AUTHOR=Cai Yu , Wu Chun , Zhu Shuangshuang , Zhang Yanting , Xie Yuji , Tan Yuting , Yan Xiaojun , Huang Lei , Zhang Yichan , Zhang Yiwei , Li Yuman , Yang Yali , Wang Jing , Sun Zhenxing , Zhang Li , Xie Mingxing TITLE=Feasibility, reproducibility, and prognostic value of a fully automated measurement of left ventricular longitudinal strain in heart transplant recipients JOURNAL=Frontiers in Cardiovascular Medicine VOLUME=Volume 12 - 2025 YEAR=2025 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/cardiovascular-medicine/articles/10.3389/fcvm.2025.1499306 DOI=10.3389/fcvm.2025.1499306 ISSN=2297-055X ABSTRACT=AimsLeft ventricular longitudinal strain (LVGLS) is a robust parameter for predicting adverse events in patients who have undergone a heart transplant (HTx). However, measuring LVGLS is time-consuming and operator-dependent. Thus, we investigated whether automated strain software for LVGLS measurement has feasibility, reproducibility, and prognostic value in patients who underwent an HTx.MethodsIn total, 286 patients who had undergone heart transplants and comprehensive echocardiography were included. LVGLS was obtained from the same apical images by three different methods, namely, fully automated LVGLS measurement (Auto-Strain), semiautomated LVGLS measurement (automated with manual editing), and manual LVGLS measurement. Patients were followed up and the primary composite endpoint (defined as all-cause death and rejection) was recorded.ResultsFully automated measurements were feasible in 277 subjects (96.8%). Analysis times for the automated LVGLS (27.7 ± 2.8 s/patient) and the semiautomated LVGLS measurement methods (237.4 ± 41.0 s/patient) were shorter than for the manual LVGLS measurement method (440.4 ± 65 s/patient). The semiautomated LVGLS measurement method showed a stronger correlation with the manual LVGLS measurement method than the automated LVGLS measurement method (r = 0.854 vs. 0.654, P < 0.001), and there were smaller disagreements between the semiautomated LVGLS and manual LVGLS measurement methods [bias: 0.79, limits of agreement (LOA): 2.78] than between the automated LVGLS and manual LVGLS measurement methods (bias: 2.72, LOA: 3.98). During a median follow-up of 51 months (35.0–66.5 months), 35 patients experienced endpoint events. The automated LVGLS measurement method can detect abnormal systolic function and predict adverse events in patients who have undergone an HTx, while the detection and prediction ability of semiautomated the LVGLS measurement method was greater.ConclusionsFully automated LVGLS measurement enables rapid and reproducible assessment of graft function in patients who have undergone an HTx. Furthermore, the automated LVGLS measurement method detected abnormal systolic function and predicted adverse events, while the semiautomated LVGLS measurement method performed better in these aspects.