Latest statements from European and American societies recommend to rule out viral presence in endomyocardial biopsy (EMB) via polymerase chain reaction (PCR) analysis before starting ...immunosuppression or immunomodulation in acute lymphocytic myocarditis presenting with life‐threatening scenarios. However, recommendations in myocarditis are mostly based on heterogeneous studies enrolling patients with inflammatory cardiomyopathies and established heart failure rather than acute myocarditis. Thus, definitive evidence of a survival benefit from immunomodulation guided by viral presence is currently lacking. Finally, distinguishing innocent bystanders from causative agents among EMB‐detected viruses remain challenging and a major goal to achieve in the near future. Therefore, considerable divergence remains between official recommendations and clinical practice, including the possibility of starting immunosuppressive therapy empirically, without knowing viral PCR results. This review systematically discusses the unsolved issues of immunomodulation guided by viral presence in acute lymphocytic myocarditis, namely (i) virus epidemiology and prognosis, (ii) variability of viral presence rates, (iii) the role of potential viral bystander findings, and (iv) the main results of immunosuppression controlled trials in lymphocytic myocarditis. Furthermore, a practical approach for the critical use of viral presence analysis in guiding immunomodulation is provided, highlighting its importance before starting immunosuppression or immunomodulation. Future, multicentre studies are needed to address specific scenarios such as fulminant lymphocytic myocarditis and a virus‐tailored management as for parvovirus B19.
Dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) represents a specific phenotype of heart failure. Sex differences in the long-term prognosis of patients with DCM are unknown. The aim of this study is to investigate the ...long-term prognostic role of gender in a large cohort of patients with DCM.
A total of 1113 patients with DCM were prospectively enrolled. To investigate the impact of sex, a propensity score–matching analysis was performed on a sample of 586 patients. Univariable and multivariable Cox models and competing-risk analyses were estimated on both cohorts for the following outcome measures: (1) all-cause mortality/heart transplantation (HTx)/ventricular assist device (VAD); (2) cardiovascular mortality/HTx/VAD; and (3) sudden cardiac death or malignant ventricular arrhythmias.
Women were older than men (50 ± 15 years vs 47 ± 15 years, respectively, P = 0.004) and more frequently had moderate to severe left ventricular dilation (P < 0.001) and left bundle branch block (P = 0.019). At multivariable analyses, male sex was independently associated with all considered outcome measures in the total cohort. At propensity score–matching analysis, over a median follow-up of 126 months (interquartile range, 62-201), 96 men (33%) vs 66 women (22%) experienced all-cause mortality/HTx/VAD (P = 0.03), 95 men (32%) vs 57 women (20%) experienced cardiovascular mortality/HTx/VAD (P = 0.025), and 46 men (16%) vs 28 women (10%) experienced sudden cardiac death/malignant ventricular arrhythmias (P = 0.07).
The long-term outcomes of women affected by DCM are more favourable than those of men, and sex emerged as an important independent factor, particularly for cardiovascular outcomes.
La cardiomyopathie dilatée représente un phénotype précis d’insuffisance cardiaque. Les différences en fonction du sexe quant au pronostic à long terme des patients atteints de cette affection sont inconnues. Cette étude vise à évaluer l’incidence du sexe dans le pronostic à long terme de la cardiomyopathie dilatée chez une vaste cohorte de patients qui en sont atteints.
Au total, 1113 patients atteints de cardiomyopathie dilatée ont été inscrits à l’étude de manière prospective. Pour évaluer l’incidence du sexe, un échantillon de 586 patients a fait l’objet d’une analyse d’appariement des coefficients de propension. Des modèles de Cox à une seule et à plusieurs variables ainsi que des analyses des risques concurrentiels ont été utilisés pour évaluer les paramètres suivants dans les deux cohortes : (1) décès toutes causes confondues, transplantation cardiaque (TC) et recours à un dispositif d’assistance ventriculaire (DAV); (2) décès d’origine cardiovasculaire, TC et recours à un DAV et (3) mort subite d’origine cardiaque et arythmies ventriculaires malignes.
