Single ventricle physiology occurs in approximately 8% of patients with CHDs. Reference Collins, Doshi, Onukwube, Fram and Robbins1 Many of these patients are palliated with a Fontan circulation in which blood from the systemic veins is channelled directly into the pulmonary artery, bypassing the right heart. The Fontan circulation relies on a low pulmonary vascular resistance to return adequate blood flow to the heart. Reference Deal and Jacobs2 Therefore, the pulmonary vascular resistance dictates the preload to the single ventricle and even slight increase in pulmonary vascular resistance can exponentially decrease cardiac output. Reference Dasi, Krishnankuttyrema and Kitajima3 Increases in pulmonary vascular resistance also correlate with the development of serious complications from this circulation such as pulmonary vascular remodelling and Fontan failure. Reference Mori, Aguirre and Elder4
Vasodilator medication is an available option for reducing the pulmonary vascular resistance in Fontan patients. The most widely used of these, sildenafil, has been shown to increase exercise tolerance and improve the cardiac output at rest and during exercise. Reference Van De Bruaene, La Gerche and Claessen5 However, its effectiveness differs between patients, with not all benefiting from the therapy. Reference Goldberg, French and Szwast6 Determining the individual improvement from treatment is currently achieved through trial periods or acute vasodilator response testing, the latter of which often involves general anaesthesia and invasive right heart catheterisation. Reference Costa, Jardim, Bogossian, Amato, Carvalho and Souza7
Oxygen has pulmonary vasodilatory properties, and its inhalation is used for acute vasodilator testing. Reference Barst, Agnoletti, Fraisse, Baldassarre and Wessel8 Combined with the novel techniques of four-dimensional phase-contrast cardiac magnetic resonance (4D Flow MRI) imaging, this produces the potential for a method of non-invasive acute vasodilator testing with advanced analysis of intracardiac parameters. 4D Flow MRI allows measurement of blood velocity in all directions within a three-dimensional volume and has been shown to improve the accuracy of flow quantification across the atrioventricular valve in Fontan patients. Reference She, Roest and Calkoen9 Kinetic energy of blood flow is a novel measurement parameter distinctive to 4D Flow MRI; it represents the work performed by the heart muscle that results in the movement of blood. Reference Wong, Chabiniok and Tibby10 Previous research has shown diastolic kinetic energy to be reduced in Fontan patients compared to controls, Reference Sjoberg, Heiberg and Wingren11 and the sensitivity of kinetic energy testing is capable of identifying subclinical cases of left ventricular dysfunction. Reference Svalbring, Fredriksson and Eriksson12
This pilot study aimed to assess the potential for non-invasive testing of the acute vasodilator response using 4D Flow MRI during oxygen inhalation.
Methods
Study population and study design
The study group consisted of six patients with a Fontan circulation and six age-matched healthy volunteers. All participants were prospectively recruited and scanned at the University of Oxford. Inclusion criteria for single ventricle patients were adults who had undergone the Fontan surgical palliation, had preserved ventricular function, had minimal or no atrioventricular valve regurgitation, and had no contraindications to MRI in line with recruitment criteria of the FUEL trial. Reference Goldberg, Zak and Goldstein13 All healthy volunteers had no history or symptoms of cardiovascular dysfunction, did not take any cardiovascular or other relevant medication, and had no contraindications to MRI. The study was approved by the local research ethics committee: South Central-Berkshire (Reference 10/H0505/100) and conducted in line with the Helsinki declaration. All participants gave written informed consent. All Fontan patients and one volunteer participated in two MRI scans within the same study visit. Scan 1 was at normal baseline conditions, and scan 2 was taken during inhalation of oxygen, for non-invasive pulmonary vasodilator response testing. The remaining five volunteers underwent one scan only.
Application of oxygen vasodilation
Traditionally, nitric oxide has been used but increasingly oxygen inhalation is also used for acute vasodilator testing. Reference Barst, Agnoletti, Fraisse, Baldassarre and Wessel8 Importantly, the physiology of inhaled pulmonary vasodilator differs from oral systemic vasodilators, Reference Walmrath, Schermuly, Pilch, Grimminger and Seeger14 but in the acute, short-term test setting, inhaled vasodilators are preferred as they have a faster onset of vasodilation.
Following a baseline scan, each Fontan patient and one of the volunteers underwent oxygen inhalation at 15 L/min through a non-rebreath mask. Patients were monitored until they reached a steady state, around 5 minutes, before the second scan was performed. It was assumed that at this stage, maximum oxygen saturation had been achieved. Oxygen administration was continued for the duration of the second MRI scan.
