Cardiomyopathy and Myocarditis
1963CHAPTER 259
and occasionally recent infections. Glucocorticoid therapy alone is
rarely effective, but in combination with other immunosuppression
therapies similar to those used for severe transplant rejection, it may
improve short-term outcomes in patients who are hemodynamically
stable at presentation. Most patients in cardiogenic shock from giant
cell myocarditis progress to urgent mechanical support or transplantation, which may be precluded by systemic infection from intensive immunosuppression. Although the severity of presentation and
myocardial histology are more fulminant than with sarcoidosis, the
occasional finding of giant cell myocarditis after a previous diagnosis
of sarcoidosis suggests that they may share the same disease spectrum.
Eosinophilic myocarditis can be an important manifestation of the
hypereosinophilic syndrome, which in Western countries is often considered idiopathic, although in Mediterranean and African countries,
it is associated with antecedent infection. It may also be seen with
systemic eosinophilic syndromes such as Churg-Strauss syndrome
or malignancies. Hypersensitivity myocarditis is often an unexpected
diagnosis, made when the biopsy reveals infiltration with lymphocytes
and mononuclear cells with a high proportion of eosinophils. Most
commonly, the reaction is attributed to antibiotics, particularly those
taken chronically, but thiazides, anticonvulsants, indomethacin, and
methyldopa have also been implicated. Occasional associations with
the smallpox vaccine (vaccinia) have been reported. Although the circulating eosinophil count may be slightly elevated in hypersensitivity
myocarditis, it is lower than in the hypereosinophilic syndrome. Highdose glucocorticoids and discontinuation of the trigger agent can be
curative for hypersensitivity myocarditis.
Myocarditis is often associated with systemic inflammatory diseases,
such as polymyositis and dermatomyositis, which affect skeletal and
cardiac muscle. Although noninfective inflammatory myocarditis is
sometimes included in the differential diagnosis, cardiac involvement
with connective tissue disease such as systemic lupus erythematosus
more often presents as pericarditis, vasculitis, pulmonary hypertension, and accelerated coronary artery disease.
The most dramatic form of noninfectious inflammatory myocarditis
is that seen with combined immune checkpoint inhibitors. Targeted
monoclonal antibody therapy to unblock the host immune response
has produced remarkable remission of melanoma, renal cell carcinoma,
refractory Hodgkin’s lymphoma, and other advanced tumors. Inhibitory receptors on T lymphocytes (such as CTLA4 and PD-1) and the
“programmed death” ligands, such as PD-L1, on target tissues interact
to turn off immune activation as part of normal autoregulation. Tumor
cells can upregulate these ligands to hide from immune recognition.
Antibodies to the inhibitory receptors or ligands can reawaken host
response, but also unleash immune attack against host tissues expressing PD-L1, which include myocytes and endothelial cells and multiple
organs, such as liver, pancreas, thyroid, skin, and skeletal muscle. The
frequency of myocarditis as reported is <0.5%, is higher with monoclonal therapy against PD-1 than against CTLA4, and is over tenfold
higher with combined used of two checkpoint inhibitors. Patients
can present with acute heart failure, often with bizarre electrocardiographic arrhythmias or conduction block and with evidence of skeletal
myositis. Echocardiography may suggest myocardial edema without
ventricular dilation, and initial ejection fraction may not be markedly
reduced. Troponin is often positive, B-type natriuretic peptide may be
elevated, and creatine phosphokinase may be high, particularly with
skeletal involvement. If performed, MRI shows widespread inflammation, and biopsy shows extensive lymphocytic infiltration with CD4+
and CD8+ T cells and CD68+ macrophages. The diagnosis should
be suspected immediately with acute cardiac presentation in patients
treated with checkpoint inhibitors, who may also present initially with
other acute organ system involvement, which warrants urgent multidisciplinary management usually in an intensive care unit. Initial therapy
involves high-dose glucocorticoids, which may be followed by other
immunosuppressive agents. Reported fatality in fulminant checkpoint
inhibition myocarditis has been ~50% and is higher after combined
checkpoint inhibition. Less commonly, cardiovascular involvement can
cause pericarditis or arteritis, particularly temporal arteritis.
