OBJECTIVES: To understand relationships and survival implications between structural heart disease and hypertrophic cardiomyopathy in Noonan syndrome (Noonan syndrome-HCM), we reviewed the clinical course of 138 children with Noonan syndrome diagnosed with cardiovascular abnormalities and compared survival with the 30 children with Noonan syndrome-HCM with 120 contemporaneous children with nonsyndromic HCM. METHODS: Study cohorts represent consecutive cases diagnosed at our institution 1966 through 2006. Outcomes were modeled using multiphase parametric techniques followed by multivariable regression with bagging. RESULTS: Cardiac abnormalities in Noonan syndrome: Cardiac abnormalities in the 138 Noonan syndrome children included pulmonary valve dysplasia (52%), hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (22%), atrial septal defect (20%), ventricular septal defect (10%), mitral valve dysplasia (6%), coarctation (3%), and Fallot's tetralogy (2%). Need for surgery was high but not different from children with structural defects coexisting with HCM. Overall, late survival in children with Noonan syndrome and cardiac defects was good (91 ± 3% at 15 years), although significantly worse for those with Noonan syndrome-HCM (P < .01). Noonan syndrome-HCM vs. nonsyndromic HCM: In the 30 children with Noonan syndrome-HCM, structural cardiac malformations coexisted in 18 (57%). The incidence of structural cardiac malformations in nonsyndromic HCM was instead 3/120 (2.5%, P < .001). Risk-adjusted late survival was significantly worse for Noonan syndrome-HCM than for nonsyndromic HCM (P= .02). CONCLUSIONS: Noonan syndrome-HCM frequently coexists with structural cardiac malformations, whereas nonsyndromic HCM does not; their natural histories may therefore be different. Late survival is significantly worse for Noonan syndrome-HCM than nonsyndromic HCM.
OBJECTIVES: To understand relationships and survival implications between structural heart disease and hypertrophic cardiomyopathy in Noonan syndrome (Noonan syndrome-HCM), we reviewed the clinical course of 138 children with Noonan syndrome diagnosed with cardiovascular abnormalities and compared survival with the 30 children with Noonan syndrome-HCM with 120 contemporaneous children with nonsyndromic HCM. METHODS: Study cohorts represent consecutive cases diagnosed at our institution 1966 through 2006. Outcomes were modeled using multiphase parametric techniques followed by multivariable regression with bagging. RESULTS:Cardiac abnormalities in Noonan syndrome: Cardiac abnormalities in the 138 Noonan syndromechildren included pulmonary valve dysplasia (52%), hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (22%), atrial septal defect (20%), ventricular septal defect (10%), mitral valve dysplasia (6%), coarctation (3%), and Fallot's tetralogy (2%). Need for surgery was high but not different from children with structural defects coexisting with HCM. Overall, late survival in children with Noonan syndrome and cardiac defects was good (91 ± 3% at 15 years), although significantly worse for those with Noonan syndrome-HCM (P < .01). Noonan syndrome-HCM vs. nonsyndromic HCM: In the 30 children with Noonan syndrome-HCM, structural cardiac malformations coexisted in 18 (57%). The incidence of structural cardiac malformations in nonsyndromic HCM was instead 3/120 (2.5%, P < .001). Risk-adjusted late survival was significantly worse for Noonan syndrome-HCM than for nonsyndromic HCM (P= .02). CONCLUSIONS:Noonan syndrome-HCM frequently coexists with structural cardiac malformations, whereas nonsyndromic HCM does not; their natural histories may therefore be different. Late survival is significantly worse for Noonan syndrome-HCM than nonsyndromic HCM.
Authors: G Bademci; F B Cengiz; J Foster Ii; D Duman; L Sennaroglu; O Diaz-Horta; T Atik; T Kirazli; L Olgun; H Alper; I Menendez; I Loclar; G Sennaroglu; S Tokgoz-Yilmaz; S Guo; Y Olgun; N Mahdieh; M Bonyadi; N Bozan; A Ayral; F Ozkinay; M Yildirim-Baylan; S H Blanton; M Tekin Journal: Sci Rep Date: 2016-08-26 Impact factor: 4.379