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Cardiac defects, morbidity and mortality in patients affected by RASopathies. CARNET study results

Authors :
Jan Marek
Bruno Dallapiccola
M. Giovanna Russo
Elena Banaudi
Bruno Marino
Francesco Gesualdo
Maurizio Marasini
Giulio Calcagni
Marco Tartaglia
Gabriella Agnoletti
Ornella Milanesi
Angelo D’Ambrosio
M. Cristina Digilio
Giuseppe Pacileo
Maurizio Brighenti
Francesca Cairello
Anwar Baban
Roberto Formigari
Sonia B. Albanese
Paolo Versacci
Daniela Messina
Giulia Tuo
Giuseppe Limongelli
Enrica De Luca
Giovanni Battista Ferrero
Giuseppina Baldassarre
Juan Pablo Kaski
Calcagni, Giulio
Limongelli, Giuseppe
D'Ambrosio, Angelo
Gesualdo, Francesco
Digilio, M. Cristina
Baban, Anwar
Albanese, Sonia B.
Versacci, Paolo
De Luca, Enrica
Ferrero, Giovanni B.
Baldassarre, Giuseppina
Agnoletti, Gabriella
Banaudi, Elena
Marek, Jan
Kaski, Juan P.
Tuo, Giulia
Russo, M. Giovanna
Pacileo, Giuseppe
Milanesi, Ornella
Messina, Daniela
Marasini, Maurizio
Cairello, Francesca
Formigari, Roberto
Brighenti, Maurizio
Dallapiccola, Bruno
Tartaglia, Marco
Marino, Bruno
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Elsevier Ireland Ltd, 2017.

Abstract

Background RASopathies are developmental disease caused by mutations in genes encoding for signal transducers of the RAS-MAPK cascade. The aim of the present study was to provide a comprehensive description of morbidity and mortality in patients with molecularly confirmed RASopathy. Methods A multicentric, observational, retrospective study was conducted in seven European cardiac centres participating to the CArdiac Rasopathy NETwork (CARNET). Clinical records of 371 patients with confirmed molecular diagnosis of RASopathy were reviewed. Mortality was described as crude mortality, cumulative survival and restricted estimated mean survival. Multivariable regression analysis was used to assess the impact of mutated genes on number of interventions and overall prognosis. Results Cardiac defects occurred in 80.3% of cases, almost half of them underwent at least one intervention. Overall, crude mortality was 0.29/100 patients-year. Cumulative survival was 98.8%, 98.2%, 97.7%, 94.3%, at 1, 5, 10, and 20 years, respectively. Restricted estimated mean survival at 20 years follow-up was 19.6 years. Ten patients died (2.7% of the entire cohort; 3.4% of patients with cardiac defect). Patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) and age < 2 years or young adults, as well as subjects with biventricular obstruction and PTPN11 mutations had a higher risk of cardiac death. Conclusions The risk of intervention was higher in individuals with Noonan syndrome and pulmonary stenosis carrying PTPN11 mutations. Overall, mortality was relatively low, even though the specific association between HCM, biventricular outflow tract obstructions and PTPN11 mutations appeared to be associated with early mortality, including immediate post-operative events and sudden death.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9d803e017b1329ade3453ca0224e2829