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Time-to-first appropriate shock in patients implanted prophylactically with an implantable cardioverter-defibrillator: data from the Survey on Arrhythmic Events in BRUgada Syndrome (SABRUS)

Milman, Anat; Hochstadt, Aviram; Andorin, Antoine; Gourraud, Jean-Baptiste; Sacher, Frederic; Mabo, Philippe; Kim, Sung-Hwan; Conte, Giulio; Arbelo, Elena; Kamakura, Tsukasa; Aiba, Takeshi; Napolitano, Carlo; Giustetto, Carla; Denjoy, Isabelle; Juang, Jimmy J M; Maeda, Shingo; Takahashi, Yoshihide; Leshem, Eran; Michowitz, Yoav; Rahkovich, Michael; Jespersen, Camilla H; Wijeyeratne, Yanushi D; Champagne, Jean; Calo, Leonardo; Huang, Zhengrong; Mizusawa, Yuka; Postema, Pieter G; Brugada, Ramon; Wilde, Arthur A M; Yan, Gan-Xin; Behr, Elijah R; Tfelt-Hansen, Jacob; Hirao, Kenzo; Veltmann, Christian; Leenhardt, Antoine; Corrado, Domenico; Gaita, Fiorenzo; Priori, Silvia G; Kusano, Kengo F; Takagi, Masahiko; Delise, Pietro; Brugada, Josep; Brugada, Pedro; Nam, Gi-Byoung; Probst, Vincent; Belhassen, Bernard
Aims/UNASSIGNED:Data on predictors of time-to-first appropriate implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD) therapy in patients with Brugada Syndrome (BrS) and prophylactically implanted ICD's are scarce. Methods and results/UNASSIGNED:SABRUS (Survey on Arrhythmic Events in BRUgada Syndrome) is an international survey on 678 BrS patients who experienced arrhythmic event (AE) including 252 patients in whom AE occurred after prophylactic ICD implantation. Analysis was performed on time-to-first appropriate ICD discharge regarding patients' characteristics. Multivariate logistic regression models were utilized to identify which parameters predicted time to arrhythmia ≤5 years. The median time-to-first appropriate ICD therapy was 24.8 ± 2.8 months. A shorter time was observed in patients from Asian ethnicity (P < 0.05), those with syncope (P = 0.001), and those with Class IIa indication for ICD (P = 0.001). A longer time was associated with a positive family history of sudden cardiac death (P < 0.05). Multivariate Cox regression revealed shorter time-to-ICD therapy in patients with syncope [odds ratio (OR) 1.65, P = 0.001]. In 193 patients (76.6%), therapy was delivered during the first 5 years. Factors associated with this time were syncope (OR 0.36, P = 0.001), spontaneous Type 1 Brugada electrocardiogram (ECG) (OR 0.5, P < 0.05), and Class IIa indication (OR 0.38, P < 0.01) as opposed to Class IIb (OR 2.41, P < 0.01). A near-significant trend for female gender was also noted (OR 0.13, P = 0.052). Two score models for prediction of <5 years to shock were built. Conclusion/UNASSIGNED:First appropriate therapy in BrS patients with prophylactic ICD's occurred during the first 5 years in 76.6% of patients. Syncope and spontaneous Type 1 Brugada ECG correlated with a shorter time to ICD therapy.
PMID: 30590530
ISSN: 1532-2092
CID: 3680632

Unexpected Risk Profile of a Large Pediatric Population With Brugada Syndrome [Letter]

Mazzanti, Andrea; Ovics, Paz; Shauer, Ayelet; Mameli, Stefano; Marino, Maira; Bloise, Raffaella; Monteforte, Nicola; Raimondo, Cristina; Maltret, Alice; Napolitano, Carlo; Bagnardi, Vincenzo; Priori, Silvia G
PMID: 30975305
ISSN: 1558-3597
CID: 4095732

