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Risk of cardioembolic ischemic events and relation to atrial fibrillation/flutter in patients with arrhythmogenic cardiomyopathy during a long-term follow-up. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • Arrhythmogenic cardiomyopathy (ACM) is a hereditary heart condition leading to the abnormal replacement of heart muscle, with this study focusing on the risk of strokes linked to cardiovascular events in ACM patients.
  • Among 111 ACM patients monitored over nearly 13 years, 10% experienced cardioembolic ischemic events (CIEs), which occur more frequently in this group compared to the general population.
  • Factors such as female sex, specific heart ECG changes, and reduced heart function were related to a higher risk of CIEs, but standard stroke risk assessments like the CHADS-VASc score were not effective in identifying high-risk patients needing anticoagulants.

Article Abstract

Background: Arrhythmogenic cardiomyopathy (ACM) is an inherited heart disease characterized by fibro-fatty replacement of myocardium. Limited data is available concerning cardioembolic stroke. This study sought to determine the occurrence of cardioembolic ischemic events (CIEs) in ACM patients and to identify clinical and imaging predictors of CIEs.

Methods: Every consecutive ACM patient was enrolled. ECG, Holter monitoring or implantable cardiac devices were used to detect atrial arrhythmias (AAs). CIEs were defined according to TOAST classification.

Results: In our cohort of 111 patients, CIEs were observed in eleven (10%) over a 12.9-year median follow-up, with an incidence of 7.9 event/1000 patient-year (HR 4.12 compared to general population). Mean age at the event was 42 ± 9 years. Female sex (p = 0.03), T-wave inversion (p = 0.03), RVOT dilatation (p = 0.006) and lower LVEF (p = 0.006) were associated with CIEs. Among patients with AAs (23/111, 20.7%), 5 (21.7%) experienced CIEs. CHADS-VASc did not prove useful to define patients at higher risk of CIEs (p = 0.098). 60% of stroke suffering patients had a pre-event score between 0 and 1 (if female).

Conclusions: In ACM patients, CIEs are much more common than in general population and present a high burden at younger age. AAs relate to less than half of these events. In AAs patients, CHADS-VASc is not useful to stratify those requiring oral anticoagulation. As a hypothesis-generating study, our research proposes the role of atrial myopathy, irrespective of AAs, as a pivotal factor in thrombogenesis risk, pointing out a definite unmet need in ACM therapeutic algorithm.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijcard.2023.131200DOI Listing

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