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Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is the most common genetic cardiac disorder worldwide with a prevalence of 1:500 in the general population. It is mainly associated to mutations in genes encoding cardiac sarcomere proteins and it is characterized by left ventricular hypertrophy that is not explained by pathological loading conditions or coexisting myocardial storage disease. In this setting, diagnosis is based on left ventricular wall thickness segment (LVWT) of at least 15 mm documented by echocardiography, cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) or cardiac computed tomography. Less severe grades of hypertrophy (13-14 mm) are needed when genetic tests are performed and a pathogenic or a likely pathogenic variant documented. However, women with HCM tend to be underdiagnosed or diagnosed at late stages possibly developing unfavorable outcomes. Asymmetry is the hallmark feature of hypertrophy in HCM: rather than by a single segment measurement, the heterogeneity of wall thickness may be better assessed by WTSD, the standard deviation of wall thickness, previously derived in a CMR study.
WTSD with a cut-off of >2.4 had the highest accuracy to identify HCM from normal hearts and from other forms of myocardial hypertrophy in a cohort of living subjects, and was particularly accurate in diagnosing HCM in females.
This is an observational multicentre, prospective study that will explore the combined predictive value of clinical, electrocardiographic and imaging parameters in diagnosing HCM in subjects with clinical suspicion of the disease. Specifically, we will focus on the predictive power of WTSD in diagnosing HCM n women. Indeed, since WTSD with a cut-off > 2.4 to detect HCM was derived from a CMR study, we will test the feasibility of WTSD analysis on echocardiographic imaging and its reliability compared to WTSD analysis on CMR. Exploratory objectives will evaluate the role of WTSD to predict HCM with a cut-off >2.4 also in male population.
This is an observational multicentre, prospective study that will involve 2 Research Units (RU):
The enrolment phase will take up to 18 months (month 1 to 18) (RU1, RU2). Enrolment will prospectively involve:
We consider a proportion of patients who will be classified as dropouts from the study because they will not be diagnosed with HCM.
At time of enrolment (time 0) all patients will be evaluated in ambulatory care setting and will undergo electrocardiogram, transthoracic echocardiography (TTE), CMR and genetic testing.
At 6 month follow-up clinical examination, electrocardiogram and transthoracic echocardiography will be performed in all patients.
The end of enrolment is estimated at 18th month and the follow-up of each patient is estimated at least 6 months. Each patient's clinical, electrocardiographic, and imaging data from the hospital records will be collected. WTSD will be measured both at echocardiography and CMR. All echocardiographic examinations and CMRs will be reviewed and analyzed by a core lab placed at the Cardiovascular Imaging Unit of IRCCS San Raffaele Hospital in Milan, Italy.
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Known history of systemic hypertension with documented secondary LV heart disease.
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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