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The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism Vol. 84, No. 5 1518-1523
Copyright © 1999 by The Endocrine Society


Original Studies

Impact of Patient’s Age and Disease Duration on Cardiac Performance in Acromegaly: A Radionuclide Angiography Study

Annamaria Colao, Alberto Cuocolo, Paolo Marzullo, Emanuele Nicolai, Diego Ferone, Anna Maria Della Morte, Mario Petretta, Marco Salvatore and Gaetano Lombardi

Department of Molecular and Clinical Endocrinology and Oncology (An.C., P.M., D.F., G.L.), Nuclear Medicine Center of the National Council of Research, Department of Biomorphological and Functional Sciences (Al.C., E.N., A.M.D.M., M.S.) and Department of Internal Medicine (M.P.), Federico II University of Naples, 80131 Napoli, Italy

Address all correspondence and requests for reprints to: Annamaria Colao, M.D., Ph.D., Department of Molecular and Clinical Endocrinology and Oncology, Federico II University of Naples, via S. Pansini 5, 80131 Napoli, Italy. E-mail: colao{at}unina.it


    Abstract
 Top
 Abstract
 Introduction
 Subjects and Methods
 Results
 Discussion
 References
 
The aim of this study was to evaluate the impact of age and disease duration on cardiac performance in acromegaly. To address these issues, the left ventricular function at rest and during physical exercise was assessed by equilibrium radionuclide angiography in 40 rigorously selected patients with active acromegaly but without evidence of other complications able to affect heart function and in 32 healthy controls.

Patients and controls were divided in two groups, on the basis of age below and above 40 yr. Circulating GH and insulin-like growth factor-I levels were significantly increased in patients, compared with controls, but were similar in the two groups of patients.

At peak exercise, the systolic blood pressure was significantly higher in elderly patients (P < 0.001), whereas diastolic blood pressure was significantly higher in young patients than in age-matched controls (P < 0.01). Heart rate at peak exercise was significantly higher in young than in elderly patients and controls (P < 0.01), without any evidence of arrhythmia in both groups. The left ventricular ejection fraction at rest was normal (>50%) in all but 2 patients and in all controls. The left ventricular ejection fraction at peak exercise was significantly decreased in elderly, compared with young, patients (P < 0.01) and in age-matched controls (P < 0.001). A normal response of the left ventricular ejection fraction to exercise was found in 12 of 40 patients (30%) and in 28 of 32 controls (87.5%) ({chi}2, 5.764; P < 0.01). Exercise-induced changes in left ventricular ejection fraction were significantly decreased in young (+5.2 ± 4.4% vs. +21.3 ± 3.4%, P < 0.005) and elderly patients (-10.2 ± 2.8% vs. +13.7 ± 2.7%, P < 0.0001), as compared with age-matched controls. The peak rate of left ventricular filling was significantly higher in young, than in elderly, patients whether peak filling rate was normalized to end-diastolic volume (P < 0.001), or stroke volume (P < 0.0001), or expressed as the ratio of peak filling rate to peak ejection rate (P < 0.001). The peak rate of left ventricular filling was significantly decreased in elderly patients, compared with young patients and age-matched controls, whether peak filling rate was normalized to end-diastolic volume (P < 0.01), or stroke volume (P < 0.005), or expressed as the ratio of peak filling rate to peak ejection rate (P < 0.001).

In the patient group, the left ventricular ejection fraction at peak exercise was significantly correlated with age (r = -0.33, P < 0.05), estimated disease duration (r = -0.34, P < 0.05), exercise-induced changes of the left ventricular ejection fraction (r = 0.34, P < 0.05), and the peak rate of left ventricular filling, whether peak filling rate was normalized to end-diastolic volume (r = 0.33, P < 0.05). Age and estimated disease duration were both significantly correlated with the peak rate of left ventricular filling, whether peak filling rate was normalized to end-diastolic volume (r = 0.55, P < 0.001 and r = -0.49, P < 0.001, respectively), or stroke volume (r = 0.5, P < 0.001 and r = -0.57, P < 0.001, respectively), or expressed as the ratio of peak filling rate to peak ejection rate (r = 0.56, P < 0.0001 and r = -0.52, P < 0.001, respectively). In the control group, the left ventricular ejection fraction at peak exercise was significantly correlated with the left ventricular ejection fraction at rest (r = 0.54, P < 0.01), exercise-induced changes of the left ventricular ejection fraction (r = 0.57, P < 0.001), but neither with age nor peak rate of left ventricular filling at all measurements.

