Narayanan Kumar, Uy-Evanado Audrey, Teodorescu Carmen, Reinier Kyndaron, Nichols Gregory A, Gunson Karen, Jui Jonathan, Chugh Sumeet S
The Heart Institute, Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, Los Angeles, California.
Center for Health Research, Kaiser Permanente, Portland, Oregon.
Heart Rhythm. 2016 Feb;13(2):498-503. doi: 10.1016/j.hrthm.2015.09.026. Epub 2015 Sep 28.
Mitral valve prolapse (MVP) is relatively common in the general population with recently reported prevalence of 1% and familial clustering (Framingham Heart Study). However, its association with ventricular arrhythmias and sudden cardiac arrest (SCA) remains controversial.
The purpose of this study was to characterize the frequency and clinical profile of patients with MVP who suffer SCA in the community.
Patients with SCA cases were prospectively identified in the population-based Oregon Sudden Unexpected Death Study (population ~1 million). The presence of MVP was identified from echocardiograms recorded prior but unrelated to the SCA event. The detailed clinical profile of patients with SCA and MVP was compared with that of SCA patients without MVP to identify potential differences.
A total of 729 SCA patients were evaluated over a 12-year period (mean age 69.5 ± 14.8 years; 64.6% men). MVP was observed in 17 (2.3%) prior to the SCA event (95% confidence interval 1.2%-3.4%). Mitral regurgitation was present in 14 SCA patients with MVP (82.3%) and was moderate or severe in 10 (58.8%). Compared with SCA patients without MVP, SCA patients with MVP were younger (mean age 60.9 ± 16.4 years vs 69.7 ± 14.7 years; P = .02), with fewer risk factors (diabetes 5.9% vs 46.4%; P = .001; hypertension 41.2% vs 78.9%; P = .001) or known coronary disease (29.4% vs 65.6%; P < .001).
MVP was observed in a small proportion (2.3%) of SCA patients in the general population, suggesting a low risk overall. Since SCA patients with MVP were characterized by younger age and relatively low cardiovascular comorbidity, a focus on imaging for valve structure/insufficiency as well as genetics could aid future risk stratification approaches.
二尖瓣脱垂(MVP)在普通人群中相对常见,最近报告的患病率为1%,且有家族聚集性(弗雷明汉心脏研究)。然而,其与室性心律失常和心脏性猝死(SCA)的关联仍存在争议。
本研究的目的是描述社区中发生SCA的MVP患者的频率和临床特征。
在基于人群的俄勒冈州意外猝死研究(人口约100万)中前瞻性地确定SCA病例患者。通过记录在SCA事件之前但与之无关的超声心动图来确定是否存在MVP。将SCA合并MVP患者的详细临床特征与无MVP的SCA患者进行比较,以确定潜在差异。
在12年期间共评估了729例SCA患者(平均年龄69.5±14.8岁;64.6%为男性)。在17例(2.3%)SCA事件之前观察到MVP(95%置信区间1.2%-3.4%)。14例合并MVP的SCA患者存在二尖瓣反流(82.3%),其中10例(58.8%)为中度或重度反流。与无MVP的SCA患者相比,合并MVP的SCA患者更年轻(平均年龄60.9±16.4岁对69.7±14.7岁;P = 0.02),危险因素更少(糖尿病5.9%对46.4%;P = 0.001;高血压41.2%对78.9%;P = 0.001)或已知冠心病(29.4%对65.6%;P < 0.001)。
在普通人群中,一小部分(2.3%)SCA患者存在MVP,提示总体风险较低。由于合并MVP的SCA患者具有年龄较小和心血管合并症相对较少的特点,关注瓣膜结构/功能不全的影像学检查以及遗传学检查可能有助于未来的风险分层方法。