International Triadin Knockout Syndrome Registry

Clemens, Daniel J; Tester, David J; Giudicessi, John R; Bos, J Martijn; Rohatgi, Ram K; Abrams, Dominic J; Balaji, Seshadri; Crotti, Lia; Faure, Julien; Napolitano, Carlo; Priori, Silvia G; Probst, Vincent; Rooryck-Thambo, Caroline; Roux-Buisson, Nathalie; Sacher, Frederic; Schwartz, Peter J; Silka, Michael J; Walsh, Mark A; Ackerman, Michael J
BACKGROUND:Triadin knockout syndrome (TKOS) is a rare, inherited arrhythmia syndrome caused by recessive null mutations in TRDN-encoded cardiac triadin. Based previously on 5 triadin null patients, TKOS has been characterized by extensive T-wave inversions, transient QT prolongation, and severe disease expression of exercise-induced cardiac arrest in early childhood refractory to conventional therapy. METHODS:We have established the International Triadin Knockout Syndrome Registry to include patients who have genetically proven homozygous/compound heterozygous TRDN null mutations. Clinical/genetic data were collected using an online survey generated through REDCap. RESULTS:Currently, the International Triadin Knockout Syndrome Registry includes 21 patients (11 males, average age of 18 years) from 16 families. Twenty patients (95%) presented with either cardiac arrest (15, 71%) or syncope (5, 24%) at an average age of 3 years. Mild skeletal myopathy/proximal muscle weakness was noted in 6 (29%) patients. Of the 19 surviving patients, 16 (84%) exhibit T-wave inversions, and 10 (53%) have transient QT prolongation > 480 ms. Eight of 9 patients had ventricular ectopy on exercise stress testing. Thirteen (68%) patients have received implantable defibrillators. Despite various treatment strategies, 14 (74%) patients have had recurrent breakthrough cardiac events. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:TKOS is a potentially lethal disease characterized by T-wave inversions in the precordial leads, transient QT prolongation in some, and recurrent ventricular arrhythmias at a young age despite aggressive treatment. Patients displaying this phenotype should undergo TRDN genetic testing as TKOS may be a cause for otherwise unexplained cardiac arrest in young children. As gene therapy advances, enrollment into the International Triadin Knockout Syndrome Registry is encouraged to better understand TKOS and to ready a well-characterized cohort for future TRDN gene therapy trials.
PMID: 30649896
ISSN: 2574-8300
CID: 3682382

Gender Differences in Patients with Brugada Syndrome and Arrhythmic Events: Data from a Survey on Arrhythmic Events in 678 Patients

Milman, Anat; Gourraud, Jean-Baptiste; Andorin, Antoine; Postema, Pieter G; Sacher, Frederic; Mabo, Philippe; Conte, Giulio; Giustetto, Carla; Sarquella-Brugada, Georgia; Hochstadt, Aviram; Kim, Sung-Hwan; Juang, Jimmy Jm; Maeda, Shingo; Takahashi, Yoshihide; Kamakura, Tsukasa; Aiba, Takeshi; Leshem, Eran; Michowitz, Yoav; Rahkovich, Michael; Mizusawa, Yuka; Arbelo, Elena; Huang, Zhengrong; Denjoy, Isabelle; Wijeyeratne, Yanushi D; Napolitano, Carlo; Brugada, Ramon; Casado-Arroyo, Ruben; Champagne, Jean; Calo, Leonardo; Tfelt-Hansen, Jacob; Priori, Silvia G; Takagi, Masahiko; Veltmann, Christian; Delise, Pietro; Corrado, Domenico; Behr, Elijah R; Gaita, Fiorenzo; Yan, Gan-Xin; Brugada, Josep; Leenhardt, Antoine; Wilde, Arthur A M; Brugada, Pedro; Kusano, Kengo F; Hirao, Kenzo; Nam, Gi-Byoung; Probst, Vincent; Belhassen, Bernard
BACKGROUND:There is limited information on gender differences in patients with Brugada syndrome (BrS) who experienced arrhythmic events (AEs). OBJECTIVES/OBJECTIVE:To compare clinical, electrocardiographic (ECG), electrophysiologic (EP) and genetic characteristics between males and females in BrS-patients with their first AE. METHODS:The multicenter Survey on AE in BrS (SABRUS) collected data on first AE in 678 BrS-patients including 619 (91.3%) males and 59 (8.7%) females aged 0.27 to 84 (mean 42.5±14.1) years at the time of AE. RESULTS:After excluding pediatric patients, females were older than males (49.5±14.4 vs. 43±12.7 years, respectively, P=0.001). Higher proportions of females were observed in the pediatric and elderly populations. In Asians, male/female ratio of AE was ≈9-fold higher compared to Caucasians. Spontaneous type 1 BrS-ECG was associated with earlier onset of AE in pediatric females. A similar prevalence (≈65%) of spontaneous type 1 BrS-ECG was present in males and females above age of 60 years. Females less frequently showed a spontaneous type-1 BrS-ECG (31% vs. 59%, P<0.001) or arrhythmia-inducibility at EP study (34% vs. 64%, P<0.001). An SCN5A mutation was more frequently found in females (47.6% vs. 27.8% in males, P=0.007). CONCLUSIONS:This study confirms that female BrS-patients are much rarer, display less type 1 Brugada-ECG and exhibit lower inducibility rates than males. It shows for the first time that BrS females with AE have higher SCN5A mutation rates as well as the relationship between gender vs. age at onset of AE and ethnicity.
PMID: 29908370
ISSN: 1556-3871
CID: 3167482