Cardiovascular image acquisition
The MRI protocol was the same as published previously by Stoll et al. Reference Stoll, Loudon and Eriksson15 In brief, participants were scanned on a 3 T system (Trio, Siemens Healthcare Erlangen, Germany) and images were ECG-gated. Cine images were acquired using retrospectively gated balanced steady-state free precession (bSSFP) cine sequences with single breath-hold per acquired slice: slice thickness 8 mm with contiguous slice position, echo time 1.5 milliseconds (ms), repetition time 3 ms and flip angle 50 degrees. 4D Flow MRI data covered the entire heart, planned in the sagittal orientation, and were obtained during free breathing, with respiratory navigator gating using a prototype three-dimensional time-resolved phase-contrast MRI sequence. Retrospective gating was employed, and 30 cardiac phases were reconstructed to represent one full cardiac cycle. 4D Flow MRI parameters were as follows: spatial resolution 3 mm3; echo time 2.75 ms; repetition time 4.3 ms; temporal resolution 52 ms; flip angle 7 degrees; velocity encoding range ± 100 cm/s.
4 D Flow MRI image analysis
The evaluation of net forward flow volume through the mitral valve was completed with valve tracking using the commercially available CAAS MR Solutions 5.1 (Pie Medical Imaging, Maastricht, The Netherlands). The mitral valve was identified in the two-chamber and four-chamber cine images and tracked throughout the cardiac cycle. The mitral valve flow was delineated in the resulting 2D flow plane throughout the cardiac cycle. All images were corrected for aliasing at the mitral inflow. A significant change in mitral inflow (improved or worsened) was defined as at least a 5% change in forward flow (increase or decrease respectively) in keeping with a recent systematic review. Reference Doyle, Orr, Greenwood, Plein, Tsoumpas and Bissell16
Ventricular function, 4D Flow MRI analysis, and kinetic energy quantification were performed using the research MASS software (MASS; Version 2019EXP, Leiden University, The Netherlands). The endocardial border of the left ventricle in healthy volunteers and the single ventricle in Fontan patients was manually traced in the short-axis cine stack throughout the entire cardiac cycle. Papillary muscles were disregarded. The hypoplastic right ventricle was included in the atrioventricular septal defect case. End-diastolic volume, stroke volume, and ejection fraction were calculated. A decrease in ejection fraction was defined as at least 10% reduction as this was considered clinically significant.
Misalignment was assessed visually, and if necessary, motion correction was performed using the automated image-based 3D rigid registration toolbox. Reference Klein, Staring, Murphy, Viergever and Pluim17 Kinetic energy was computed following the previously published method. Reference Elbaz, Calkoen, Westenberg, Lelieveldt, Roest and van der Geest18 Kinetic energy for each voxel within the left ventricle was computed as ½ mv2, with (m) as the mass representing the voxel volume multiplied by the density of blood (1.025 g/mL) and (v) as the three-directional velocity from 4D Flow MRI. For each acquired time phase, volumetric kinetic energy was then computed by integrating (by cumulative sum) the computed kinetic energy over the segmented 3D left ventricular volume. Peak systolic kinetic energy, peak E-wave kinetic energy, and peak A-wave kinetic energy were assessed normalised to end-diastolic volume and stroke volume (Table 1). Improved diastolic inflow was defined as an at least 10% increase in maximum E-wave kinetic energy. Improvement in systolic peak kinetic energy was defined as an at least 10% decrease. 10% change was chosen in line with the 10% change in ejection fraction above which was deemed to be clinically significant. This change is also likely larger than can be explained by re-scan variability. Reference Stoll, Loudon and Eriksson15,Reference Kamphuis, van der Palen and de Koning19
All KE parameters in this study are indexed to end-diastolic volume or stroke volume, and all were measured in μJ/ml; KE = kinetic energy.
Energy loss was calculated using Circle CVI42, v 5.13 (Circle Cardiovascular Imaging Inc., Calgary, Canada) at the inferior caval vein to conduit junction. 4D Flow MRI magnitude data were used to create an isosurface area of the vessel. Two planes were placed (one in the inferior caval vein after the hepatic veins entered, one in the proximal conduit) to define the junction for energy loss calculation. Maximum energy loss across this vessel segment was reported. Analysis was not possible in one patient due to artefact from percutaneous fenestration closure device.
Statistical analysis
Data analysis was performed using SPSS Statistics version 26.0 (International Business Machines, Armonk, USA). Normality was tested by the Shapiro–Wilk test. Continuous non-normal data are presented as median and interquartile range. MRI measures at baseline and during oxygen inhalation were compared using the paired Wilcoxon signed-rank test for non-parametric scale data.
