Symptomatic presentation influences outcomes in pediatric restrictive cardiomyopathy

Introduction Children with restrictive cardiomyopathy (RCM) traditionally have a poor prognosis, with most patients either dying or requiring heart transplantation within 2 years of diagnosis. The development of symptoms in RCM suggests advanced disease. However, as screening practices evolve and le...

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Published inFrontiers in pediatrics Vol. 11; p. 1264751
Main Authors Lorenzo, Melissa, Lynch, Aine, Ashkanase, Jenna, Fazari, Linda, George, Kristen, Arathoon, Katelyn, Minn, Sunghoon, Nicolson, Dawn, Jeewa, Aamir, Jean-St-Michel, Emilie
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Frontiers Media S.A 19.10.2023
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Summary:Introduction Children with restrictive cardiomyopathy (RCM) traditionally have a poor prognosis, with most patients either dying or requiring heart transplantation within 2 years of diagnosis. The development of symptoms in RCM suggests advanced disease. However, as screening practices evolve and lead to diagnosis of early disease, identifying appropriate timing of transplant listing becomes increasingly important. In this context we compared outcomes of children with RCM presenting with clinical symptoms to those asymptomatic at initial presentation. Methods This retrospective cohort study included 25 patients with RCM presenting to a quaternary care center between 2001 and 2018. Times to transplantation, death, and a composite outcome of adverse cardiac events (CPR, cardioversion, inotropic support, mechanical ventilation, mechanical support, or heart transplant) were compared between those symptomatic and asymptomatic at presentation. Results At 2 years following diagnosis, patients asymptomatic at presentation had a significantly better transplant-free survival at 57% compared to 17% for symptomatic patients ( p  = 0.03). Those asymptomatic at diagnosis also had significantly improved cardiac event-free survival at 71% compared to symptomatic patients at 25% ( p  = 0.01). In multivariable analysis, cardiac symptoms at presentation remained an independent risk factor for heart-transplant or death [hazard ratio 5.17 (1.28–20.85), p  = 0.02]. Conclusion Patients with RCM who are symptomatic at time of diagnosis have significantly worse transplant-free survival and cardiac event-free survival. Given current practice variability in timing of transplant listing, the presence of any cardiac symptoms is an important negative prognostic marker and should prompt urgent transplant listing.
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Reviewed by: Keiichi Hirono, University of Toyama, Japan Fabrizio De Rita, Newcastle upon Tyne Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, United Kingdom
Edited by: Inga Voges, University Medical Center Schleswig-Holstein, Germany
ISSN:2296-2360
2296-2360
DOI:10.3389/fped.2023.1264751