Publications by authors named "Caforio Alp"

Myocarditis is an inflammatory disease of the myocardium with heterogeneous etiology, clinical presentation, and prognosis; when it is associated with myocardial dysfunction, this identifies the entity of inflammatory cardiomyopathy. In the last few decades, the relevance of the immune system in myocarditis onset and progression has become evident, thus having crucial clinical relevance in terms of treatment and prognostic stratification. In fact, the advances in cardiac immunology have led to a better characterization of the cellular subtypes involved in the pathogenesis of inflammatory cardiomyopathy, whether the etiology is infectious or autoimmune/immune-mediated.

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. Pericarditis has a heterogeneous clinical spectrum and rate of relapse. Data on aetiology, real-life treatment strategies, and long-term course from contemporary pericarditis cohorts are lacking.

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Article Synopsis
  • Autoantibodies against Desmoglein-2 (anti-DSG2-ab) were found in patients with Arrhythmogenic Right Ventricular Cardiomyopathy (ARVC) and myocarditis, indicating a potential link to immune responses against desmosomal proteins.
  • The study aimed to evaluate the specificity of anti-DSG2-ab in ARVC, compare detection methods (ELISA vs. IFL), and identify clinical correlates related to these antibodies among various patient groups.
  • In a cohort of patients, 56% of those with ARVC tested positive for anti-DSG2-ab, showing a higher rate of positivity in those also positive for anti-intercalated disk autoantibodies (A
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The role of the immune system in myocarditis onset and progression involves a range of complex cellular and molecular pathways. Both innate and adaptive immunity contribute to myocarditis pathogenesis, regardless of its infectious or non-infectious nature and across different histological and clinical subtypes. The heterogeneity of myocarditis etiologies and molecular effectors is one of the determinants of its clinical variability, manifesting as a spectrum of disease phenotype and progression.

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Aims: Standardized immunosuppressive therapy (IS) had been previously investigated in biopsy-proven (BP) lymphocytic myocarditis with heart failure (HF). This study evaluated efficacy and safety of tailored IS in BP immune-mediated myocarditis, irrespective of histology and clinical presentation.

Methods And Results: Consecutive BP myocarditis patients treated with long-term tailored IS on top of optimal medical therapy (OMT), were compared with OMT non-IS controls using propensity-score weighting.

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Background And Aims: Contemporary multicentre data on clinical and diagnostic spectrum and outcome in myocarditis are limited. Study aims were to describe baseline features, 1-year follow-up, and baseline predictors of outcome in clinically suspected or biopsy-proven myocarditis (2013 European Society of Cardiology criteria) in adult and paediatric patients from the EURObservational Research Programme Cardiomyopathy and Myocarditis Long-Term Registry.

Methods: Five hundred eighty-one (68.

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: Cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) has emerged as the most accurate, non-invasive method to support the diagnosis of clinically suspected myocarditis and as a risk-stratification tool in patients with cardiomyopathies. We aim to assess the diagnostic and prognostic role of CMR at diagnosis in patients with myocarditis. We enrolled consecutive single-center patients with 2013 ESC consensus-based endomyocardial biopsy (EMB)-proven or clinically suspected myocarditis undergoing CMR at diagnosis.

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Background And Aims: Childhood-onset cardiomyopathies are rare and poorly characterized. This study examined the baseline characteristics and 1-year follow-up of children with cardiomyopathy in the first European Cardiomyopathy Registry.

Methods: Prospective data were collected on individuals aged 1-<18 years enrolled in the European Society of Cardiology EURObservational Research Programme Cardiomyopathy and Myocarditis long-term registry (June 2014-December 2016).

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Article Synopsis
  • * A study aimed to investigate if patients with a history of myocarditis would experience relapses during the pandemic or after vaccination.
  • * Out of 409 patients studied, none experienced myocarditis relapse due to COVID-19 infection or vaccination, and the rate of new myocarditis cases remained unchanged compared to before the pandemic.
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  • Constrictive pericarditis is a rare condition that can lead to heart failure but may be treatable; it often has a gradual onset and can be difficult to diagnose.
  • Recent findings suggest that transient pericardial constriction can occur during acute pericarditis and may resolve with appropriate treatment, without leading to chronic issues.
  • The document presents two cases of transient pericardial constriction and emphasizes the importance of recognizing and treating this condition to prevent it from becoming irreversible.
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Fulminant myocarditis, rather than being a distinct form of myocarditis, is instead a peculiar clinical presentation of the disease. The definition of fulminant myocarditis has varied greatly in the last 20 years, leading to conflicting reports on prognosis and treatment strategies, mainly because of varied inclusion criteria in different studies. The main conclusion of this review is that fulminant myocarditis may be due to different histotypes and aetiologies that can be diagnosed only by endomyocardial biopsy and managed by aetiology-directed treatment.

