Should lethal arrhythmias in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy be predicted using non-electrophysiological methods?

Author:

Saumarez Richard1ORCID,Silberbauer John2ORCID,Scannell Jack3ORCID,Pytkowski Mariusz4ORCID,Behr Elijah R5ORCID,Betts Timothy6ORCID,Della Bella Paulo7ORCID,Peters Nicholas S8ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Retired , Waterbeach, CB25 9HW , UK

2. Department Cardiology, Royal Sussex Hospital , Eastern Road, Brighton BN2 5BE , UK

3. The Bayes Centre, University of Edinburgh , Edinburgh EH8 9BT , UK

4. Department of Cardiology, Narodowy Instytut Kardiologii , ul Alpejska 42, 04-628 Warsaw , Poland

5. St George's, Blackshaw Road , London SW17 ORE , UK

6. Department of Cardiology, John Radcliffe Hospital , Oxford OX3 9DU , UK

7. Department of Cardiology, San Raffaele Hospital , IT 20133, Milan , Italy

8. Department of Cardiology, Hammersmith Hospital, Imperial College , London W12 0HS , UK

Abstract

Abstract While sudden cardiac death (SCD) in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is due to arrhythmias, the guidelines for prediction of SCD are based solely on non-electrophysiological methods. This study aims to stimulate thinking about whether the interests of patients with HCM are better served by using current, ‘risk factor’, methods of prediction or by further development of electrophysiological methods to determine arrhythmic risk. Five published predictive studies of SCD in HCM, which contain sufficient data to permit analysis, were analysed to compute receiver operating characteristics together with their confidence bounds to compare their formal prediction either by bootstrapping or Monte Carlo analysis. Four are based on clinical risk factors, one with additional MRI analysis, and were regarded as exemplars of the risk factor approach. The other used an electrophysiological method and directly compared this method to risk factors in the same patients. Prediction methods that use conventional clinical risk factors and MRI have low predictive capacities that will only detect 50–60% of patients at risk with a 15–30% false positive rate [area under the curve (AUC) = ∼0.7], while the electrophysiological method detects 90% of events with a 20% false positive rate (AUC = ∼0.89). Given improved understanding of complex arrhythmogenesis, arrhythmic SCD is likely to be more accurately predictable using electrophysiologically based approaches as opposed to current guidelines and should drive further development of electrophysiologically based methods.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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