Mitral valve prolapse imaging: the role of tissue characterization
The presence of a mitral valve prolapse (MVP) is a common finding (up to 3% of the general population) but the correct classification of this pathology can be complex (1-3). MVP is classically defined as the displacement of the mitral single-leaflet or bileaflet >2 mm beyond the long-axis annular plane at end-systole (4). The detection of this pathology occurs frequently during the clinical examination and is confirmed with two-dimensional echocardiography. Cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) is recommended by the American Heart Association as an alternative imaging technique when the quality of ultrasound images is not appropriate (5,6). In fact, CMR is a non-invasive imaging method that allows for a precise evaluation of ventricular volumes, systolic function, valvular morphology and the degree of mitral regurgitation. Furthermore, CMR provides a tissue characterization highlighting areas of myocardial injury/fibrosis with late gadolinium enhancement (LGE) and T1 mapping sequences and myocardial edema with T2-weighted and T2 mapping sequences (4,7).
MVP has a widely heterogenous outcome that ranges from a benign condition without the need for intervention, to severe complications (8,9). MVP is an important cause of mitral regurgitation and it is estimated that almost 10% of subjects with MVP have severe mitral regurgitation requiring surgery (1,10). Other adverse sequelae of primary MVP include congestive heart failure, infective endocarditis, stroke, arrhythmias and sudden cardiac death (SCD) (2,5). The small subset of MVP patients with an increased risk of life-threatening ventricular arrhythmias and SCD are classified as having a malignant arrhythmic MVP phenotypic (5,10). Usually, the ‘arrhythmic MVP profile’ is characterized by bileaflet MVP, myxomatous degeneration of the mitral valve (defined as leaflet thickness of greater than 5 mm due to the accumulation of proteoglycans), ECG repolarization abnormalities and complex ventricular arrhythmias (3).
Although the existence of malignant arrhythmic MVP is now recognized, its prevalence, risk stratification, and appropriate management have not been fully defined. In the Framingham study, the prevalence of MVP among SCD victims was reported to be 2.4% (11). Although the estimated risk of SCD in patients with MVP is low (0.2% to 0.4% per year), it is at least 3-fold higher than in the general population (3,5,12,13). In light of this, the main clinical challenge is to identify MVP patients at higher risk for fatal arrhythmic events. Therefore, it is essential that the arrhythmogenic mechanism is better understood and also is crucial to identify the best imaging technique for risk stratification.
ECG abnormalities of “arrhythmic MVP” syndrome include complex premature ventricular beats (PVBs) arising from the papillary muscle region, the outflow tract, and from the Purkinje tissue. Moreover, inverted or biphasic T-wave inversions in the inferolateral leads are frequent in MVP patients who have had a cardiac arrest. These ECG findings suggest a stretch-mediated triggered activity. A mechanical irritation produced by the prolapsing leaflets on the papillary muscles and left ventricular (LV) outflow tract produces myocardial scarring that could be the substrate of electrical instability (3,5,9). Basso et al. were the first to demonstrate the evidence of LV inferobasal fibrosis (93%) or papillary muscle fibrosis (88%) in young SCD victims with MVP. In fact, in a study subpopulation of living MVP patients with complex ventricular arrhythmias, CMR showed an LGE distribution very similar to histopathological fibrosis observed in SCD victims (8). Subsequently, these results have been confirmed by other studies, one of which demonstrated the association between MVP and myocardial fibrosis when comparing patients with MVP or non-MVP-related mitral regurgitation (14,15). The authors found that left ventricle fibrosis is more frequent in MVP patients (36.7%) compared with non-MVP patients (6.7%), and that LV fibrosis tends to occur in the basal inferolateral wall and is associated with arrhythmic events. In this setting, CMR plays a pivotal role in identifying replacement-type fibrosis as variable patterns of LGE (MidWall, patchy, or subendocardial) in left ventricle inferobasal and at the level of papillary muscles. Moreover, CMR offers the capability to detect diffuse subclinical interstitial fibrosis by using T1 mapping. Bui et al. showed that patients with MVP had significantly shorter post-contrast T1 times when compared with controls, and diffuse (non-focal) subclinical ventricular fibrosis was associated with complex ventricular arrhythmia (16).
In addition, in our series of patients with MVP we found higher T1 values in native T1 maps and an increased extracellular volume compared with the control group. Furthermore, we found no statistically significant differences in terms of native T1 time at the inferolateral wall between MVP patients with LGE and those without LGE (17). These observations strengthened the assumption that in MVP, subclinical diffuse fibrosis may be a precursor of focal fibrosis or a separate disease entity, and confirmed that T1 mapping is a new promising tool for the identification of even non-focal myocardial wall alteration and for a better risk stratification of these patients.
Moreover, mitral insufficiency is the most frequent complication of MVP. This condition can cause atrial dilatation, which can be associated with atrial fibrillation (18). Atrial dilatation promotes the development of supraventricular arrhythmias. Recently, mitral annulus disjunction (MAD) was also considered to have a role in the arrhythmogenic mechanism. MAD is defined as the systolic separation of the point of insertion of the posterior mitral valve leaflet and left atrial junction from the left ventricle attachment at the posterior wall (3). Hutchins et al. first suggested that MAD could lead to myxomatous valve degeneration as a consequence of mechanical stress on the leaflets due to excessive mobility (19). Eriksson et al. and Carmo et al. demonstrated that MAD was associated with an increased risk of ventricular arrhythmias (20,21).