In conclusion, left ventricular performance is more frequently preserved in young patients with a short disease duration, although the left ventricular response to exercise was already reduced, as compared with controls. These results indicate that a careful investigation of diastolic and systolic function, by equilibrium radionuclide angiography, is advised in acromegalic patients at diagnosis, as it can be useful to reveal abnormalities in cardiac performance to be monitored during different treatments.


    Introduction
 Top
 Abstract
 Introduction
 Subjects and Methods
 Results
 Discussion
 References
 
IN ACROMEGALY, it is now well established that atherosclerosis, cardiovascular, and cerebrovascular diseases double the death rate, compared with healthy population, especially after the age of 45 yr (1, 2, 3). The poor prognosis of acromegalic patients is caused not only by an increased frequency of cardiovascular disease (such as systemic hypertension, premature coronary artery disease, and arrhythmias) but also by the presence of cardiomyopathy (4). In recent years, consistent evidence has been provided that the chronic GH and insulin-like growth factor (IGF)-I excess in acromegaly causes a specific derangement of cardiomyocytes, leading to abnormalities in cardiac muscle structure and function (5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11). The existence of a specific acromegalic cardiomyopathy is still questioned, mostly because the majority of the patients included in clinical studies had the coexistence of other cardiovascular and metabolic alterations (the most frequent being hypertension and diabetes mellitus), which could worsen cardiac function independently from GH and IGF-I excess (5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12). However, left ventricular hypertrophy is a quite constant finding in acromegaly (13), even in young patients (14). From clinical and experimental studies, it emerged that cardiac dysfunction seems to progressively develop during the natural history of untreated acromegaly from a first stage, characterized by increased contractility and a high cardiac output, to a second stage, when patients usually are diagnosed, characterized by left ventricular hypertrophy, which causes diastolic dysfunction at rest, with impaired cardiac performance during physical exercise (4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14). If acromegaly is left untreated, congestive heart failure may occur because of left ventricular dilatation and mitral and/or aortic valve disease (4, 13, 15, 16). However, only few data are available on cardiac performance in uncomplicated acromegaly along the development of untreated disease. In addition, cardiac function has been investigated in the majority of the studies by echocardiography, which is affected by two major limitations: the intra- and interobserver variability and the poor sensitivity attributable to the assumptions necessary to calculate ejection fraction (17).

Another aspect that should not be disregarded is that, in normal subjects, relevant physiological changes in left ventricular function may occur as part of the aging process, so that the rate and extent of left ventricular filling is reduced (18, 19). However, no study has been reported, so far, in acromegalic patients to investigate whether cardiac function is modified in accordance with patients’ age as physiological response to aging. Therefore, this study was designed to evaluate the impact of acromegalic patients’ age and disease duration on cardiac performance. To address these issues, in a large series of rigorously selected patients with active acromegaly, but without evidence of other complications able to affect cardiac performance, left ventricular function at rest and during physical exercise was assessed by equilibrium radionuclide angiography.


    Subjects and Methods
 Top
 Abstract
 Introduction
 Subjects and Methods
 Results
 Discussion
 References
 
Patients

Forty untreated acromegalic patients (19 women; 21 men; age range, 18–67 yr) constituted the patient population. The patients were selected among 77 patients on the basis of the absence of other concomitant diseases, such as diabetes mellitus, coronary artery diseases, long-standing hypertension, and hyperthyroidism, which could affect cardiac function. Latent coronary artery disease was excluded using exercise thallium-201 myocardial tomography. The diagnosis of acromegaly was performed in keeping with high serum GH levels during an 8-hr time course, not suppressible below 2 µg/L after 75 g oral glucose load and high plasma IGF-I levels for age (20). The presumed duration of acromegaly was assessed by comparison of patients’ photographs taken during a 1- to 3-decade span and by patient’s interviews, to date the onset of acral enlargement, and it was assumed as the interval between the clinical onset and the time of treatment. In the present series of patients, disease duration ranged between 4–30 yr. As a control group, 32 healthy volunteers, sex- and age-matched with the patients (13 women; 19 men; age range, 23–62 yr) were studied. All patients and controls gave their informed consent to participate in this study, and the study protocol was approved by the ethical committee of the Medical School of the University Federico II of Naples. Twelve patients and 10 controls were smokers, and all had a sedentary lifestyle. Patients and controls were divided in 2 groups, on the basis of age below and above 40 yr (Table 1Go). The threshold age of 40 yr was chosen because of a significant increase of left ventricular mass without alterations of diastolic and systolic function demonstrated by echocardiography in patients below 40 yr of age (14). The preliminary results of 10 out of 40 patients have been previously reported (21). At the time of radionuclide angiography, 7 out of 40 patients were occasionally found to have a diastolic blood pressure higher than 90 mm Hg: hypertension was subsequently excluded by serial blood pressure measurement during the subsequent follow-up, and no treatment for hypertension was needed.