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Myocarditis is an inflammatory disease of the myocardium caused by infectious or non-infectious agents. It can lead to serious short-term and long-term sequalae, such as sudden cardiac death or dilated cardiomyopathy. Due to its heterogenous clinical presentation and disease course, challenging diagnosis and limited evidence for prognostic stratification, myocarditis poses a great challenge to clinicians.

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The use of immunosuppressive therapy (IT) in biopsy-proven, autoimmune/immune-mediated (AI), virus-negative myocarditis has become the standard of care. In particular, according to recent guidelines, azathioprine (AZA), in association with steroids, is a cornerstone of first-line therapy regimens. IT may have a crucial impact on the natural history of AI myocarditis, preventing its progression to end-stage heart failure, cardiovascular death, or heart transplantation, provided that strict appropriateness and safety criteria are observed.

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Background: Myocarditis and inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD) are rare conditions, but may coexist. Myocarditis in IBD may be infective, immune-mediated, or due to mesalamine toxicity. A gap of knowledge exists on the clinical features of patients that present myocarditis in association with IBD, especially for endomyocardial biopsy-proven cases.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates the role of C-reactive protein (CRP) in diagnosing and predicting outcomes in patients with myocarditis.
  • It analyzed data from 409 patients, finding that elevated CRP is associated with clinically suspected myocarditis and less severe symptoms, but does not predict survival outcomes.
  • Key predictors for survival were identified as left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF), biopsy-proven status, and the presence of anti-nuclear auto-antibodies (ANA).
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  • Cardiovascular diseases are the leading cause of death for women, even with 30 years of medical advances.
  • Women often get heart diseases later in life than men and show unusual symptoms that are hard to recognize.
  • The paper discusses how gender affects heart health and looks into the research on diagnosis and treatment for women.
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Arterial stiffness (AS) and atrial fibrillation (AF) share commonalities in molecular and pathophysiological mechanisms and numerous studies have analyzed their reciprocal influence. The gold standard for AS diagnosis is represented by aortic pulse wave velocity, whose measurement can be affected by arrhythmias characterized by irregularities in heart rhythm, such as AF. Growing evidence show that patients with AS are at high risk of AF development.

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  • The study sought to identify predictors of death, heart transplantation, and relapse in myocarditis patients before immunosuppression was introduced, involving 466 patients over 20 years.
  • Significant findings showed that female gender, a severe initial presentation, and specific autoantibodies were linked to higher risks of death or heart transplantation; meanwhile, a higher left ventricular ejection fraction provided a protective effect.
  • The results indicated that younger age and a history of previous myocarditis increased the chances of relapse, emphasizing that autoimmune characteristics can worsen patient prognosis.
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The best studied of the inherited cardiomyopathies-hypertrophic (HCM), dilated (DCM) and arrhythmogenic (ACM)-present overlapping clinical phenotypes with varying, often unrecognized, risk of sudden death. Risk assessment is informed by patient sex and by the specific disease-causing variant. HCM and arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy (ARVC) remain important causes of sudden death.

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Many systemic immune-mediated diseases (SIDs) may involve the heart and present as myocarditis with different histopathological pictures, i.e. lymphocytic, eosinophilic, granulomatous, and clinical features, ranging from a completely asymptomatic patient to life-threatening cardiogenic shock or arrhythmias.

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  • Heart involvement (HInv) in systemic sclerosis (SSc) is linked to myocarditis and worsens patient prognosis, with specific autoantibodies (AHA and AIDA) serving as important markers for diagnosis and outcomes.
  • A study of 116 SSc patients revealed significantly higher frequencies of AHA and AIDA compared to control groups, indicating a prevalent autoimmune component in heart issues related to SSc.
  • The presence of AHA is correlated with various clinical factors and unfavorable outcomes, underscoring the need for better recognition and management of autoimmune heart involvement in SSc patients.
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