Results
Demographic characteristics
Characteristics of the Fontan patients are shown in Table 2. The underlying pathology leading to a Fontan circulation was as follows: two patients with tricuspid atresia, with or without an associated ventricular septal defect; three patients with pulmonary atresia, and one patient with a complete unbalanced atrioventricular septal defect. All Fontan patients were male, and the median age was 20.5 years with ages ranging between 19 and 31 years of age. Median heart rate was 75 [19] bpm. Patients and volunteers were similar in median age (20.5 [8] versus 20.5 [17] years, p = 0.82), heart rate (75 [19] versus 62 [17] beats per minute, p = 0.24), and body surface area (1.91 [0.5] versus 1.83 [0.3] m2, p = 0.49).
Five patients had an extracardiac conduit, and one patient (patient 5) had an atrial-pulmonary Fontan circulation. The individual diameter of the extracardiac conduit is described in Table 2. No patient had a patent fenestration or any stents inserted. Oxygen saturation at baseline was >95% in all participants and increased to 100% during oxygen administration.
Flow-related response to oxygen therapy
The change in 4D Flow MRI parameters after non-invasive vasodilator response testing (scan 2 during oxygen inhalation) in comparison to baseline (scan 1) is shown in Table 3. Comparing all patients together, no significant difference was seen between the mitral valve net forward flow volume in scan 2 (73 [53] ml, p = 0.94) to scan 1 (73 [42] ml) (Fig 1).
Data are presented as median and interquartile range [IQR].
Bold text = significant p-values. KE = kinetic energy; HR = heart rate; EDV = end-diastolic volume; SV = stroke volume.
Systolic peak kinetic energy was significantly lower in scan 2 (15.5 [2.8] μJ/ml) compared to scan 1 (19.8 [5.1] μJ/ml, p = 0.046) when indexed to both end-diastolic volume and stroke volume. However, there was no significant difference in average systolic kinetic energy between the scans (10.7 [3] μJ/ml in scan 1 versus 8.7 [1]0.4 μJ/ml in scan 2, p = 0.1). There was also no significant difference in the E-wave peak kinetic energy between scan 1 (12.3 [5.2] μJ/ml) and scan 2 (13.4 [6.5] μJ/ml, p = 0.4) when analysed within the whole cohort.
Individual patient differences in flow
There were mixed individual responses to oxygen administration (Fig 2). Three patients had improved net forward flow through the mitral valve (patients 1, 2, and 6), by 40, 9, and 52%, respectively, and higher E-wave peak kinetic energy, by 31, 13, and 75%, respectively. Patients 2, 3, 4, and 6 exhibited a decrease in the systolic peak kinetic energy from scan 1 to scan 2 by 11, 17, 39, and 40%, respectively.
In comparison, the healthy volunteer who underwent assessment during oxygen inhalation had a stable net forward flow through the mitral valve (baseline 76 mls and on oxygen 75 mls). E-wave peak kinetic energy decreased by 37%. Systolic peak kinetic energy decreased by 44%. Heart rate also decreased.
Individual energy loss across the extracardiac conduit from inferior caval vein to conduit is detailed for each patient in Table 4. Patient 1 had a percutaneously closed fenestration. The occluder device caused artefact and did not allow for energy loss quantification at the anastomosis from inferior caval vein to conduit.
KE = kinetic energy; AP = atrio-pulmonary Fontan; O2 = oxygen; mW = milli Watts.
Table 4 summarises changes for each patient individually and the additional healthy volunteer. On combined 4D Flow MRI assessment patients 2 and 6 showed improved preload with increased mitral inflow and maximum E-wave kinetic energy as well as systolic peak kinetic energy decrease. Patient 1 showed improved preload only. Patient 5 showed no change, and patient 3 had equivocal results. Patient 4, however, showed a decrease in preload and cardiac filling/function during oxygen administration (Table 4). Patients 2 and 6 had higher kinetic energy loss at the inferior caval vein to conduit junction. Patients 4 and 5 were older than the other patients. Furthermore, patient 5 was the only patient with an atrio-pulmonary Fontan connection. No other clear demographic differences were found between those that benefitted from oxygen inhalation compared to those that did not.
Discussion
This study has demonstrated that in two out of six patients, oxygen administration (and presumed pulmonary vasodilation) in Fontan patients leads to a decrease in the systolic peak kinetic energy of the left ventricle and in three out of six patients to improved diastolic inflow with an increase in E-wave peak kinetic energy and an increase in the mitral net forward flow volume. The other three patients showed no change or decreased ventricular flow.
