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Contemporary genetic testing in inherited cardiac disease: Tools, ethical issues, and clinical applications

Authors :
Kalliope Pilichou
Iacopo Olivotto
Cristina Basso
Cristina Mazzaccara
Benedetta Tomberli
Matteo Benelli
Giulia Frisso
Giuseppe Limongelli
Eloisa Arbustini
Lia Crotti
Ruggiero Mango
Francesca Girolami
Maria Iascone
Girolami, Francesca
Frisso, Giulia
Benelli, Matteo
Crotti, Lia
Iascone, Maria
Mango, Ruggiero
Mazzaccara, Cristina
Pilichou, Kalliope
Arbustini, Eloisa
Tomberli, Benedetta
Limongelli, Giuseppe
Basso, Cristina
Olivotto, Iacopo
Girolami, F
Frisso, G
Benelli, M
Crotti, L
Iascone, M
Mango, R
Mazzaccara, C
Pilichou, K
Arbustini, E
Tomberli, B
Limongelli, G
Basso, C
Olivotto, I
Source :
Journal of Cardiovascular Medicine (Hagerstown, Md.)
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Inherited cardiac diseases comprise a wide and heterogeneous spectrum of diseases of the heart, including the cardiomyopathies and the arrhythmic diseases in structurally normal hearts, that is, channelopathies. With a combined estimated prevalence of 3% in the general population, these conditions represent a relevant epidemiological entity worldwide, and are a major cause of cardiac morbidity and mortality in the young. The extraordinary progress achieved in molecular genetics over the last three decades has unveiled the complex molecular basis of many familial cardiac conditions, paving the way for routine use of gene testing in clinical practice. In current practice, genetic testing can be used in a clinically affected patient to confirm diagnosis, or to formulate a differential diagnosis among overlapping phenotypes or between hereditary and acquired (nongenetic) forms of disease. Although genotype-phenotype correlations are generally unpredictable, a precise molecular diagnosis can help predict prognosis in specific patient subsets and may guide management. In clinically unaffected relatives, genetic cascade testing is recommended, after the initial identification of a pathogenic variation, with the aim of identifying asymptomatic relatives who might be at risk of disease-related complications, including unexpected sudden cardiac death. Future implications include the identification of novel therapeutic targets and development of tailored treatments including gene therapy. This document reflects the multidisciplinary, 'real-world' experience required when implementing genetic testing in cardiomyopathies and arrhythmic syndromes, along the recommendations of various guidelines.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Cardiovascular Medicine (Hagerstown, Md.)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....00d92231ae8d8a80999d56bacf6979f0