| Literature DB >> 35122776 |
Sawai Singh Rathore1, Kinza Iqbal2, Shameel Shafqat3, Eleze Tariq3, Sohaib Tousif4, Zain Ghufran UlHaq4, David Fernández-Sánchez5, María José Hernández-Woodbine5, Sofia Carolina Granados-Mendoza5, Natalia Andrea Lacouture-Cárdenas5, Camilo Andrés Avendaño-Capriles5, Chanchal Maheshwari6, Aimen Iqbal7, Gauranga Mahalwar8, Mariam Shariff9, Ashish Kumar10.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Takotsubo cardiomyopathy (TC) or stress-induced cardiomyopathy is a transient heart condition that clinically resembles an acute coronary syndrome. This study aims to assess the incidence of life-threatening arrhythmias in patients with Takotsubo cardiomyopathy and evaluate the outcomes of patients with life-threatening arrhythmias (LTAs) in Takotsubo cardiomyopathy compared with those without LTA.Entities:
Keywords: Life-threatening arrhythmias; Mortality; Takotsubo cardiomyopathy
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35122776 PMCID: PMC9039676 DOI: 10.1016/j.ihj.2022.01.005
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Indian Heart J ISSN: 0019-4832
Study characteristics of the included studies.
| First author | Country | Study Design | Total Population ( | Inclusion criteria | Exclusion criteria |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Auzel O et al, 2016 | France | Retrospective case study | 90 | >18 years with clinical presentation of ACS TC was defined according to the Mayo Clinic criteria | No coronary angiography was performed |
| Dib C et al, 2008 | United States | Case-control study | 105 | Patients who underwent coronary arteriography and left ventriculography and met the Mayo Clinic criteria for Apical Ballooning Syndrome (ABS) Documented complete normalization of left ventricular function con follow-up echocardiography | Patients diagnosed with cardiomyopathy, valvular disease, congenital heart disease, pheochromocytoma, cocaine abuse, paced heart rhythm, or active myocarditis |
| El-Battrawy I et al, 2020 | Germany and Italy | Prospective cohort study | 906 | TC defined as being a transient systolic dysfunction with marked LV contraction abnormality due to akinesia or dyskinesia of the LV apical and/or midventricular or basal segments extending beyond a single coronary perfusion bed | – |
| Jesel L et al, 2018 | France | Retrospective study | 214 | Patients diagnosed with TC according to Madias'criteria | – |
| Madias C et al, 2011 | United States | Cohort | 93 | TC was diagnosed based on characteristic patterns of left ventricular dysfunction | – |
| Malanchini G et al, 2020 | Italy | Retrospective study | 10,861 | Patients with a primary diagnosis at the discharge of TC | – |
| Song BG et al, 2010 | Korea | Retrospective study | 87 | Transient coronary-artery vascular distribution The absence of significant coronary artery angiograms (diameter stenosis, <50% by visual estimation) or angiographic evidence of acute plaque rupture New electrocardiographic changes (ST-segment changes, T-wave inversions, or Q-waves) | – |
| Sharkey SW et al, 2010 | United States | Cohort | 136 | An acute cardiac event typically presenting with substernal pain Systolic dysfunction with marked LV contraction abnormality, extending beyond the geographic territory of a single epicardial coronary artery, assessed with LV angiography, CMR imaging, or 2-dimensional echocardiography Absence of obstructive atherosclerotic coronary artery stenosis | – |
| Brinjikji W et al, 2012 | United States | Retrospective study | 24,701 | Patients with a diagnosis of TC | – |
| Regnante RR et al, 2009 | United States | Cohort study | 70 | TC was defined according to the Mayo Clinic criteria | – |
| Bento D et al, 2019 | Portugal | Cohort study | 234 | TC was defined according to the Mayo Clinic criteria | Patients who died during the acute phase, before complete recovery of myocardial function |
| Tsuchihashi K et al, 2001 | Japan | Retrospective study | 88 | Patients with suspected ACS based on chest symptoms or ECG changes Transient LV ballooning confirmed by left ventriculography or echocardiography No significant angiographic stenosis within 48 h of the onset No known cardiomyopathies | Patients with idiopathic cardiomyopathy, febrile disorders, pheochromocytoma or prior history of myocardial infarction and those receiving coronary revascularization therapy were |
| Pant S et al 2013 | United States | Retrospective study | 16,450 | TC was defined according to the ICD-9-CM codes | Patients with ACS, ischemic heart disease or any other form of cardiomyopathy were excluded. |
