These tools will no longer be maintained as of December 31, 2024. Archived website can be found here. PubMed4Hh GitHub repository can be found here. Contact NLM Customer Service if you have questions.
Pubmed for Handhelds
PUBMED FOR HANDHELDS
Search MEDLINE/PubMed
Title: Detection of Left Ventricular Hypertrophy Using Bayesian Additive Regression Trees: The MESA. Author: Sparapani R, Dabbouseh NM, Gutterman D, Zhang J, Chen H, Bluemke DA, Lima JAC, Burke GL, Soliman EZ. Journal: J Am Heart Assoc; 2019 Mar 05; 8(5):e009959. PubMed ID: 30827132. Abstract: Background We developed a new left ventricular hypertrophy ( LVH ) criterion using a machine-learning technique called Bayesian Additive Regression Trees ( BART ). Methods and Results This analysis included 4714 participants from MESA (Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis) free of clinically apparent cardiovascular disease at enrollment. We used BART to predict LV mass from ECG and participant characteristics using cardiac magnetic resonance imaging as the standard. Participants were randomly divided into a training set (n=3774) and a validation set (n=940). We compared the diagnostic/prognostic performance of our new BART - LVH criteria with traditional ECG - LVH criteria and cardiac magnetic resonance imaging- LVH . In the validation set, BART - LVH showed the highest sensitivity (29.0%; 95% CI , 18.3%-39.7%), followed by Sokolow-Lyon- LVH (21.7%; 95% CI , 12.0%-31.5%), Peguero-Lo Presti (14.5%; 95% CI , 6.2%-22.8%), Cornell voltage product (10.1%; 95% CI , 3.0%-17.3%), and Cornell voltage (5.8%; 95% CI , 0.3%-11.3%). The specificity was >93% for all criteria. During a median follow-up of 12.3 years, 591 deaths, 492 cardiovascular disease events, and 332 coronary heart disease events were observed. In adjusted Cox models, both BART - LVH and cardiac magnetic resonance imaging- LVH were associated with mortality (hazard ratio [95% CI ], 1.88 [1.45-2.44] and 2.21 [1.74-2.81], respectively), cardiovascular disease events (hazard ratio [95% CI ], 1.46 [1.08-1.98] and 1.91 [1.46-2.51], respectively), and coronary heart disease events (hazard ratio [95% CI ], 1.72 [1.20-2.47] and 1.96 [1.41-2.73], respectively). These associations were stronger than associations observed with traditional ECG - LVH criteria. Conclusions Our new BART - LVH criteria have superior diagnostic/prognostic ability to traditional ECG - LVH criteria and similar performance to cardiac magnetic resonance imaging- LVH for predicting events.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]