Fever-related arrhythmic events in the multicenter Survey on Arrhythmic Events in Brugada Syndrome

Michowitz, Yoav; Milman, Anat; Sarquella-Brugada, Georgia; Andorin, Antoine; Champagne, Jean; Postema, Pieter G; Casado-Arroyo, Ruben; Leshem, Eran; Juang, Jimmy J M; Giustetto, Carla; Tfelt-Hansen, Jacob; Wijeyeratne, Yanushi D; Veltmann, Christian; Corrado, Domenico; Kim, Sung-Hwan; Delise, Pietro; Maeda, Shingo; Gourraud, Jean-Baptiste; Sacher, Frederic; Mabo, Philippe; Takahashi, Yoshihide; Kamakura, Tsukasa; Aiba, Takeshi; Conte, Giulio; Hochstadt, Aviram; Mizusawa, Yuka; Rahkovich, Michael; Arbelo, Elena; Huang, Zhengrong; Denjoy, Isabelle; Napolitano, Carlo; Brugada, Ramon; Calo, Leonardo; Priori, Silvia G; Takagi, Masahiko; Behr, Elijah R; Gaita, Fiorenzo; Yan, Gan-Xin; Brugada, Josep; Leenhardt, Antoine; Wilde, Arthur A M; Brugada, Pedro; Kusano, Kengo F; Hirao, Kenzo; Nam, Gi-Byoung; Probst, Vincent; Belhassen, Bernard
BACKGROUND:The literature on fever-related arrhythmic events (AE) in Brugada syndrome (BrS) is currently limited to few case reports and small series. OBJECTIVE:The present study aimed to describe the characteristics of fever-related AE in a large cohort of patients with BrS. METHODS:The Survey on Arrhythmic Events in Brugada Syndrome is a multicenter study on 678 patients with BrS with first AE documented at the time of aborted cardiac arrest (n = 426) or after prophylactic implantable cardioverter-defibrillator implantation (n = 252). RESULTS:In 35 of 588 patients (6%) with available information, the AE occurred during a febrile illness. Most of the 35 patients were male (80%), Caucasian (83%), and proband (70%). The mean age at the time of AE was 29 ± 24 years (range 0.3-76 years). Most patients (80%) presented with aborted cardiac arrest and 6 (17%) with arrhythmic storm. Family history of sudden death, history of syncope, and spontaneous type 1 Brugada electrocardiogram were noted in 17%, 40%, and 66% of patients, respectively. Ventricular fibrillation was induced at electrophysiology study in 9 of 19 patients (47%). An SCN5A mutation was found in 14 of 28 patients (50%). The highest proportion of fever-related AE was observed in the pediatric population (age <16 years), with a disproportionally higher event rate in the very young (age 0-5 years) (65%). Males were involved in all age groups and females only in the pediatric and elderly groups. Fever-related AE affected 17 Caucasians aged <24 years, but no Asians aged <24 years. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:The risk of fever-related AE in BrS markedly varies according to age group, sex, and ethnicity. Taking these factors into account could help the clinical management of patients with BrS with fever.
PMID: 29649615
ISSN: 1556-3871
CID: 3058852

J-Wave Syndromes: Electrocardiographic and Clinical Aspects

Priori, Silvia G; Napolitano, Carlo
Early repolarization, Brugada syndrome, and pathologic J waves have been described for decades, but only recently experimental and clinical data have allowed reconciliation of Brugada and Early Repolarization under the common definition of J-wave syndromes. The concept was derived from studies showing, in both conditions, the presence of transmural dispersion of repolarization, localized conduction abnormalities, and abnormal transition between QRS and ST segment on electrocardiogram. Although several clinical studies have addressed the clinical presentation and epidemiology of J-wave syndromes, relevant knowledge gaps exist. Incomplete pathophysiologic understanding and uncertain electrocardiographic definitions limit effective risk stratification. Here, we review the current knowledge and recommendations for diagnosis and clinical management of these arrhythmogenic disorders.
PMID: 29784488
ISSN: 1877-9190
CID: 3165302

