SPIROMICS HF: Rationale, Design, and Reproducibility of Measures. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • BACKGROUND: Although chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and heart failure with preserved ejection fraction often coexist with overlapping clinical features, they are usually studied separately. The SPIROMICS HF (Subpopulations and Intermediate Outcome Measures in COPD and Heart Failure Study) is testing hypotheses that new computed tomography emphysema subtypes are associated with specific cardiovascular phenotypes (eg, cor pulmonale, cor pulmonale parvus), common airway branch variants are associated with right heart dysfunction, and symptomatic tobacco-exposed people with preserved spirometry have signs of increased left ventricular afterload. METHODS: SPIROMICS is a multicenter observational study of COPD with extensive pulmonary phenotyping of participants with ≥20 pack-years smoking and nonsmoking controls. COPD and COPD severity were defined by standard spirometric criteria and symptomatic tobacco-exposed people with preserved spirometry by ≥20 pack-years, normal spirometry, and COPD Assessment Test score >10. SPIROMICS HF selected all participants in SPIROMICS visit 5 at major sites. Its comprehensive speckle-tracking echocardiography, which included physiological perturbations of leg raise and low-intensity exercise, was harmonized prospectively with the Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis Early Heart Failure and HeartSHARE studies. The cardiopulmonary magnetic resonance imaging protocol with gadolinium administration included myocardial fibrosis sequences, pulmonary angiography, time-resolved 3-dimensional cine magnetic resonance imaging for 4-dimensional flow of venous return, and metronome-paced tachypnea to induce dynamic hyperinflation. Coronary artery calcium was assessed on computed tomography scans. The Kansas City Cardiomyopathy Questionnaire was administered. RESULTS: Of the final sample of 753 participants, 57% had COPD (15% mild, 27% moderate, and 15% severe), 18% had symptomatic tobacco-exposed people with preserved spirometry, 16% were smoking controls, and 8% were nonsmoking controls. Reproducibility of the main measures from speckle-tracking echocardiography (intraclass correlation coefficient, 0.83-0.99), exercise echocardiography (intraclass correlation coefficient, 0.71-0.99) and magnetic resonance imaging (intraclass correlation coefficient, 0.57-0.99) were good-to-excellent, including in severe COPD. CONCLUSIONS: SPIROMICS HF aims to characterize and understand cardiopulmonary interactions in COPD and COPD-related phenotypes to inform targeted treatments for combined cardiopulmonary failure.

authors

  • Barr, R Graham
  • Lima, Joao A C
  • Prince, Martin
  • Ambale Venkatesh, Bharath
  • Abraham, Theodore
  • Agarwal, Prachi P
  • Arora, Garima
  • Balasubramanian, Aparna
  • Barjaktarevic, Igor
  • Bello, Natalie A
  • Bluemke, David A
  • Budoff, Matthew J
  • Carr, James C
  • Chaudhuri, Dipayan
  • Cooper, Christopher B
  • Couper, David
  • Finn, J Paul
  • Freed, Benjamin H
  • Han, MeiLan K
  • Hansel, Nadia N
  • Hsu, Jeffrey J
  • Kitzman, Dalane W
  • Krishnan, Jerry A
  • LaBounty, Troy M
  • Lee, Yoo Jin
  • Liu, Jing
  • Lloyd, Steven G
  • Markl, Michael
  • Mukherjee, Monica
  • Beussink-Nelson, Lauren
  • Ohar, Jill
  • Ortega, Victor E
  • Paine, Robert
  • Peters, Stephen P
  • Schroeder, Joyce D
  • Shen, Wei
  • Shepshelovich, Daniel
  • Sun, Yifei
  • Vogel-Claussen, Jens
  • Watson, Karol E
  • Wells, J Michael
  • Wieben, Oliver
  • Woodruff, Prescott G
  • Shah, Sanjiv J

publication date

  • November 5, 2025

Identity

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1161/CIRCHEARTFAILURE.125.012833

PubMed ID

  • 41190426