Abstract
Since the American Heart Association’s recommendation for familial screening of adults with congenital heart disease for bicuspid aortic valve, similar recommendations for other left-sided heart defects, such as hypoplastic left heart syndrome (HLHS), have been proposed. However, defining at-risk populations for these heart defects based on genetics is less straightforward due to the wide variability of inheritance patterns and non-genetic influences such as environmental and lifestyle factors. We discuss whether there is sufficient evidence to standardize echocardiographic screening for first-degree relatives of children diagnosed with HLHS. Due to variations in the inclusion of cardiac anomalies linked to HLHS and the identification of asymptomatic individuals with cardiac malformations, published studies are open to interpretation. We conclude that familial aggregation of obstructive left-sided congenital heart lesions in families with history of HLHS is not supported and recommend that additional screening should adopt a more conservative definition of what truly constitutes this heart defect. More thorough consideration is needed before embracing familial screening recommendations of families of patients with HLHS, since this could inflict serious costs on healthcare infrastructure and further burden affected families both emotionally and financially.
Highlights
Screening protocols for at-risk populations improve the outcomes of patients with diseases that are asymptomatic by detecting them before they progress far enough to be imminently life-threatening and facilitating their treatment
Recruited 210 first-degree relatives of 30 patients with bicuspid aortic valve (BAV) to see if the isolated reports of families with multiple cases of BAV held true in a larger population [9]
Of the 186 subjects they screened by echocardiography, 17 cases of BAV were found
Summary
Screening protocols for at-risk populations improve the outcomes of patients with diseases that are asymptomatic by detecting them before they progress far enough to be imminently life-threatening and facilitating their treatment. The heritability and associated pathologies of each disease must be taken into consideration when making screening recommendations. In 2008, the American Heart Association recommended familial screening for bicuspid aortic valve (BAV) in their clinical practice guidelines for adults with congenital heart disease (CHD) [1]. Understanding the existing data for familial aggregation of these diseases using the tools available for evaluating the efficacy of a screening recommendation is important to determine whether familial screening should be extended to other left-sided heart lesions
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