Systolic kinetic energy
Previous studies have demonstrated that peak systolic kinetic energy values are higher in Fontan patients than in healthy volunteers, Reference Rutkowski, Barton, Francois, Bartlett, Anagnostopoulos and Roldan-Alzate20–Reference Kamphuis, Roest and van den Boogaard22 especially in those with impaired ejection fraction. Reference Kamphuis, Roest and van den Boogaard22 This is also reflected in research into other conditions of cardiac dysfunction including Tetralogy of Fallot, myocardial infarction, and heart failure. Reference Jeong, Anagnostopoulos and Roldan-Alzate23–Reference Kanski, Arvidsson and Toger25 Furthermore, dobutamine stress MRI has shown to increase systolic kinetic energy in the Fontan circulation, and a larger kinetic energy increase was associated with markers of reduced exercise tolerance. Reference Kamphuis, Elbaz and van den Boogaard21 It has been suggested that increased systolic peak kinetic energy indicates a lower efficiency in the cardiac circulation, as there is a higher workload required to pump a lower volume of blood. Reference Rutkowski, Barton, Francois, Bartlett, Anagnostopoulos and Roldan-Alzate20 This higher systolic kinetic energy in the ventricle may also be a marker for ventricular dysfunction. Reference Sjoberg, Heiberg and Wingren11 Therefore, the reduction in systolic kinetic energy with oxygen therapy seen in patient 2-6 can be interpreted as a subtle improvement in ventricular efficiency.
Diastolic kinetic energy
E-wave kinetic energy is reduced in the Fontan circulation. Reference Sjoberg, Heiberg and Wingren11,Reference Kamphuis, Roest and van den Boogaard22 Previous research has also highlighted that patients have a lower E-wave peak kinetic energy after myocardial infarction. Reference Garg, Crandon and Swoboda24 This decreased early diastolic kinetic energy has been shown to correlate with increased energy loss within the cardiac cycle and to represent below optimal ventricular filling Reference de Vecchi, Nordsletten, Razavi, Greil and Smith26 due to reduced passive inflow by impaired ventricular relaxation. An improvement in E-wave peak kinetic energy is therefore suggestive of improved diastolic function.
Response of the Fontan circulation to oxygen administration
From the kinetic energy time curves of patients between scan 1 and scan 2, and the changes in flow parameters, it is reasonable to conclude that three patients exhibited beneficial effects from pulmonary vasodilation. These three patients (1, 2, and 6) all showed improved diastolic inflow. Two of these patients had the complete improvement pattern of a lower systolic peak kinetic energy and a higher E-wave peak kinetic energy returning these patients towards kinetic energy values from healthy individuals. In a study of Fontan patients by Sjöberg et al., Reference Sjoberg, Heiberg and Wingren11 the post-intervention kinetic energy curves after beneficial cardiac intervention appear to show this same pattern, a lowering of the peak systolic kinetic energy and an increase in the peak early diastolic kinetic energy. This further alludes to the possibility that this pattern contributes to advantageous cardiac filling in the Fontan circulation. One possible explanation for this pattern is that an increase in venous return into the left atrium, caused by the pulmonary vasodilation, leads to greater filling during early diastole which leads to a more efficient cardiac cycle. Reference Jiamsripong, Calleja and Alharthi27 Another explanation could come from findings that Zajac et al. documented in patients with dilated cardiomyopathy Reference Zajac, Eriksson, Dyverfeldt, Bolger, Ebbers and Carlhall28 : Decreased early diastolic filling and increased late diastolic filling can impact the ventricular flow pattern away from efficient systolic ejection. Reference Zajac, Eriksson, Dyverfeldt, Bolger, Ebbers and Carlhall28 Interestingly, patients 2 and 6 also showed slightly higher energy loss at the inferior caval vein to conduit junction. This might be another indicator of positive response to vasodilation.
Additionally, it is important to note that three out of six patients (3, 4, and 5) did not respond to the pulmonary vasodilation in the pattern which we have defined as beneficial for Fontan patients.
Patient 5 showed no change. This patient had an atrio-pulmonary Fontan circulation with a severely dilated right atrium, where positive vasodilatory effects might be minimal.
Patient 3 had equivocal results. This was expected, as research suggests that not all Fontan patients improve from pulmonary vasodilator therapy Reference Snarr, Paridon, Rychik and Goldberg29 and some patients are “non”-responders, and patient 3 might be one of them. Interestingly, energy loss across the inferior caval vein to conduit was smaller compared to the other patients, suggesting that one reason for non-respondence might be already favourable haemodynamics in the Fontan circulation.