Profile of patients with Brugada syndrome presenting with their first documented arrhythmic event: Data from the Survey on Arrhythmic Events in BRUgada Syndrome

Milman, Anat; Andorin, Antoine; Gourraud, Jean-Baptiste; Postema, Pieter G; Sacher, Frederic; Mabo, Philippe; Kim, Sung-Hwan; Juang, Jimmy J M; Maeda, Shingo; Takahashi, Yoshihide; Kamakura, Tsukasa; Aiba, Takeshi; Conte, Giulio; Sarquella-Brugada, Georgia; Leshem, Eran; Rahkovich, Michael; Hochstadt, Aviram; Mizusawa, Yuka; Arbelo, Elena; Huang, Zhengrong; Denjoy, Isabelle; Giustetto, Carla; Wijeyeratne, Yanushi D; Napolitano, Carlo; Michowitz, Yoav; Brugada, Ramon; Casado-Arroyo, Ruben; Champagne, Jean; Calo, Leonardo; Tfelt-Hansen, Jacob; Priori, Silvia G; Takagi, Masahiko; Veltmann, Christian; Delise, Pietro; Corrado, Domenico; Behr, Elijah R; Gaita, Fiorenzo; Yan, Gan-Xin; Brugada, Josep; Leenhardt, Antoine; Wilde, Arthur A M; Brugada, Pedro; Kusano, Kengo F; Hirao, Kenzo; Nam, Gi-Byoung; Probst, Vincent; Belhassen, Bernard
BACKGROUND:Detailed information on the profile of patients with Brugada syndrome (BrS) presenting their first arrhythmic event (AE) after prophylactic implantation of an implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD) is limited. OBJECTIVES/OBJECTIVE:The objectives of this study were (1) to compare clinical, electrocardiographic, electrophysiological, and genetic profiles of patients who exhibited their first documented AE as aborted cardiac arrest (group A) with profiles of those in whom the AE was documented after prophylactic ICD implantation (group B) and (2) to characterize group B patients' profile using the class II indications for ICD implantation established by HRS/EHRA/APHRS expert consensus statement in 2013. METHODS:A survey of 23 centers from 10 Western and 4 Asian countries enabled data collection of 678 patients with BrS who exhibited their AE (group A, n = 426; group B, n = 252). RESULTS:The first AE occurred in group B patients 6.7 years later than in group A (mean age 46.1 ± 13.3 years vs 39.4 ± 15.1 years; P < .001). Group B patients had a higher incidence of family history of sudden cardiac death and SCN5A mutations. Of the 252 group B patients, 189 (75%) complied with the HRS/EHRA/APHRS indications whereas the remaining 63 (25%) did not. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:Patients with BrS with the first AE documented after prophylactic ICD implantation exhibited their AE at a later age with a higher incidence of positive family history of sudden cardiac death and SCN5A mutations as compared with those presenting with aborted cardiac arrest. Only 75% of patients who exhibited an AE after receiving a prophylactic ICD complied with the 2013 class II indications, suggesting that efforts are still required for improving risk stratification.
PMID: 29325976
ISSN: 1556-3871
CID: 2988012

Genetic risk stratification in cardiac arrhythmias

Napolitano, Carlo; Mazzanti, Andrea; Priori, Silvia G
PURPOSE OF REVIEW/OBJECTIVE:The current article provides a concise summary of the possibilities and limitations of genotype-based risk stratification of cardiac arrhythmias. We will outline the most important findings of the recent years in the light of their chronological and conceptual development. RECENT FINDINGS/RESULTS:Genotype-phenotype association studies in families with single-gene disorders as well as in the general population led to the discovery of several DNA variants significantly associated with the risk of sudden death or life-threatening arrhythmias. In genetic (monogenic) diseases, the disease-causing mutations modulate the risk of events and response to antiarrhythmic therapy according to the specific gene involved, to their position of the mutation and to their functional effects. These causal relationships have been quite well characterized in the case of long QT syndrome but are still less defined in the case of other inherited conditions. Quantitatively, the risk associated with a single genetic variant is large for DNA variants that cause monogenic inherited arrhythmias. Much different is the case of more common variants associated with the risk of arrhythmias in the general population as they are generally associated with a small effect size. SUMMARY/CONCLUSIONS:Genetic profiling identifies arrhythmogenic risk even if a complete picture allowing high-granularity risk stratification is yet to come.
PMID: 29624510
ISSN: 1531-7080
CID: 3058322