| Murakami T et al 2013 | Japan | Retrospective study | 107 | Transient hypokinesis, akinesis, or dyskinesis of the left ventricular midsegments with or without apical involvement; the regional wall motion abnormalities extend beyond a single epicardial vascular distribution Absence of obstructive coronary disease or angiographic evidence of acute plaque rupture New ECG abnormalities (either ST-segment elevation and/or T-wave inversion) or modest cardiac troponin elevation. | Patients with pheochromocytoma or myocarditis were excluded |
| Migliore F et al, 2012 | Italy | Prospective study | 61 | TC was defined according to the Mayo Clinic criteria | – |
| Templin C et al, 2015 | Switzerland | Prospective and retrospective, observational study | 1750 | TC was defined according to the Mayo Clinic criteria | Patients with the presence of coexisting coronary artery disease, the presence of a wall-motion abnormality that was congruent with a single coronary artery territory in a patient matching all other criteria and death during the acute phase before wall-motion recovery were excluded |
| Citro R et al, 2012 | Italy | Partially retrospective, partially prospective observational study | 190 | TC was defined according to the Mayo Clinic criteria | – |
| Sharkey SW et al, 2015 | United States | Prospective | 249 | Acute presentation typically with chest pain/discomfort or dyspnea, Systolic dysfunction with marked LV contraction abnormality, extending beyond the geographic territory of a single coronary artery, assessed with contrast LV angiography, cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging (CMR), or 2-dimensional echocardiography, Absence of obstructive coronary stenosis (i.e., 50% luminal narrowing of the major coronary arteries by angiography) or evidence of acute plaque rupture Absence of myocarditis or ischemic transmural late gadolinium enhancement on CMR. | – |
ABS: Apical ballooning syndrome, ACS: acute coronary syndrome, CAG: coronary angiogram, CMR: cardiovascular magnetic resonance, ECG: electrocardiogram, LTAs: life-threatening arrhythmias, LV: left ventricle, SC: stress cardiomyopathy, SCM: stress cardiomyopathy, SD: standard deviation, TLVBS: transient left ventricular ballooning syndrome, TC: takotsubo cardiomyopathy, VA: ventricular arrhythmias, VF: ventricular fibrillation, VT: ventricular tachycardia.
Baseline Clinical characteristics of the included studies.
| First | Total Population ( | Participant description and Mean age (SD) | Type and prevalence of LTAs | In-hospital mortality | Long-term mortality | Follow-up for long-term mortality |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Auzel O et al, 2016 | 90 | Patients with a clinical presentation of ACS who underwent coronary arteriography at the coronary care unit Female: 97% 72 years (13) 46% Hypertension 29% Dyslipidemia | Ventricular arrhythmias: non-sustained and sustained VT and VF. | LTA group = 0/9 Non-LTA group = 2/81 | – | – |
| Dib C et al, 2008 | 105 | Patients with a diagnosis of TC who underwent coronary arteriography and left ventriculography in the Mayo Clinic Cardiac Catheterization database Female: 100% 69 years (8.9) | Significant arrhythmia: VF and asystole. | LTA group = 1/6 Non-LTA group = 0/99 | LTA group = 1/6 Non-LTA group = 0/99 | – |
| El-Battrawy I et al, 2020 | 906 | Patients with a diagnosis of TC who were enrolled in GErman Italian STress cardiomyopathy (GEIST) registry Female: 89.4% 70 ± 11 years 70.1% Diabetes 70.1% Hypertension | VT, VF, torsade de pointes (TdP), and asystole or complete atrioventricular block) | LTA group = 7/67 No LTA group = 32/839 | LTA group = 50/67 No LTA group = 530/839 | 3 years |
| Jesel L et al, 2018 | 214 | Patients with a diagnosis of TC in the Cardiac Catheterization Laboratory database of Strasbourg University Hospital Female: 81.3% 69 years (12.6) Hypertension (56.5%) Dyslipidemia (39.8%) | LTAs were defined as VT, VF, or sudden cardiac arrest. | - LTA group = 9/23 -No LTA group = 17/191 | LTA group = 11/23 No LTA group = 27/191 | 1 year |
| Madias C et al, 2011 | 93 | Patients with the diagnosis of TC in the database of 2 institutions in Massachusetts Female: 86% 67 years Hypertension 53% - Hypercholesterolemia 33% | Malignant ventricular arrhythmias: VF and torsades de pointes (TdP). | - LTA group = 0/8 | - No LTA group = 77% | 2 years |
| Malanchini G et al, 2020 | 10,861 | Patients with a diagnosis of TC in the Italian National Healthcare System Databank Female: 91.7% 70.7 years (11.9) Hypertension 23.2% Hypercholesterolemia 12% | VF and VT. | 241/10,861 (2,2%) | – | – |