Les femmes étaient plus âgées que les hommes (50 ± 15 ans contre 47 ± 15 ans, p = 0,004) et présentaient plus fréquemment une dilatation du ventricule gauche modérée ou grave (p < 0,001) et un bloc de branche gauche (p = 0,019). Les analyses multivariables ont révélé que le sexe masculin était indépendamment associé à tous les paramètres évalués dans l’ensemble de la cohorte. Dans l’analyse d’appariement des coefficients de propension, au cours d’un suivi médian de 126 mois (écart interquartile de 62 à 201), 96 hommes (33 %) comparativement à 66 femmes (22 %) ont atteint les critères d’évaluation composés du décès toutes causes confondues, de la TC et du recours à un DAV (p = 0,03), 95 hommes (32 %) comparativement à 57 femmes (20 %), les critères d’évaluation composés du décès d’origine cardiovasculaire, de la TC et du recours à un DAV (p = 0,025), et 46 hommes (16 %) comparativement à 28 femmes (10 %), les critères d’évaluation composés de la mort subite d’origine cardiaque et des arythmies ventriculaires malignes (p = 0,07).
L’issue à long terme de la cardiomyopathie dilatée est plus favorable chez les femmes que chez les hommes et le sexe ressort comme un important facteur indépendant, particulièrement en ce qui a trait aux issues cardiovasculaires.
Sudden cardiac death and arrhythmia-related events in patients with non-ischaemic dilated cardiomyopathy (NICM) have been significantly reduced over the last couple of decades as a result of ...evidence-based pharmacological and non-pharmacological therapeutic strategies. Nevertheless, the arrhythmic stratification in patients with NICM remains extremely challenging, and the simple indication based on left ventricular ejection fraction appears to be insufficient. Therefore, clinicians need to go beyond the current criteria for implantable cardioverter-defibrillator implantation in the direction of a multiparametric evaluation of arrhythmic risk. Several parameters for arrhythmic risk stratification, ranging from electrocardiographic, echocardiographic, imaging-derived and genetic markers, are crucial for proper arrhythmic risk stratification and a multiparametric evaluation of risk in patients with NICM. In particular, integration of cardiac magnetic resonance parameters (mostly late gadolinium enhancement) and specific genetic information (ie, presence of LMNA, PLN, FLNC mutations) appears fundamental for proper implementation of the current arrhythmic risk stratification. Finally, a novel approach focused on both arrhythmic risk and prediction of left ventricular reverse remodelling during follow-up might be useful for effective multiparametric and dynamic arrhythmic risk stratification in NICM. In the future, a complete and integrated evaluation might be mandatory to implement arrhythmic risk prediction in patients with NICM and to discriminate the competing risk between heart failure-related events and life-threatening arrhythmias.
Abstract
Myocarditis is an infectious–inflammatory disease often superimposed to individual genetic background which could favour or inhibit its progression into a chronic heart muscle disorder (most ...often dilated cardiomyopathy, rarely arrhythmogenic, or right-sided cardiomyopathy). Post-myocarditis cardiomyopathy is likely caused by a complex interaction between the viral infection and an individual predisposition. Some viruses are able to highlight a clinical phenotype replicating a model similar to the genetically determined conditions, while other can affect the resolution or the progressive remodelling of the left ventricle after the infectious process. The identification of specific individual genetic backgrounds, or genes favouring the progression of the disease, are important future research goals for precision medicine aiming at a specific and individualized treatment for patients affected with myocarditis.
Persistent left ventricular (LV) systolic dysfunction in patients with acute lymphocytic myocarditis (LM) is widely unexplored.
To assess the frequency and predictors of persistent LV dysfunction in ...patients with LM and reduced LVEF at admission.
