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Pregnancy course and outcomes in women with arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy

Authors :
Cynthia A. James
Richard N.W. Hauer
Brittney Murray
Abhishek C. Sawant
Arthur A.M. Wilde
Judith A. Groeneweg
Anke R Hodes
Hugh Calkins
Harikrishna Tandri
Stuart D. Russell
Crystal Tichnell
Maarten P. van den Berg
J. Peter van Tintelen
Anneline S.J.M. te Riele
Daniel P. Judge
Karin Y. van Spaendonck-Zwarts
Human Genetics
ACS - Amsterdam Cardiovascular Sciences
Cardiology
Cardiovascular Centre (CVC)
Source :
Heart, 102(4), 303. BMJ Publishing Group, Heart (British Cardiac Society), 102(4), 303-312. BMJ Publishing Group, Heart, Heart, 102(4), 303-312. BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Objectives To characterise pregnancy course and outcomes in women with arrhythmogenic right ventricular dysplasia/cardiomyopathy (ARVD/C).Methods From a combined Johns Hopkins/Dutch ARVD/C registry, we identified 26 women affected with ARVD/C (by 2010 Task Force Criteria) during 39 singleton pregnancies > 13 weeks (1-4 per woman). Cardiac symptoms, treatment and episodes of sustained ventricular arrhythmias (VAs) and heart failure (HF) >= Class C were characterised. Obstetric outcomes were ascertained. Incidence of VA and HF were compared with rates in the non-pregnant state. Long-term disease course was compared with 117 childbearing-aged female patients with ARVD/C who had not experienced pregnancy with ARVD/C.Results Treatment during pregnancy (n=39) included beta blockers (n=16), antiarrhythmics (n=6), diuretics (n=3) and implantable cardioverter defibrillators (ICDs) (n=28). In five pregnancies (13%), a single VA occurred, including two ICD-terminated events. Arrhythmias occurred disproportionately in probands without VA history (p=0.045). HF, managed on an outpatient basis, developed in two pregnancies (5%) in women with pre-existing overt biventricular or isolated right ventricular disease. All infants were live-born without major obstetric complications. Caesarean sections (n=11, 28%) had obstetric indications, except one (HF). beta Blocker therapy was associated with lower birth weight (3.1 +/- 0.48 kg vs 3.7 +/- 0.57 kg; p=0.002). During follow-up children remained healthy (median 3.4 years), and mothers were without cardiac mortality or transplant. Neither VA nor HF incidence was significantly increased during pregnancy. ARVD/C course (mean 6.5 +/- 5.6 years) did not differ based on pregnancy history.Conclusions While most pregnancies in patients with ARVD/C were tolerated well, 13% were complicated by VA and 5% by HF.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
13556037
Volume :
102
Issue :
4
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Heart
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7adb4da354e3c437576d63576fce8113