■ PERIPARTUM CARDIOMYOPATHY
Peripartum cardiomyopathy (PPCM) develops during the last trimester
or within the first 6 months after pregnancy, affecting between 1:2000
and 1:4000 deliveries in the United Sates. Risk factors are increased
maternal age, increased parity, twin pregnancy, malnutrition, use of
tocolytic therapy for premature labor, and preeclampsia or toxemia of
pregnancy. Several of these risk factors contribute to antiangiogenic
signaling through secreted vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF)
inhibitors, such as soluble FLT1 (sFLT1). Recent animal and human
studies have confirmed the role of decreased angiogenic reserve in the
pathogenesis of PPCM, which may be rescued by correcting the angiogenic imbalance. Another recently proposed mechanism invokes an
abnormal prolactin cleavage fragment, which is induced by oxidative
stress and also affects angiogenesis; this observation has led to preliminary investigation of bromocriptine as possible therapy.
However, other processes also contribute to PPCM. Heart failure
early after delivery was previously common in Nigeria, when the
custom for new mothers included salt ingestion while reclining on a
warm bed, which likely impaired mobilization of the excess circulating
volume after delivery. In the Western world, lymphocytic myocarditis
has sometimes been found on myocardial biopsy. This inflammation has been hypothesized to reflect increased susceptibility to viral
myocarditis or an autoimmune myocarditis due to cross-reactivity of
anti-uterine antibodies against cardiac muscle.
As the increased circulatory demand of pregnancy can aggravate
other cardiac disease that was clinically unrecognized, it is crucial to
the diagnosis of PPCM that there be no evidence for a preexisting cardiac disorder. By contrast, heart failure presenting earlier in pregnancy
has been termed pregnancy-associated cardiomyopathy (PACM).
Both PPCM and PACM have been found in some families with other
presentations of DCM. As in familial and sporadic DCM, truncating
mutations, predominantly in TTN, are present in 15% of patients with
PPCM and are associated with systolic dysfunction that persists. Pregnancy may represent another example of environmental triggers for
accelerated phenotypic expression of genetic cardiomyopathies.
■ TOXIC CARDIOMYOPATHY
Cardiotoxicity has been reported with multiple environmental and
pharmacologic agents. Often these associations are seen only with very
high levels of exposure or acute overdoses, in which acute electrocardiographic and hemodynamic abnormalities may reflect both direct
drug effect and systemic toxicity.
Alcohol is the most common toxin implicated in chronic DCM.
Excess consumption may contribute to >10% of cases of heart failure,
FIGURE 259-8 Sarcoidosis. Microscopic image of an endomyocardial biopsy
showing a noncaseating granuloma and associated interstitial fibrosis typical of
sarcoidosis. No microorganisms were present on special stains, and no foreign
material was identified. Hematoxylin and eosin–stained section, 200× original
magnification. (Image courtesy of Robert Padera, MD, PhD, Department of
Pathology, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston.)
1964 PART 6 Disorders of the Cardiovascular System
including exacerbation of heart failure with structural heart disease.
Alcoholic cardiomyopathy causes many more hospital admissions in
men than women, but prevalence is similar between men and women
with alcoholism, with left ventricular dysfunction detected in about a
third of asymptomatic patients. Estimates of the alcohol intake necessary to cause cardiomyopathy have been 4–5 ounces or 80–100 g
of pure ethanol daily for 5–10 years, about 1 L of wine, 8 beers, or
½ pint of hard liquor. Frequent binge drinking may also be sufficient.