| Song BG et al, 2010 | 87 | Patients with a diagnosis of TLVBS at a tertiary-care center in Korea. Female: 74% Nonsurvivors: 72 years Survivors: 61 years -Hypertension (45%) -Hypercholesterolemia (25%) | Third-degree atrioventricular block, VF, VT, and cardiac arrest. | 8/87 (9%) | 20/87 (23%) | 42 months |
| Sharkey SW et al, 2010 | 136 | Patients who presented with SC to the emergency and hospital facilities of the Minneapolis Heart Institute and Abbott Northwestern Hospital (Minneapolis, Minnesota) Female: 96% 68 years (13) | – | 2% | – | – |
| Brinjikji W et al, 2012 | 24,701 | Patients with a diagnosis of TC in the National Inpatient Database Samples. Female: 89% 66.8 years (30.7) -Hypertension (58.4%) -Hyperlipidemia (37.5%) | – | 4.2% | – | – |
| Regnante RR et al, 2009 | 70 | Patients who underwent emergent cardiac catheterizations with findings consistent with TC at 2 major hospitals in Rhode Island Female: 95% 67 years (11) Hypertension (66%) Hyperlipidemia (49%) | Sustained ventricular arrhythmias: VF or VT | LTA group = 1/3 No LTA group = 0/67 | LTA group = 1/3 No LTA group = 2/67 | – |
| Bento D et al, 2019 | 234 | Patients with a diagnosis of TC in 12 Portuguese hospitals Female: 89.7% 68 years (12) Hypertension (67.9%) Dyslipidemia (54.3%) | VF, VT, and complete atrioventricular block | 2.2% | 4.4% | 33 ± 33 months |
| Tsuchihashi K et al, 2001 | 88 | Patients with transient LV apical wall motion abnormalities without stenosis on CAG enrolled from cardiovascular institutes of Angina Pectoris Myocardial Infarction investigations in Japan Female: 76% 67 years (13) Hypertension (48%) Hyperlipidemia (24%) | Atrioventricular block, VT and VF | 1% | 2% | 13 ± 14 months |
| Pant S et al 2013 | 16,450 | Patients with a diagnosis of TC in the National Inpatient Samples Database Female (89.6%) | VT, VF, ventricular flutter, and SCA | LTA group = 7% No LTA group = 3.7% | – | – |
| Murakami T et al 2013 | 107 | Patients with a diagnosis of TC from the Tokyo CCU Network database compromising 67 cardiovascular centers Female (76.6%) 73.9 years (11.1) | Sustained VT, VF, and advanced atrioventricular block | 8.4% | – | – |
| Migliore F et al, 2012 | 61 | Female (96.7%) 67 years (8) | – | – | 57 ± 23 months | |
| Templin C et al, 2015 | 1750 | Female (89.8%) 66.4 years (13.1) | VT | 4.1% | 5.6% per patient-year | 10 years |
| Citro R et al, 2012 | 190 | Patients with a diagnosis of TC enrolled in the Tako-tsubo Italian Network registry at 11 Italian referral cardiac centers Female (92.1%) 66 years Hypertension (48.4%) Hypercholesterolemia (34.2%) | VT and VF | 2.8% | – | – |
| Sharkey SW et al, 2015 | 249 | Patients presented with a first TC event to the Minneapolis Heart Institute at the Abbott Northwestern Hospital (Minneapolis, Minnesota) Female (96%) Diabetes (13.3%) Hypertension (54.2%) | VF, pulseless electrical activity, and asystole | 1.2% | 8% | 4.7 years |
ABS: Apical ballooning syndrome, ACS: acute coronary syndrome, CAG: coronary angiogram, CMR: cardiovascular magnetic resonance, ECG: electrocardiogram, LTAs: life-threatening arrhythmias, LV: left ventricle, SC: stress cardiomyopathy, SCM: stress cardiomyopathy, SD: standard deviation, TLVBS: transient left ventricular ballooning syndrome, TC: takotsubo cardiomyopathy, VA: ventricular arrhythmias, VF: ventricular fibrillation, VT: ventricular tachycardia.
Pooled prevalence of life-threatening arrhythmias in Takotsubo Cardiomyopathy.
| Type of LTA | Number of studies | Sample size | Pooled prevalence |
|---|---|---|---|
| Overall | 16 | 31,475 | 6.285% (CI: 4.698–8.084%; I2 = 94.67%) |
| Complete atrioventricular block | 4 | 11,397 | 2.129% (CI: 0.877–3.912%; |
| Asystole | 3 | 1369 | 2.036% (CI: 1.216–3.061%; |
| Ventricular fibrillation | 8 | 12,538 | 2.674% (CI: 1.159–4.789%; |
| Ventricular tachycardia | 7 | 30,359 | 3.343% (CI: 1.844–5.264%; |
LTA: life-threatening arrhythmia, CI: confidence interval, p: probability value.
Fig. 1Pooled incidence of life-threatening arrhythmias in Takotsubo Cardiomyopathy patients (A) Overall LTAs (B) Complete AV-Block (C) Asystole (D) Ventricular fibrillation (E) Ventricular tachycardia.
Fig. 2(A) Pooled Odds Ratios of in-hospital mortality in the LTA group versus the non-LTA group of TC patient (B) Pooled Odds Ratios of long-term mortality in the LTA group versus the non-LTA group of TC patients (C) Pooled Odds Ratios of cardiogenic shock development in the LTA group versus the non-LTA group of TC patients (D) Pooled Odds Ratios of in-hospital mortality in the LTA group versus the non-LTA group of TC patients after sensitivity analysis. CI = confidence interval; M−H = Mantel-Haenszel; df = degrees of freedom.