We retrospectively evaluated 89 consecutive patients with histologically-proven acute myocarditis enrolled at three Italian referral hospitals. A subgroup of 48 patients with LM, baseline systolic impairment and an available echocardiographic assessment at 12 months (6-18) from discharge constituted the study population. The primary study end-point was persistent LV dysfunction, defined as LVEF <50% at 1-year, and was observed in 27/48 patients (56.3%). Higher LV end-diastolic diameter at admission (odds ratio OR 1.22, 95% confidence interval CI 1.04-1.43, p = 0.002), non-fulminant presentation (OR 8.46, 95% CI 1.28-55.75, p = 0.013) and presence of a poor lymphocytic infiltrate (OR 12.40, 95% CI 1.23-124.97, p = 0.010) emerged as independent predictors of persistent LV dysfunction at multivariate analysis (area under the curve 0.91, 95% CI 0.82-0.99). Pre-discharge LVEF was lower in patients with persistent LV dysfunction compared to the others (32%±8 vs. 53%±8, p <0.001), and this single variable showed the best accuracy in predicting the study end-point (area under the curve 0.95, 95% CI 0.89-1.00).
More than half of patients presenting with acute LM and LVEF <50% who survive the acute phase show persistent LV dysfunction after 1-year from hospital discharge. Features of subacute inflammatory process and of established myocardial damage at initial hospitalization emerged as predictors of this end-point.
Background
During cardiopulmonary exercise test, the isocapnic buffering period ranges between anaerobic threshold (AT) and respiratory compensation point (RCP). We investigated whether oxygen uptake ...(VO2) increase during the isocapnic buffering period (ΔVO2AT-RCP) is related to heart failure severity and prognosis.
Methods
We retrospectively analysed reduced ejection fraction heart failure patients who attained RCP at cardiopulmonary exercise test. The study endpoint was the composite of cardiovascular mortality and urgent heart transplantation/left ventricular assist device implantation. Hazard ratio was assessed to identify the increase of risk associated with ΔVO2AT-RCP (below and above the median of ΔVO2AT-RCP).
Results
AT and RCP were both identified in 782 (39.2%) out of 1995 reduced ejection fraction heart failure cases. Left ventricular ejection fraction and peak VO2 were 33 ± 9% and 16.5 ± 4.5 mL/kg per min (61 ± 16% of predicted value), suggesting moderate heart failure. At five years, endpoint did not vary between patients below and above the median ΔVO2AT-RCP (3.85 mL/min per kg (25–75th interquartile range = 2.69–5.46)). ΔVO2AT-RCP correlated with several parameters associated to heart failure prognosis, such as peak VO2, VE/VCO2 slope, brain natriuretic peptide and left ventricular ejection fraction. The ΔVO2AT-RCP value was associated with prognosis at univariate but not at multivariable analysis, where only VE/VCO2 slope endured.
Conclusion
ΔVO2AT-RCP correlates with several parameters linked to heart failure severity. Isocapnic buffering period stratifies heart failure patients, but not more than other prognostic indices.
Heart failure (HF) is a leading cause of morbidity worldwide, imposing a significant burden on deaths, hospitalizations, and health costs. Anticipating patients' deterioration is a cornerstone of HF ...treatment: preventing congestion and end organ damage while titrating HF therapies is the aim of the majority of clinical trials. Anyway, real-life medicine struggles with resource optimization, often reducing the chances of providing a patient-tailored follow-up. Telehealth holds the potential to drive substantial qualitative improvement in clinical practice through the development of patient-centered care, facilitating resource optimization, leading to decreased outpatient visits, hospitalizations, and lengths of hospital stays. Different technologies are rising to offer the best possible care to many subsets of patients, facing any stage of HF, and challenging extreme scenarios such as heart transplantation and ventricular assist devices. This article aims to thoroughly examine the potential advantages and obstacles presented by both existing and emerging telehealth technologies, including artificial intelligence.