Toxicity is attributed both to alcohol and to its primary metabolite,
acetaldehyde. Chronic heavy exposure may alter metabolism, protein
synthesis, substrate utilization, and oxidative stress. Polymorphisms
of the genes encoding alcohol dehydrogenase and the angiotensinconverting enzyme may influence the likelihood of alcoholic cardiomyopathy. Superimposed vitamin deficiencies and toxic alcohol additives
are rarely implicated currently. Mutations in TTN and other DCM
disease genes can be identified in ~10% of patients with presumed
alcohol cardiomyopathy.
Many patients with alcoholic cardiomyopathy are fully functional in
their daily lives without apparent stigmata of alcoholism. The cardiac
impairment in severe alcoholic cardiomyopathy is the sum of both
permanent damage and a substantial component that is reversible after
cessation of alcohol consumption. Atrial fibrillation occurs commonly
both early in the disease (“holiday heart”) and in advanced stages.
Medical therapy includes neurohormonal antagonists and diuretics
as needed for fluid management. Withdrawal should be supervised
to avoid exacerbations of heart failure or arrhythmias, and ongoing
support arranged. Even with severe disease, marked improvement can
occur within 3–6 months of abstinence, but the prognosis is grim if
alcohol consumption continues.
Cocaine, amphetamines, and related catecholaminergic stimulants
can produce chronic cardiomyopathy as well as acute ischemia, tachyarrhythmias, malignant hypertension, aortic dissection, and stroke.
Cardiac pathology reveals microinfarcts consistent with small vessel
ischemia, similar to those seen with pheochromocytoma, and thrombosis secondary to endothelial dysfunction in the case of cocaine.
Chemotherapy agents are the most common drugs implicated in
toxic cardiomyopathy. Judicious use balances risks of the malignancy
and the risks of cardiotoxicity presented not only by the drug regimens
but also by the patient’s cardiovascular profile and possibly genetic
factors influencing myocyte response to injury. Receipt of cardiotoxic
drugs or radiation may warrant designation as “stage B” heart failure,
with asymptomatic changes in cardiac structure and biomarkers. Once
symptoms are apparent, the prognosis with heart failure is worse than
for many types of cancer.
Anthracyclines (e.g., doxorubicin) cause characteristic histologic
changes of vacuolar degeneration and myofibrillar loss. Multiple mechanisms have been implicated, involving reactive oxygen species and
iron compounds, mitochondrial damage, transcription factors such as
hypoxia-induced factor, and, most recently, inhibition of topoisomerase
II involved in DNA repair. Risk for cardiotoxicity increases with older
age, preexisting cardiac disease, higher doses or combination therapies,
or left chest irradiation. Systolic dysfunction can occur acutely with
symptoms of heart failure noted soon after drug administration, but
more often is detected by surveillance echocardiography during the
first year after exposure. Doxorubicin cardiotoxicity generally does not
result in marked left ventricular dilation, such that stroke volume and
systemic perfusion can be severely reduced with only a modest reduction of ejection fraction. Therapy for reduced ejection fraction includes
β-adrenergic receptor blockade and inhibition of the renin-angiotensin
system, with conflicting data on whether these agents decrease toxicity
when given in parallel with chemotherapy. Once thought to have an
inexorable downward course, many patients with symptomatic heart
failure can improve to near-normal function with careful management,
including prevention of “second-hit” insults such as atrial fibrillation or
hypertension. The course differs for some children treated with these
agents before puberty, in whom inadequate growth of the heart may
lead to refractory heart failure as they reach their twenties.
Trastuzumab (Herceptin) is one of the humanized monoclonal antibodies that interfere with human epidermal growth receptor 2 (HER2),
which is crucial for growth of some tumors, such as breast cancer, and
for cardiac adaptation. Cardiotoxicity is highest when anthracyclines
are administered in conjunction with trastuzumab; however, less toxicity is seen now when these agents are combined compared with the
toxicity observed previously with paclitaxel for breast cancer. Although
more often reversible than anthracycline cardiotoxicity, trastuzumab
cardiomyopathy may persist in about a third of affected patients and
can progress to clinical heart failure and death. For cardiotoxicity
with anthracyclines or trastuzumab, therapy is recommended as for
other causes of reduced ejection fraction, but it is not clear whether
treatment enhances the spontaneous rate of improvement or whether
it decreases progression.