Patient 4, however, showed a similar response to the healthy volunteer. In healthy volunteers, oxygen inhalation increases pulmonary blood flow but also shows negative effects such as increased systemic vascular resistance; it reduces heart rate with a largely stable cardiac output. Reference Bak, Sjöberg, Rousseau, Steinvall and Janerot-Sjoberg30–Reference Li, Tesselaar, Borges, Böhm, Sjöberg and Janerot-Sjöberg33 The marked decrease in systolic kinetic energy as well as peak E-wave kinetic energy in the healthy volunteer might be a response to increased systemic vascular resistance. Interestingly, while patient 4 was older with a smaller extracardiac conduit than some of the other patients, he still had a normal ejection fraction. Furthermore, the timing of peak E-wave kinetic energy was earlier and more aligned with the healthy volunteers than in the other patients. Delay in diastolic peak kinetic energy is often observed in the Fontan circulation. Reference Rutkowski, Barton, Francois, Bartlett, Anagnostopoulos and Roldan-Alzate20 These findings suggest that patient 4 might have more favourable intracardiac haemodynamics at baseline and therefore displays a similar response to oxygen administration as seen in healthy volunteers. Further research is necessary to delineate, whether a similar (negative) response would also be seen with medical vasodilators.
These results suggest that “non”-responders might have a number of underlying reasons such as unfavourable anatomy (atrio-pulmonary Fontan circulation) or favourable haemodynamics at baseline (Fontan circulation and/or intracardiac haemodynamic). This may in part explain the modest results of the randomised FUEL trial which overall showed some mild benefit in exercise performance but no statistically significant difference in the primary endpoint of improved maximal oxygen consumption during cardiopulmonary exercise testing. Reference Goldberg, Zak and Goldstein34 An overall small but not statistically significant improvement in maximal oxygen consumption during cardiopulmonary exercise testing is also reported by a recent meta-analysis. Reference Li, Zhou, An and Feng35 This suggests that careful patient selection might be important to show a statistically significant improvement in exercise tolerance in a more specifically defined patient cohort.
Study limitations
This pilot study lacks invasive measurement; therefore, the exact cardiac loading conditions are not fully known. Other parameters such as ventricular energy loss might be even more reproducible than kinetic energy Reference Kamphuis, van der Palen and de Koning19 but analysis software for these is not widely available, and the common denominator of the majority of 4D Flow MRI publications is kinetic energy, as this is a key component of cardiac work. Reference Arvidsson, Töger Heiberg, Heiberg Carlsson, Carlsson Arheden and Arheden36 Furthermore, kinetic energy and energy loss correlate well in healthy volunteers and Fontan patients. Reference Kamphuis, van der Palen and de Koning19,Reference Kamphuis, Elbaz and van den Boogaard21 The inflow improvement seen in patient 6 is quite large, and some degree of measurement error cannot be excluded. However, the increase in inflow is in keeping with the other results of this patient and the 4D Flow MRI sequence used in this publication has been extensively evaluated for reproducibility. Reference Stoll, Loudon and Eriksson15
Long-term functional and symptomatic improvement in patients was outside the scope of this pilot study, and the correlation of oxygen-induced vasodilation with vasodilator medication response requires demonstration in future studies. However, this pilot study provides important proof-of-concept data for a larger follow-on study.
Conclusions
This study showed the potential of non-invasive acute vasodilator response testing in Fontan patients using oxygen administration and 4D Flow MRI imaging. Vasodilator testing led to positive haemodynamic responses in some patients, with increased mitral forward flow, decreased systolic peak kinetic energy, and increased E-wave peak kinetic energy, leading to a pattern of more efficient cardiac filling.
The differing response to oxygen in Fontan patients may suggest that 4D Flow MRI can help to identify those expected to respond to vasodilator therapy and would benefit from a trial of pulmonary vasodilator medication in Fontan patients. However, the correlation of the oxygen response with the response to vasodilator medication requires confirmation in further studies.
Acknowledgements
We would like to thank all patients and volunteers that participated in this study.
Financial support
This pilot study was funded by the NIHR Oxford Biomedical Research Centre. SGM is supported by the United Kingdom NIHR Oxford Biomedical Research Centre. SKP and SN acknowledge support from the Oxford British Heart Foundation Centre for Research Excellence (grant RE/18/3/34214).
Conflict of interest
None.
Ethical standards
The authors assert that all procedures contributing to this work comply with the ethical standards of the relevant national guidelines on human experimentation in the United Kingdom and with the Helsinki Declaration of 1975, as revised in 2008, and have been approved by the research ethics committee: South Central-Berkshire.