010 that also underwent cardiac MRI were enrolled. HF was defined as the presence of relevant symptoms and signs and objective evidence of cardiac dysfunction: either a left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) 125 pg/ml. QRS duration >120 ms was grouped as left (LBBB), right bundle branch block (RBBB) or indeterminate ventricular conduction delay (IVCD) depending on ECG findings. Results Of 878 patients enrolled, 176 (20%) had QRS 120–150 ms and 129 (15%) had QRS >150 ms. The prevalence of LBBB, RBBB and IVCD amongst patients with QRS 120–150 ms was 52%, 24% and 24% respectively and amongst patients with QRS >150 ms was 81%, 16%, 3%. Compared to patients with LBBB, those with RBBB had more evidence of congestion, a higher prevalence of atrial fibrillation (11% vs 25%; p 150 ms. Overall, in multivariable Cox regression models, QRS duration or morphology were not independently associated with an adverse outcome. Conclusions In patients with chronic HF with or without a reduced LVEF and QRS>120 ms, RBBB morphology on ECG identifies patients with more severe bi-ventricular dysfunction on cardiac MRI who also have an adverse outcome. Although not independently significant in multi-variable models it is a simple method of identifying patients with other adverse prognostic features.
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