1. Clinical profile and outcome of cardiomyopathies in infants and children seen at a tertiary centre.
- Author
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Pagano, M., Fumagalli, C., Girolami, F., Passantino, S., Gozzini, A., Brambilla, A., Spinelli, V., Morrone, A., Procopio, E., Pochiero, F., Donati, M.A., Olivotto, I., and Favilli, S.
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INBORN errors of metabolism , *MAJOR adverse cardiovascular events , *CARDIOMYOPATHIES , *CHILD patients , *HYPERTROPHIC cardiomyopathy , *HEART failure - Abstract
Due to their rare prevalence and marked heterogeneity, pediatric cardiomyopathies (CMPs) are little known and scarcely reported. We report the etiology, clinical profile and outcome of a consecutive cohort of children diagnosed with CMP and followed at Meyer Children's Hospital over a decade. We retrospectively reviewed patients consecutively referred from May 2008 to May 2019 for pediatric onset CMP (<18 years). Heart disease caused by arrhythmic disorders, toxic agents, rheumatic conditions and maternal disease were excluded. We enrolled 110 patients (65 males), diagnosed at a median age of 27 [4–134] months; 35% had an infant onset (<1 year of age). A positive family history was more often associated with childhood-onset (38.8%). Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM; 48 patients) was the most frequent phenotype, followed by dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM; 35 patients). While metabolic and idiopathic etiologies were preponderant in infants, metabolic and sarcomeric diseases were most frequent in the childhood-onset group. Major adverse cardiac events (MACE) occurred in 31.8% of patients, including hospitalization for acute heart failure in 25.5% of patients, most commonly due to DCM. Overall, the most severe outcomes were documented in patients with metabolic diseases. In a consecutive cohort of pediatric patients with CMP, those with infantile onset and with a metabolic etiology had the worst prognosis. Overall, MACE occurred in 41% of the entire population, most commonly associated with DCM, inborn errors of metabolism and genetic syndromes. Systematic NGS genetic testing was critical for etiological diagnosis and management. • Children with CMP with infantile onset and with a metabolic etiology had the worst prognosis. • MACE is most commonly associated with DCM, inborn errors of metabolism and genetic syndromes. • NGS genetic testing was pivotal to reach an etiological diagnosis and guide management. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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