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Familial clustering of unexplained heart failure - A Danish nationwide cohort study. | LitMetric

Familial clustering of unexplained heart failure - A Danish nationwide cohort study.

Int J Cardiol

Department of Cardiology, The Heart Centre, Copenhagen University Hospital, Rigshospitalet, Copenhagen, Denmark; Department of Forensic Medicine, Copenhagen University Hospital, Rigshospitalet, Copenhagen, Denmark.

Published: July 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to assess if having a family history of unexplained heart failure (HF) in first-degree relatives increases the likelihood of developing unexplained HF themselves.
  • An analysis of Danish nationwide registry data from 1978 to 2017 found that first-degree relatives of probands with unexplained HF had a significantly higher incidence rate of HF, particularly among siblings and when the proband was diagnosed at a younger age.
  • The findings suggest that relatives of individuals with early-onset unexplained HF should be screened more closely due to the increased risk of developing the condition themselves.

Article Abstract

Aims: To determine whether a family history of unexplained heart failure (HF) in first-degree relatives (children or sibling) increases the rate of unexplained HF.

Methods And Results: Using Danish nationwide registry data (1978-2017), we identified patients (probands) diagnosed with first unexplained HF (HF without any known comorbidities) in Denmark, and their first-degree relatives. All first-degree relatives were followed from the HF date of the proband and until an event of unexplained HF, exclusion diagnosis, death, emigration, or study end, whichever occurred first. Using the general population as a reference, we calculated adjusted standardized incidence ratios (SIR) of unexplained HF in the three groups of relatives using Poisson regression models. We identified 55,110 first-degree relatives to individuals previously diagnosed with unexplained HF. Having a family history was associated with a significantly increased unexplained HF rate of 2.59 (95%CI 2.29-2.93). The estimate was higher among siblings (SIR 6.67 [95%CI 4.69-9.48]). Noteworthy, the rate of HF increased for all first-degree relatives when the proband was diagnosed with HF in a young age (≤50 years, SIR of 7.23 [95%CI 5.40-9.68]) and having >1 proband (SIR of 5.28 [95%CI 2.75-10.14]). The highest estimate of HF was observed if the proband was ≤40 years at diagnosis (13.17 [95%CI 8.90-19.49].

Conclusion: A family history of unexplained HF was associated with a two-fold increased rate of unexplained HF among first-degree relatives. The relative rate was increased when the proband was diagnosed at a young age. These data suggest that screening families of unexplained HF with onset below 50 years is indicated.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ijcard.2024.132028DOI Listing

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