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Clinical genetics and outcome of left ventricular non-compaction cardiomyopathy.

Authors :
Sedaghat-Hamedani, Farbod
Haas, Jan
Feng Zhu
Geier, Christian
Kayvanpour, Elham
Liss, Martin
Alan Lai
Frese, Karen
Pribe-Wolferts, Regina
Amr, Ali
Tian Li, Daniel
Samani, Omid Shirvani
Carstensen, Avisha
Bordalo, Diana Martins
Müller, Marion
Fischer, Christine
Jing Shao
Jing Wang
Ming Nie
Li Yuan
Source :
European Heart Journal; 12/7/2017, Vol. 38 Issue 46, p3449-3460, 12p, 1 Diagram, 1 Chart, 5 Graphs
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Aims In this study, we aimed to clinically and genetically characterize LVNC patients and investigate the prevalence of variants in known and novel LVNC disease genes. Introduction Left ventricular non-compaction cardiomyopathy (LVNC) is an increasingly recognized cause of heart failure, arrhythmia, thromboembolism, and sudden cardiac death. We sought here to dissect its genetic causes, phenotypic presentation and outcome. Methods and results In our registry with follow-up of in the median 61 months, we analysed 95 LVNC patients (68 unrelated index patients and 27 affected relatives; definite familial LVNC = 23.5%) by cardiac phenotyping, molecular biomarkers and exome sequencing. Cardiovascular events were significantly more frequent in LVNC patients compared with an age-matched group of patients with non-ischaemic dilated cardiomyopathy (hazard ratio = 2.481, P = 0.002). Stringent genetic classification according to ACMG guidelines revealed that TTN, LMNA, and MYBPC3 are the most prevalent disease genes (13 patients are carrying a pathogenic truncating TTN variant, odds ratio = 40.7, Confidence interval = 21.6-76.6, P < 0.0001, percent spliced in 76-100%). We also identified novel candidate genes for LVNC. For RBM20, we were able to perform detailed familial, molecular and functional studies. We show that the novel variant p.R634L in the RS domain of RBM20 co-segregates with LVNC, leading to titin mis-splicing as revealed by RNA sequencing of heart tissue in mutation carriers, protein analysis, and functional splice-reporter assays. Conclusion Our data demonstrate that the clinical course of symptomatic LVNC can be severe. The identified pathogenic variants and distribution of disease genes--a titin-related pathomechanism is found in every fourth patient--should be considered in genetic counselling of patients. Pathogenic variants in the nuclear proteins Lamin A/C and RBM20 were associated with worse outcome. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0195668X
Volume :
38
Issue :
46
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
European Heart Journal
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
126740721
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/eurheartj/ehx545