Cardiotoxicity with cyclophosphamide and ifosfamide generally
occurs acutely and with very high doses. 5-Fluorouracil, cisplatin,
and some other alkylating agents can cause recurrent coronary spasm
that occasionally leads to depressed contractility. Acute administration of interferon-α, interleukin 2, and other cytokine-based therapies can cause hypotension and arrhythmias. Clinical heart failure
occurring during their chronic administration usually resolves after
discontinuation.
VEGF, produced endogenously or by tumors, enhances angiogenesis
by activating the VEGF signaling pathways. Inhibitors of this pathway
and its receptors are potent against multiple cancers. Many smallmolecule tyrosine kinase inhibitors that affect VEGF are in use for different
malignancies. Although these agents are “targeted” at specific tumor
receptors or pathways, the biologic conservation of signaling pathways
means that some of these drugs also find targets in the cardiovascular
and other organ systems. Blood pressures increase in most patients
during therapy, attributed to an imbalance between endogenous vasodilators and vasoconstrictors and alteration of glomerular function.
Hypertension and proteinuria can develop with these agents, similar
to preeclampsia, and presentation is associated with increased risk
of future cardiac disease. Recognition of cardiotoxicity during therapy with these agents is complicated because they occasionally cause
peripheral fluid accumulation (ankle edema, periorbital swelling, pleural effusions) due to local factors rather than elevated central venous
pressures. Therapeutic approaches include withdrawal of the tyrosine
kinase inhibitor (when possible) and conventional treatment for heart
failure. Newer tyrosine kinase inhibitors effective against multiple
kinases may have more complex off-target effects.
The most dramatic toxicity of contemporary cancer therapy results
from combined immune checkpoint inhibitors, which block the natural counterregulatory T-cell suppression and unleash potentially fatal
inflammation directed toward multiple organs that can include the
heart and vessels. These are discussed in the previous section on noninfectious myocarditis (above).
Proteasome inhibitors used to treat multiple myeloma are associated
with an increased risk of hypertension, ischemic events, thromboembolism, and heart failure. The more potent agent, carfilzomib, appears
more cardiotoxic than bortezomib.
Other therapeutic drugs that can cause cardiotoxicity during
chronic use include tumor necrosis factor α antagonists for rheumatologic conditions, and carbamazepine, clozapine, and lithium for neurologic and psychiatric diagnoses. Antiretroviral therapies for HIV have
been implicated in cardiomyopathy. Chloroquine and hydroxychloroquine are widely used for systemic lupus erythematosus and rheumatoid arthritis and can decrease ejection fraction with either restrictive
or dilated phenotype, often in association with conduction block. The
presumed mechanism of toxicity is impaired lysosomal function, with
accumulation of inclusion bodies that can be seen on cardiac biopsy.
Toxic exposures can cause arrhythmias or respiratory injury acutely
during accidents. Chronic exposures implicated in cumulative cardiotoxicity include hydrocarbons, fluorocarbons, arsenicals, lead, and
mercury.