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Table 1. Cardiac parameters assessed by equilibrium radionuclide angiography in acromegalic patients and control subjects

 
Gated blood-pool cardiac scintigraphy

In vivo labeling of red blood cells was performed with 555 MBq (15 mCi) of 99mTc. Radionuclide angiography was performed at rest and during dynamic physical exercise in the 45° left anterior projection, with a 15° craniocaudal tilt, with the patient in supine position. A small-field-of-view {gamma} camera (Starcam 300 A/M, General Electric, Milwaukee, WI), equipped with a low-energy all-purpose collimator, was used. Data were recorded at a rate of 30 frames/cardiac cycle for resting study and of 16 frames/cardiac cycle for exercise study, on a dedicated computer system (General Electric). At least 200,000 counts/frame were acquired. Exercise studies were performed using a bicycle ergometer with a restraining harness to minimize patient motion under the camera. Exercise loads were increased by 25 W every 2 min until angina, limiting dyspnea, or fatigue developed. No patient developed high-grade ventricular arrhythmias necessitating termination of exercise. Heart rate and blood pressure (by cuff sphygmomanometer) were monitored during exercise at each stage.

Radionuclide angiography studies were analyzed using a standard commercial software system (General Electric). Left ventricular regions of interest were automatically drawn for each frame, and a background region of interest was also computer delineated on the end systolic frame. After background correction, a left ventricular time-activity curve was generated. Indexes of left ventricular function were derived by computer analysis of the background-corrected time-activity curve. Ejection fraction was computed on the basis of relative end-diastolic and end-systolic counts. Peak left ventricular ejection and filling rates were also calculated after a Fourier expansion with four harmonics. Peak ejection rate was computed as the minimum negative peak before end-systole and peak filling rate as the maximum positive peak after end-systole on the first derivative of the left ventricular time-activity curve. Both peak ejection rate and peak filling rate were computed in the left ventricular counts/sec, normalized for the number of counts at end-diastole and expressed as end-diastolic volume (EDV)/sec. When normalized for end-diastolic volume, both peak ejection rate and peak filling rate are influenced directly by the magnitude of the ejection fraction (22). To minimize this effect, we also analyzed peak filling rate using two additional normalization methods: peak filling rate was expressed relative to left ventricular stroke volume per second (SV/sec) and as ratio of peak filling rate to peak ejection rate (23, 24). These two latter methods have the additional advantage of being background independent. Time-to-peak ejection rate was measured from the R wave, and time-to-peak filling rate was measured relative to end-systole (minimal volume on the time-activity curve).

Assays

Circulating GH and IGF-I (after ethanol extraction) levels were assayed by immunoassays using commercially available kits. In our laboratory, the normal IGF-I range in adults (20–40 yr and 40–70 yr old) was 110–494 and 65–320 µg/L.

Statistical analysis

The statistical analysis was performed by means of a package using ANOVA (SPSS, Inc., Cary, NC). The effects of age and disease on systolic and diastolic parameters were analyzed with the two-way ANOVA, considering the main effects of the independent variance, age (<40 vs. >40 yr) and acromegaly (patients vs. controls) and the interaction between these two variables. The significance was set at 5%. Post hoc analysis was performed by means of paired and unpaired t tests, applying the Bonferroni’s correction. In this case, the significance was set at 1%. Stepwise multiple linear regression was performed to evaluate the relative importance of age, disease duration, GH, and IGF-I on systolic and diastolic parameters. Data are reported as mean ± SEM.


    Results
 Top
 Abstract
 Introduction
 Subjects and Methods
 Results
 Discussion
 References
 
When divided for age, the patients had comparable circulating GH and IGF-I levels (Table 1Go).

