By Joseph A. Hill, M.D., Ph.D.
Chief
of Cardiology
UT Southwestern Cardiology was a powerful
presence at the 2018 American Heart Association Scientific Sessions in Chicago.
A storm of tweets from many of our meeting participants highlighted exciting
events during the congress. Through our leadership of Circulation, we published
21 papers simultaneous with their presentation at the meeting.
On Sunday, Nov. 11, we held the third
Circulation Symposium orchestrated by our UT Southwestern-based team of
editors, and it was a huge success! We highlighted some of the most impactful
papers published in our journal this past year, hosted a robust discussion of
cutting-edge science, and featured “household name” luminaries from around the
world who publish in Circulation. One happy side benefit is that we showcased
the incredible talent, dedication, and “sweat equity” commitment of our editorial
team and its outstanding diversity across subspecialty focus and science
platform, gender, career stage, and geography.
A wide spectrum of science was presented,
reflective of the broad swath of cardiovascular content published in
Circulation. Dr. Mandeep Mehra (Brigham and Women’s Hospital) discussed his
work analyzing the cost-effectiveness of the newest LVAD, the HeartMate 3
device; we’re getting close to levels of cost-effectiveness deemed acceptable
across medicine. Dr. Nicholas Mills (University of Edinburgh) discussed his
study focusing on the utility of high-sensitivity cardiac troponin
measurements, which now arguably supersede numerous risk-estimating algorithms
in the evaluation of patients presenting to the Emergency Department with chest
discomfort. Dr. Rahul Deo (Brigham and Women’s Hospital) discussed the rapidly
emerging role of artificial intelligence and machine learning in cardiovascular
medicine, focusing specifically on echocardiography. Dr. Filippo Crea
(Universitá Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, Rome) discussed an impactful review
article he wrote with other international thought leaders on the role of
microvascular dysfunction in numerous types of cardiovascular disease; his
paper was the most “tweeted” item in the journal this past year!