■ METABOLIC CAUSES OF CARDIOMYOPATHY
Endocrine disorders affect multiple organ systems, including the
heart. Hyperthyroidism and hypothyroidism do not often cause clinical
heart failure in an otherwise normal heart but commonly exacerbate
Cardiomyopathy and Myocarditis
1965CHAPTER 259
heart failure. Clinical signs of thyroid disease may be masked, so tests
of thyroid function are part of the routine evaluation of cardiomyopathy. Hyperthyroidism should always be considered with new-onset
atrial fibrillation or ventricular tachycardia or atrial fibrillation in
which the rapid ventricular response is difficult to control. The most
common current reason for thyroid abnormalities in the cardiac population is the treatment of tachyarrhythmias with amiodarone, a drug
with substantial iodine content. Hypothyroidism should be treated
with very slow escalation of thyroid supplements to avoid exacerbating
tachyarrhythmias and heart failure. Hyperthyroidism and heart failure
create a dangerous combination that merits very close supervision,
often hospitalization, during titration of antithyroid medications,
during which decompensation of heart failure may occur precipitously
and fatally.
Pheochromocytoma is rare but should be considered when a patient
has heart failure and very labile blood pressure and heart rate,
sometimes with episodic palpitations (Chap. 387). Patients with
pheochromocytoma often have postural hypotension. In addition to
α-adrenergic receptor antagonists, definitive therapy requires surgical
extirpation. Very high renin states, such as those caused by renal artery
stenosis, can lead to modest depression in ejection fraction with little
or no ventricular dilation and markedly labile symptoms with flash
pulmonary edema, related to sudden shifts in vascular tone and intravascular volume.
Controversies remain regarding whether diabetes and obesity are
sufficient to cause cardiomyopathy. Most heart failure in diabetes
results from epicardial coronary disease, with further increase in coronary artery risk due to accompanying hypertension and renal dysfunction. Cardiomyopathy may result in part from insulin resistance and
increased advanced-glycosylation end products, which impair both
systolic and diastolic function. However, much of the dysfunction can
be attributed to scattered focal ischemia resulting from distal coronary
artery tapering and limited microvascular perfusion even without
proximal focal stenoses. Diabetes is a typical factor in heart failure with
“preserved” ejection fraction, along with hypertension, advanced age,
and female gender.
The existence of a cardiomyopathy due to obesity is generally
accepted. In addition to cardiac involvement from associated diabetes,
hypertension, and vascular inflammation of the metabolic syndrome,
obesity alone is associated with impaired excretion of excess volume
load, which, over time, can lead to increased wall stress and secondary
adaptive neurohumoral responses. Fluid retention may be aggravated
by large fluid intake and the rapid clearance of natriuretic peptides by
adipose tissue. In the absence of another obvious cause of cardiomyopathy in an obese patient with systolic dysfunction without marked
ventricular dilation, effective weight reduction is often associated
with major improvement in ejection fraction and clinical function.
Improvement in cardiac function has been described after successful
bariatric surgery, although all major surgical therapy poses increased
risk for patients with heart failure. Postoperative malabsorption and
nutritional deficiencies, such as calcium and phosphate deficiencies,
may be particularly deleterious for patients with cardiomyopathy.
Nutritional deficiencies can occasionally cause DCM but are not
commonly implicated in developed countries. Beri-beri heart disease
due to thiamine deficiency can result from poor nutrition in undernourished populations and in patients deriving most of their calories
from alcohol and has been reported in teenagers subsisting only on
highly processed foods. This disease is initially a vasodilated state with
very-high-output heart failure that can later progress to a low-output
state; thiamine repletion can lead to prompt recovery of cardiovascular
function. Abnormalities in carnitine metabolism can cause dilated
or restrictive cardiomyopathies, usually in children. Deficiency of
trace elements such as selenium can cause cardiomyopathy (Keshan’s
disease).
Calcium is essential for excitation-contraction coupling. Chronic
deficiencies of calcium, such as can occur with hypoparathyroidism
(particularly postsurgical) or intestinal dysfunction (from diarrheal
syndromes and following extensive resection), can cause severe chronic
heart failure that responds over days or weeks to vigorous calcium
repletion. Phosphate is a component of high-energy compounds
needed for efficient energy transfer and multiple signaling pathways.
Hypophosphatemia can develop during starvation and early refeeding
following a prolonged fast and occasionally during hyperalimentation.