The estimated duration of acromegaly was significantly longer in patients older than 40 yr than in those younger than 40 yr (Table 1Go). In controls, systolic blood pressure at rest was significantly increased, compared with younger ones (P < 0.01). The systolic blood pressure at peak exercise was significantly higher in elderly patients than in age-matched controls (P < 0.001). Similarly, the diastolic blood pressure at peak exercise was significantly increased in young patients, as compared with age-matched controls (P < 0.01). The day of the study, mild hypertension (diastolic blood pressure > 90 mm Hg) was occasionally found in 2 out of 18 patients less than 40 yr old (11.1%), in 5 out of 22 patients more than 40 yr old (22.7%), and in none of the controls; stable hypertension was excluded by serial blood pressure measurement during the subsequent follow-up. By contrast, heart rate at peak exercise was significantly higher in young (compared with elderly) patients and in young (compared with elderly) controls (P < 0.01), without any evidence of arrhythmia in both groups (data not shown). The left ventricular ejection fraction at rest was similar in both the 2 groups of patients and controls: in particular, the ejection fraction was normal (>50%) in all controls and in 38 out of 40 patients. The resting ejection fraction was 47% in 1 young patient and 46% in 1 elderly patient. By contrast, the left ventricular ejection fraction at peak exercise was markedly decreased in elderly patients, as compared with young patients (P < 0.001) and to age-matched controls (P < 0.001). The normal increase (>5% of basal value) of the ejection fraction at peak exercise was found in all controls and 11 patients (61.1%) less than 40 yr old, and in 12 out of 16 controls (75%) and only 1 out of 22 patients (4.5%) more than 40 yr old ({chi}2, 5.764; P < 0.01). The exercise-induced changes in the left ventricular ejection fraction were markedly different in young patients and controls, as compared with elderly patients and controls (Fig. 1Go). The peak rate of left ventricular filling was significantly decreased in elderly patients, as compared with young patients and age-matched controls, whether the peak filling rate was normalized to end-diastolic volume (P < 0.01) or stroke volume (P < 0.005) or expressed as the ratio of peak filling rate to peak ejection rate (P < 0.001). Young patients had the peak rate of left ventricular filling significantly higher than in age-matched controls, whether the peak filling rate was expressed as the ratio of peak filling rate to peak ejection rate (P < 0.001). Finally, the exercise duration was significantly lower in young and elderly patients than in age-matched controls (P < 0.001 and P < 0.01, respectively). The exercise capacity was significantly lower only in young patients, than in controls (P < 0.001).



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Figure 1. Exercise-induced change in left ventricular ejection fraction in acromegalic patients and in controls below and above 40 yr old.

 
In the patient group, the left ventricular ejection fraction response at peak exercise was significantly correlated with age (r = -0.33, P < 0.05, Fig. 2Go), estimated disease duration (r = -0.34, P < 0.05), exercise-induced changes of the left ventricular ejection fraction (r = 0.34, P < 0.05), and the peak rate of left ventricular filling, whether the peak filling rate was normalized to end-diastolic volume (r = 0.33, P < 0.05). Age and estimated disease duration (Fig. 3Go) were both significantly correlated with the peak rate of left ventricular filling, whether the peak filling rate was normalized to end-diastolic volume (r = 0.55, P < 0.001 and r = -0.49, P < 0.001, respectively), or stroke volume (r = 0.5, P < 0.001 and r = -0.57, P < 0.001, respectively), or expressed as the ratio of peak filling rate to peak ejection rate (r = 0.56, P < 0.0001 and r = -0.52, P < 0.001, respectively). In the control group, the left ventricular ejection fraction response at peak exercise was significantly correlated with the left ventricular ejection fraction response at rest (r = 0.54, P < 0.01), exercise-induced changes of the left ventricular ejection fraction (r = 0.57, P < 0.001), but neither with age nor with the peak rate of left ventricular filling, at all measurements. At the multiple regression analysis, disease duration was the strongest predictor of ejection fraction at peak exercise, whereas the patient’s age was the strongest predictor of the peak rate of the left ventricular filling. The results of the multiple regression analysis are shown in Table 2Go.



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Figure 2. Linear correlation analysis in patients (•) and controls ({circ}) between age and ejection fraction at rest (top) and at peak exercise (bottom).

 


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Figure 3. Linear correlation analysis in the whole patient group, between the estimated disease duration and peak rate of left ventricular filling (shown after logarithmic transformation), whether peak filling rate (PFR) was normalized to EDV/sec, or SV/sec, or expressed as the ratio of PFR to peak ejection rate (PFR/PER).

