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A common co-morbiditymodulates disease expression and treatment efficacy in inherited cardiac sodiumchannelopathy

Authors :
Maarten P. van den Berg
Gerard A Marchal
Yuka Mizusawa
Arthur A.M. Wilde
Allard C. van der Wal
Roel van der Nagel
Jacques M.T. de Bakker
J. Peter van Tintelen
Michael W.T. Tanck
Connie R. Bezzina
Eline A. Nannenberg
Harold V.M. van Rijen
Luiz Belardinelli
John A. Jansen
Rianne Wolswinkel
Sridharan Rajamani
Ingeborg van der Made
Carol Ann Remme
Pieter G. Postema
Mathilde R. Rivaud
Esther E. Creemers
Toon A.B. van Veen
Cardiovascular Centre (CVC)
Graduate School
ACS - Heart failure & arrhythmias
Cardiology
ACS - Amsterdam Cardiovascular Sciences
Human Genetics
Epidemiology and Data Science
APH - Methodology
ACS - Pulmonary hypertension & thrombosis
ACS - Atherosclerosis & ischemic syndromes
Source :
European Heart Journal, 39(31), 2898. Oxford University Press, European Heart Journal, 39(31), 2898-2907. Oxford University Press, European heart journal, 39(31), 2898-2907. Oxford University Press
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Aims: Management of patients with inherited cardiac ion channelopathy is hindered by variability in disease severity and sudden cardiac death (SCD) risk. Here, we investigated the modulatory role of hypertrophy on arrhythmia and SCD risk in sodium channelopathy.Methods and results: Follow-up data was collected from 164 individuals positive for the SCN5A-1795insD founder mutation and 247 mutation-negative relatives. A total of 38 (obligate) mutation-positive patients died suddenly or suffered life-threatening ventricular arrhythmia. Of these, 18 were aged >40 years, a high proportion of which had a clinical diagnosis of hypertension and/or cardiac hypertrophy. While pacemaker implantation was highly protective in preventing bradycardia-related SCD in young mutation-positive patients, seven of them aged >40 experienced life-threatening arrhythmic events despite pacemaker treatment. Of these, six had a diagnosis of hypertension/hypertrophy, pointing to a modulatory role of this co-morbidity. Induction of hypertrophy in adult mice carrying the homologous mutation (Scn5a1798insD/+) caused SCD and excessive conduction disturbances, confirming a modulatory effect of hypertrophy in the setting of the mutation. The deleterious effects of the interaction between hypertrophy and the mutation were prevented by genetically impairing the pro-hypertrophic response and by pharmacological inhibition of the enhanced late sodium current associated with the mutation.Conclusion: This study provides the first evidence for a modulatory effect of co-existing cardiac hypertrophy on arrhythmia risk and treatment efficacy in inherited sodium channelopathy. Our findings emphasize the need for continued assessment and rigorous treatment of this co-morbidity in SCN5A mutation-positive individuals.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0195668X
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
European Heart Journal, 39(31), 2898. Oxford University Press, European Heart Journal, 39(31), 2898-2907. Oxford University Press, European heart journal, 39(31), 2898-2907. Oxford University Press
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2c822eb9806680fcb92c11756e0960ca