Hemochromatosis is variably classified as a metabolic or storage
disease (Chap. 414). It is included among the causes of restrictive cardiomyopathy, but the clinical presentation is often that of a DCM. The
autosomal recessive form is related to the HFE gene. With up to 10% of
the population heterozygous for one mutation, the clinical prevalence
might be as high as 1 in 500. The lower observed rates highlight the
limited penetrance of the disease, suggesting the role of additional
genetic and environmental factors such as alcoholism affecting clinical
expression. Cardiac siderosis can also be acquired from iron overload
due to hemoglobinopathies in patients treated with recurrent transfusions. Excess iron is deposited in the perinuclear compartment of cardiomyocytes, with resulting disruption of intracellular architecture and
mitochondrial function. Diagnosis is easily made from measurement
of serum iron and transferrin saturation, with a threshold of >60% for
men and >45–50% for women. MRI can help to quantitate iron stores
in the liver and heart, and endomyocardial biopsy tissue can be stained
for iron (Fig. 259-9), which is particularly important if the patient has
another cause for cardiomyopathy. If diagnosed early, hemochromatosis can often be managed by repeated phlebotomy to remove iron. For
more severe iron overload, iron chelation therapy with desferrioxamine
(deferoxamine) or deferasirox can help to improve cardiac function if
myocyte loss and replacement fibrosis are not too severe.
Inborn disorders of metabolism occasionally present with DCM,
although they are most often associated with restrictive cardiomyopathy (Table 259-4).
■ FAMILIAL DILATED CARDIOMYOPATHY
The genetic basis for cardiomyopathy is discussed above in the section,
“Genetic Etiologies of Cardiomyopathy.” The recognized frequency
of familial involvement in DCM has increased to >30%. Mutations in
TTN, encoding the giant sarcomeric protein titin, are the most common cause of DCM, accounting for up to 25% of familial disease. On
average, men with TTN mutations develop cardiomyopathy a decade
before women, without distinctive clinical features. Mutations in thick
and thin filament genes account for ~8% of DCM and may manifest in
early childhood.
The most recognizable familial cardiomyopathy syndromes with
extracardiac manifestations are the muscular dystrophies. Both Duchenne’s and the milder Becker’s dystrophies result from abnormalities in
the X-linked dystrophin gene of the sarcolemmal membrane. Skeletal
myopathy is present in multiple other genetic cardiomyopathies
(Table 259-3), some of which are associated with creatine kinase elevations.
FIGURE 259-9 Hemochromatosis. Microscopic image of an endomyocardial biopsy
showing extensive iron deposition within the cardiac myocytes with the Prussian
blue stain (400× original magnification). (Image courtesy of Robert Padera, MD, PhD,
Department of Pathology, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston.)
1966 PART 6 Disorders of the Cardiovascular System
A B
LV
RV
FIGURE 259-10 Arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy. A. Cross-sectional slice of a pathology
specimen removed at transplantation, showing severe dilation and thinning of the right ventricle (RV) with
extensive fatty replacement of right ventricular myocardium. B. The remarkably thin right ventricular free
wall is revealed by transillumination. LV, left ventricle. (Images courtesy of Gayle Winters, MD, and Richard
Mitchell, MD, PhD, Division of Pathology, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston.)
Patients and families with a history of arrhythmias and/or conduction system disease that precede or supersede cardiomyopathy may have
abnormalities of the nuclear membrane lamin
proteins, which are present in ~5% of patients
with DCM. While all DCMs carry a risk of sudden
death, a family history of cardiomyopathy with
sudden death raises suspicion for a particularly
arrhythmogenic mutation; affected family members may be considered for implantable defibrillators to prevent sudden death even without meeting
the reduced ejection fraction threshold.
