New immunohistochemical test reliably diagnoses arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy
A study led by investigators at Beth Israel Deaconess
Medical Center (BIDMC) has demonstrated that a new immunohistochemical test is
reliable in diagnosing arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy (ARVC).
Reported in the March 12 issue of The New England Journal of Medicine (NEJM),
the new findings offer the possibility of a highly sensitive and specific means
of identifying this life- threatening condition at an early stage, when it can
be treated with by implanting a cardiac defibrillator.
"In many individuals, ARVC has no symptoms or warning
signs, meaning that the first and only manifestation of disease is sudden death,"
explains the study's senior author Jeffrey E. Saffitz, M.D., Ph.D., Chairman of the
Department of Pathology at BIDMC and Mallinckrodt Professor of Pathology at Harvard
Medical School. The hereditary condition, which affects approximately 1 in 5,000
individuals worldwide, is particularly prevalent among Mediterranean populations
and, in Italy, is the leading cause of sudden cardiac death among patients under
age 35.
"ARVC has been linked to genetic mutations in proteins
that form desmosomes, subcellular structures responsible for cell-to-cell adhesion,"
explains Saffitz, whose laboratory studies connections between cells in the heart
and their relationship to arrhythmias and sudden cardiac death. Several years
ago, he and his colleagues discovered that a desmosomal protein known as plakoglobin
was dramatically diminished in tissue samples of ARVC. In this new study, the
authors set out to determine if this reduced plakoglobin signal could serve as
a biomarker for ARVC early in the course of the disease.
After ascertaining that the protein was indeed diminished
in cases of ARVC - and not from other types of heart disease - the authors performed
"blinded" immunohistochemical analysis of heart-biopsy samples, obtained from
an ARVC registry located at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.
The results were remarkably accurate. "On the basis of
clinical criteria, we made the correct diagnosis in 10 of 11 subjects with definite
ARVC and correctly ruled out ARVC in 10 of 11 subjects who did not have the condition,"
explains Saffitz. "There was no question that the plakoglobin signal level was
reduced diffusely in the ARVC samples."
Although previous studies have found that magnetic resonance
imaging (MRI), electrocardiography and echocardiography can accurately identify
patients with advanced AVRC, these tests are much less sensitive for patients
with earlier or less conspicuous disease, notes Saffitz.
"Additional work will be necessary to validate this new
test but it holds considerable promise in identifying people at risk of sudden
death in whom preventive measures such as placement of an internal defibrillator
may be life-saving," says Saffitz.
This study was supported by grants from the March of
Dimes, the British Heart Foundation, the Heart Rhythm Society, the National Institutes
of Health, the Lerner Fund, the Bogle Foundation, St. Jude Medical Foundation,
the Healing Hearts Foundation, the Cassa di Risparmio de Padova e Rovigo Foundation
and the British Heart Foundation and United Kingdom National Institute for Health
Research Biomedical Research Centres.
Study coauthors include BIDMC researchers Angeliki Asimaki,
Ph.D. (first author) and Shiva Gautam, Ph.D.; Harikrishna Tandri, M.D., Hugh Calkins,
M.D., and Marc Halushka, M.D., Ph.D., of Johns Hopkins Medical Institutions, Baltimore;
Hayden Huang, Ph.D., of Brigham and Women's Hospital; Cristina Basso, M.D., Ph.D. and
Gaetano Thienne, M.D., of the University of Padua Medical School, Italy; Adalena
Tsatsopoulou, M.D., and Nikos Protonotarios, M.D., of Yiannis Protonotarios Medical
Center, Naxos, Greece; and William J. McKenna, M.D., DSc, of the Heart Hospital,
University College London Hospitals National Health Service Trust.
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