Interplay Between Genetic Substrate, QTc Duration, and Arrhythmia Risk in Patients With Long QT Syndrome

Mazzanti, Andrea; Maragna, Riccardo; Vacanti, Gaetano; Monteforte, Nicola; Bloise, Raffaella; Marino, Maira; Braghieri, Lorenzo; Gambelli, Patrick; Memmi, Mirella; Pagan, Eleonora; Morini, Massimo; Malovini, Alberto; Ortiz, Martin; Sacilotto, Luciana; Bellazzi, Riccardo; Monserrat, Lorenzo; Napolitano, Carlo; Bagnardi, Vincenzo; Priori, Silvia G
BACKGROUND:Long QT syndrome (LQTS) is a common inheritable arrhythmogenic disorder, often secondary to mutations in the KCNQ1, KCNH2, and SCN5A genes. The disease is characterized by a prolonged ventricular repolarization (QTc interval) that confers susceptibility to life-threatening arrhythmic events (LAEs). OBJECTIVES/OBJECTIVE:This study sought to create an evidence-based risk stratification scheme to personalize the quantification of the arrhythmic risk in patients with LQTS. METHODS:Data from 1,710 patients with LQTS followed up for a median of 7.1 years (interquartile range [IQR]: 2.7 to 13.4 years) were analyzed to estimate the 5-year risk of LAEs based on QTc duration and genotype and to assess the antiarrhythmic efficacy of beta-blockers. RESULTS:The relationship between QTc duration and risk of events was investigated by comparison of linear and cubic spline models, and the linear model provided the best fit. The 5-year risk of LAEs while patients were off therapy was then calculated in a multivariable Cox model with QTc and genotype considered as independent factors. The estimated risk of LAEs increased by 15% for every 10-ms increment of QTc duration for all genotypes. Intergenotype comparison showed that the risk for patients with LQT2 and LQT3 increased by 130% and 157% at any QTc duration versus patients with LQT1. Analysis of response to beta-blockers showed that only nadolol reduced the arrhythmic risk in all genotypes significantly compared with no therapy (hazard ratio: 0.38; 95% confidence interval: 0.15 to 0.93; p = 0.03). CONCLUSIONS:The study provides an estimator of risk of LAEs in LQTS that allows a granular estimate of 5-year arrhythmic risk and demonstrate the superiority of nadolol in reducing the risk of LAEs in LQTS.
PMID: 29650123
ISSN: 1558-3597
CID: 3058882

Information extraction from Italian medical reports: An ontology-driven approach

Viani, Natalia; Larizza, Cristiana; Tibollo, Valentina; Napolitano, Carlo; Priori, Silvia G; Bellazzi, Riccardo; Sacchi, Lucia
OBJECTIVE:In this work, we propose an ontology-driven approach to identify events and their attributes from episodes of care included in medical reports written in Italian. For this language, shared resources for clinical information extraction are not easily accessible. MATERIALS AND METHODS/METHODS:The corpus considered in this work includes 5432 non-annotated medical reports belonging to patients with rare arrhythmias. To guide the information extraction process, we built a domain-specific ontology that includes the events and the attributes to be extracted, with related regular expressions. The ontology and the annotation system were constructed on a development set, while the performance was evaluated on an independent test set. As a gold standard, we considered a manually curated hospital database named TRIAD, which stores most of the information written in reports. RESULTS:The proposed approach performs well on the considered Italian medical corpus, with a percentage of correct annotations above 90% for most considered clinical events. We also assessed the possibility to adapt the system to the analysis of another language (i.e., English), with promising results. DISCUSSION AND CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:Our annotation system relies on a domain ontology to extract and link information in clinical text. We developed an ontology that can be easily enriched and translated, and the system performs well on the considered task. In the future, it could be successfully used to automatically populate the TRIAD database.
PMID: 29425625
ISSN: 1872-8243
CID: 2989992