 

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Table 2. Results of the multiple linear regression analysis in acromegalic patients

 

    Discussion
 Top
 Abstract
 Introduction
 Subjects and Methods
 Results
 Discussion
 References
 
In acromegaly, despite a wide literature concerning the abnormalities of heart structure assessed by echocardiography (reviewed in Refs. 4, 13, 15, 16), data on cardiac function, and particularly on the diastolic function, are rather scant. In addition, the majority of the patients previously investigated were unselected and therefore presented other cardiovascular and metabolic disorders able to affect cardiac function per se. In previous studies performed in a small series of patients selected for the absence of coronary artery disease and diabetes mellitus, we demonstrated the presence of important alterations of systolic and diastolic function at rest, both of left and right ventricles, leading to a significant impairment of cardiac performance besides cardiac hypertrophy (25, 26). However, a consistent proportion of these patients (35%) had systemic hypertension, which could have worsened cardiac function independently from the excess of GH and IGF-I (25, 26). On the other hand, hypertension is present in approximately one-third to half of the patients, and it is rather difficult to provide a homogeneous series of untreated acromegalic patients who did not present other concomitant diseases that impair cardiac function per se. This is particularly relevant when dealing with elderly patients, who are at higher risk of developing heart failure. On the other hand, relevant physiological changes in the left ventricular function occur as part of the aging process in normal subjects, so that the rate and extent of left ventricular filling is reduced (18, 19). Cardiac function during life-span in acromegaly has never been investigated. This study was designed to further investigate cardiac function in acromegaly, evaluating the impact of patients’ age and disease duration on cardiac performance. The left ventricular systolic function, at rest and during physical exercise, and the left ventricular filling were studied by radionuclide angiography in a large series of rigorously selected patients with active acromegaly but without evidence of other complications capable of affecting heart function, and in a adequate sex- and age-matched control group. Being operator-independent, the radionuclide angiography was chosen mainly for the advantage of providing direct evaluation of ventricular function.

In the present study, we demonstrated that cardiac function is still preserved in young patients, less than 40 yr old, although being significantly reduced as compared with age-matched controls. The majority of patients (61.1%) and all controls of the young group had a normal ejection fraction at rest, with a normal response to exercise. By contrast, in patients more than 40 yr old, both systolic and diastolic function of the left ventricle were significantly impaired. None of them, except one, had a greater than 5% increase in the left ventricular ejection fraction after exercise, so that the response of the left ventricular ejection fraction to exercise was significantly associated with acromegaly ({chi}2, 7.936; P < 0.005). A significant impairment of left ventricular diastolic filling was observed in elderly patients, as compared with young patients and with age-matched controls. In the whole patient group, the estimated disease duration was significantly and directly correlated with age, but significantly and inversely correlated with left ventricular ejection fraction response at peak exercise and with peak rate of left ventricular filling, whether the peak filling rate was normalized to end-diastolic volume, or stroke volume, or expressed as the ratio of peak filling rate to peak ejection rate.

Patients’ age and disease duration were closely correlated, but from the multivariate analysis and the comparison with controls, it seemed that the estimated disease duration was the strongest predictor in determining the impaired cardiac performance in acromegaly. Thus, from the results of the present study, it emerged that the younger the age and the shorter the disease duration, the more frequently preserved the cardiac function. However, it was evident that cardiac performance was already impaired in young patients, who presented with a preserved diastolic function, when compared with age-matched healthy controls. These results seem to be relevant not only in understanding the pathophysiology of acromegalic cardiomyopathy but also in evaluating the cardiac effects of any treatment able to suppress circulating GH and IGF-I levels. In fact, although a significant decrease of left ventricular mass was described by echocardiography following octreotide administration (27, 28, 29), no significant improvement of left ventricular ejection fraction was observed by equilibrium radionuclide angiography (21). The lack of a significant improvement of systolic function following treatments able to suppress GH and IGF-I levels might be attributable to a different pretreatment cardiac performance in individual patients. In fact, a notable improvement was reported after octreotide treatment in patients with heart failure (30). It should be also considered that, when the effect of octreotide on cardiac performance was evaluated separately for patients achieving normalization of GH (<2.5 µg/L) and IGF-I and those who had not, a significant improvement in the response to exercise of the left ventricular ejection fraction was detected only in the former group (31). A significant increase in the ejection fraction at peak exercise was observed after 1 yr of octreotide treatment, either in young or in elderly patients achieving normalization of hormone levels, although elderly patients presented with a more severe impairment of systolic function at baseline (31).

In conclusion, the early impairment in cardiac performance indicates the necessity for a precocious diagnosis of acromegaly. A careful investigation of diastolic and systolic function, by equilibrium radionuclide angiography, should be included in the workup of acromegalic patients (32), because it can be useful to reveal abnormalities in cardiac performance to be monitored during different treatments.

Received June 15, 1998.

Revised November 30, 1998.

Revised January 28, 1999.

Accepted February 1, 1999.


    References
 Top
 Abstract
 Introduction
 Subjects and Methods
 Results
 Discussion
 References
 

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A. Colao, R. Baldelli, P. Marzullo, E. Ferretti, D. Ferone, P. Gargiulo, M. Petretta, G. Tamburrano, G. Lombardi, and A. Liuzzi
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