Abstract

Arrhythmogenic cardiomyopathy (AC) is a heart muscle disease clinically characterized by life-threatening ventricular arrhythmias and pathologically by an acquired and progressive dystrophy of the ventricular myocardium with fibro-fatty replacement. Due to an estimated prevalence of 1:2000-1:5000, AC is listed among rare diseases. A familial background consistent with an autosomal-dominant trait of inheritance is present in most of AC patients; recessive variants have also been reported, either or not associated with palmoplantar keratoderma and woolly hair. AC-causing genes mostly encode major components of the cardiac desmosome and up to 50 % of AC probands harbor mutations in one of them. Mutations in non-desmosomal genes have been also described in a minority of AC patients, predisposing to the same or an overlapping disease phenotype. Compound/digenic heterozygosity was identified in up to 25 % of AC-causing desmosomal gene mutation carriers, in part explaining the phenotypic variability. Abnormal trafficking of intercellular proteins to the intercalated discs of cardiomyocytes and Wnt/beta catenin and Hippo signaling pathways have been implicated in disease pathogenesis.AC is a major cause of sudden death in the young and in athletes. The clinical picture may include a sub-clinical phase; an overt electrical disorder; and right ventricular or biventricular pump failure. Ventricular fibrillation can occur at any stage. Genotype-phenotype correlation studies led to identify biventricular and dominant left ventricular variants, thus supporting the use of the broader term AC.Since there is no “gold standard” to reach the diagnosis of AC, multiple categories of diagnostic information have been combined and the criteria recently updated, to improve diagnostic sensitivity while maintaining specificity. Among diagnostic tools, contrast enhanced cardiac magnetic resonance is playing a major role in detecting left dominant forms of AC, even preceding morpho-functional abnormalities. The main differential diagnoses are idiopathic right ventricular outflow tract tachycardia, myocarditis, sarcoidosis, dilated cardiomyopathy, right ventricular infarction, congenital heart diseases with right ventricular overload and athlete heart. A positive genetic test in the affected AC proband allows early identification of asymptomatic carriers by cascade genetic screening of family members. Risk stratification remains a major clinical challenge and antiarrhythmic drugs, catheter ablation and implantable cardioverter defibrillator are the currently available therapeutic tools. Sport disqualification is life-saving, since effort is a major trigger not only of electrical instability but also of disease onset and progression. We review the current knowledge of this rare cardiomyopathy, suggesting a flowchart for primary care clinicians and geneticists.

Highlights

  • Arrhythmogenic cardiomyopathy (AC) (OMIM #107970; ORPHA247) is a rare disease of the heart muscle characterized by a progressive myocardial dystrophy with fibro-fatty replacement [1,2,3,4]

  • Risk stratification Arrhythmic risk stratification relies on phenotypic predictors, such as previous cardiac arrest due to ventricular fibrillation (VF), sustained ventricular tachycardia (VT), unexplained syncope, severe right ventricle (RV) or left ventricular (LV) dilatation/dysfunction, compound and digenic heterozygosity of desmosomal gene mutations, low QRS amplitude, QRS fragmentation, male gender, young age at time of diagnosis, proband status, inducibility at programmed ventricular stimulation (PVS), burden of electroanatomic scar and scar-related fractioned electrograms, extent of T wave inversion across precordial and inferior leads on ECG

  • Many advances have been made in the clinical diagnosis and management of AC in the last 10 years

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Summary

Background

Arrhythmogenic cardiomyopathy (AC) (OMIM #107970; ORPHA247) is a rare disease of the heart muscle characterized by a progressive myocardial dystrophy with fibro-fatty replacement [1,2,3,4]. It is a genetically determined cardiomyopathy caused by heterozygous or compound heterozygous mutations in genes mostly encoding proteins of the desmosomal complex (about 50 % of probands). There is no a single gold standard for the diagnosis, which is mainly based on functional and structural alterations of the right ventricle (RV), fibro-fatty replacement of the myocardium, depolarization and repolarization abnormalities, arrhythmias with the left bundle branch block (LBBB) morphology and family history [8]. The diagnostic criteria in adults have been demonstrated to be valid in the pediatric age group, with the exception of inverted T wave on right precordial

Global or regional dysfunction and structural alterations*
Arrhythmias
Family history
Findings
Conclusions

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