Perazzolo Marra et al. found that MAD was associated with arrhythmic MVP and left ventricle fibrosis (15). In addition, MAD is typically associated with the curling systolic motion of the mitral annulus (3). Since patients with arrhythmic MVP tend to present with MAD, systolic curling, myxomatous degeneration of the mitral valve apparatus and myocardial fibrosis, a cascade of events has been hypothesized. It is well known that the genesis of life-threatening arrhythmias usually recognizes the combination of trigger and substrate eliciting PVBs. MAD with curling was suggested as the “trigger” able to increase annulus diameter during systole, and to cause a myxomatous valve degeneration and a mechanical stretch in the inferolateral myocardium and papillary muscle. Myocardial fibrosis, suggested as the “substrate”, develops as result of this continuous wall stress exerted by the prolapsing leaflet with primary morphofunctional abnormality (3).
In the article by Miller et al. (22) “Hybrid Positron Emission Tomography/Magnetic Resonance Imaging in Arrhythmic Mitral Valve Prolapse”, the authors hypothesized that patients with MVP and severe/moderate-severe mitral regurgitation have an inflammatory component in addition to myocardial fibrosis. In their prospective observational study, the authors analyzed 20 MVP patients referred for mitral valve repair and who underwent hybrid positron emission tomography/magnetic resonance imaging (PET/MRI), an imaging modality that allows for simultaneous cardiac fluorine 18–labelled fluorodeoxyglucose (18F-FDG) PET and MRI with LGE imaging. The cohort study included 12 patients with complex ventricular arrhythmias (c-VA) and eight patients with minor ventricular arrhythmias (m-VA). The authors of the study found that 85% of their MVP patients with degenerative mitral regurgitation showed myocardial FDG uptake, and 70% exhibited both myocardial FDG uptake and LGE. In addition, the segments of FDG uptake frequently matched with areas of myocardial fibrosis. Based on their findings, the authors suggested that the inflammatory component could be prodromal to the development of myocardial fibrosis in MVP.
In the last decade, the potential link between myocardial inflammation and cardiac arrhythmias has been investigated. Acute inflammation may lead to a direct myocyte injury with consequent replacement fibrosis that is able to sustain re-entrant circuits. However, inflammation also contributes to the development of VAs per se, releasing inflammatory cytokines that are involved in electrical remodelling of myocytes promoting various forms of arrhythmias (23,24). Tung and colleagues have demonstrated the presence of occult inflammation on FDG PET in nearly 50% of patients referred for management of unexplained VAs. In the subgroup of patients that underwent endomyocardial biopsy, histologic diagnosis revealed non-granulomatous inflammation in 30%, cardiac sarcoidosis in 60%, and no inflammatory infiltrate in 10% of cases (25). These data have been confirmed by another single-center study that found abnormal myocardial 18F-FDG uptake in 51% of patients with PVCs of unexplained cause (26).
Since myocardial inflammation is a possible arrhythmogenic substrate, the results of Miller and colleagues are interesting in terms of risk stratification and management of patients with MVP. However, to the best of our knowledge, no study has demonstrated the presence of an inflammatory component in MVP confirmed by histopathological analysis. In addition, regional myocardial 18F-FDG uptake is not specific to inflammation since it can also reflect myocardial ischemia, as the study authors indicated (27).
Another complication in the interpretation of 18F-FDGPET findings is that an inadequate suppression of physiologic myocardial uptake of 18F-FDG may lead to false positive results. Moreover, a selective FDG uptake in the left ventricle inferolateral wall is considered a normal physiologic pattern (24). In this setting, to improve the specificity, 18F-FDGPET results should be compared with T2-weighted CMR images to detect myocardial edema, and with LGE images to detect myocardial injury/fibrosis. However, Miller et al. did not compare FDG uptake with T2-weighted images in their study. Since T2 mapping is the most specific CMR parameter for acute inflammation (28), studies comparing 18F-FDGPET findings with myocardial T2 relaxation time (increased in presence of acute myocardial edema) could be very interesting.
Others limitations of Miller’s article are highlighted by the authors themselves, such as the small number of patients. In our opinion, the selection bias is one of the most important limitations. The authors selected only patients with significant mitral regurgitation referred for mitral valve surgery. However, in our study evaluating the association of LGE with the mitral regurgitation fraction in MVP patients, we demonstrated that LGE is independent of the degree of valve dysfunction. Myocardial focal fibrosis was found even in patients with mild mitral regurgitation, and no significant differences were found in the severity of mitral regurgitation among MVP patients with LGE (33% mild, 40% moderate and 27% severe mitral regurgitation) (17). Furthermore, SCD or life-threatening arrhythmias can also occur in patients with hemodynamically uncomplicated MVP (3,9). Finally, a high degree of valve regurgitation and left ventricle remodeling are considered independent predictors of SCD and ventricular arrhythmias in MVP (3,8,9). In other words, the authors independently selected a high-risk population according to the presence or absence of myocardial inflammation or fibrosis, and excluded MVP patients with absent or mild mitral regurgitation which may present an arrhythmogenic substrate, regardless of the degree of valve dysfunction.
In conclusion, we have some questions concerning the three patients that exhibited only focal FDG uptake in the absence of any LGE: what kind of VAs (complex or minor ventricular arrhythmias) do they have? What is the degree of valve regurgitation (3 or 4)? Are these patients symptomatic or asymptomatic? Do they present left ventricle remodeling or not? This information would be informative and help us to understand better if myocardial inflammation could represent an early stage of a progressive disease process.
Acknowledgments
Funding: None.
Footnote
Conflicts of Interest: The authors have completed the ICMJE uniform disclosure form (available at http://dx.doi.org/10.21037/qims-2020-25). The authors have no conflicts of interest to declare.
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