A prominent family history of sudden death or
ventricular tachycardia before clinical cardiomyopathy suggests genetic defects in the desmosomal
proteins (Fig. 259-10). Originally described as
affecting the right ventricle (arrhythmogenic right
ventricular cardiomyopathy [ARVC]), this disorder
(arrhythmogenic cardiomyopathy) can affect either
or both ventricles. Patients often present first with
ventricular tachycardia. Genetic defects in proteins of the desmosomal
complex disrupt myocyte junctions and adhesions, leading to replacement of myocardium by deposits of fat. Thin ventricular walls may
be recognized on echocardiography but are better visualized on MRI.
Because desmosomes are also important for elasticity of hair and skin,
some of the defective desmosomal proteins are associated with striking
“woolly hair” and thickened skin on the palms and soles. Implantable
defibrillators are usually indicated to prevent sudden death. There is
variable progression to right, left, or biventricular failure.
Left ventricular noncompaction is a condition of unknown prevalence that is increasingly suspected with the refinement of imaging
techniques. The diagnostic criteria include the presence of multiple
trabeculations in the left ventricle distal to the papillary muscles, creating a “spongy” appearance of the apex, but are increasingly recognized
as nonspecific findings in other cardiac diseases. Noncompaction has
been associated with multiple genetic variants in the sarcomeric and
other genes, such as TAZ (encoding tafazzin). The diagnosis may be
made incidentally or in patients previously diagnosed with cardiomyopathy, in whom the criteria for noncompaction may appear and
disappear with changing left ventricular size and function. The three
cardinal clinical features of ventricular arrhythmias, embolic events,
and heart failure are largely restricted to noncompaction with concomitant systolic dysfunction. Treatment generally includes anticoagulation and early consideration for an implantable defibrillator, in
addition to neurohormonal antagonists as indicated by stage of disease.
Some families inherit a susceptibility to viral-induced myocarditis.
This propensity may relate to abnormalities in cell surface receptors,
such as the coxsackie-adenovirus receptor, that bind viral proteins.
Some may have partial homology with viral proteins such that an autoimmune response is triggered against the myocardium.
Prognosis and therapy of familial DCM are dictated primarily by the
stage of clinical disease and the risk for sudden death. In some cases, the
familial etiology facilitates prognostic decisions, particularly regarding the
likelihood of recovery after a new diagnosis, which is unlikely for familial
disease. The rate of progression of disease is to some extent heritable,
although marked variation can be seen. However, there have been cases
of remarkable clinical remission after acute presentation, likely after a
reversible “second hit,” such as prolonged tachycardia or viral myocarditis.
■ TAKOTSUBO CARDIOMYOPATHY
The apical ballooning syndrome, or acute stress-induced cardiomyopathy, occurs typically in older women after sudden intense emotional
or physical stress. The ventricle shows global ventricular dilation with
basal contraction, forming the shape of the narrow-necked jar (takotsubo)
used in Japan to trap octopuses. Originally described in Japan, it is well
recognized elsewhere during emergency cardiac catheterization and
intensive care unit admissions for noncardiac conditions. Presentations
include pulmonary edema, hypotension, and chest pain with ECG
changes mimicking an acute infarction. The left ventricular dysfunction
extends beyond a specific coronary artery distribution and generally
resolves within days to weeks. Animal models and ventricular biopsies suggest that this acute cardiomyopathy may result from intense
sympathetic activation with heterogeneity of myocardial autonomic
innervation, diffuse microvascular spasm, and/or direct catecholamine
toxicity. Cardiac MRI demonstrates diffuse myocardial edema without
necrosis. Coronary angiography may be required to rule out acute
coronary occlusion. No therapies have been proven beneficial, but
reasonable strategies include nitrates for pulmonary edema; intraaortic
balloon pump if needed for low output, provided transient left ventricular outflow tract obstruction is absent; combined alpha and beta
blockers rather than selective beta blockade if hemodynamically stable;
and magnesium for arrhythmias related to QT prolongation. The longterm prognosis is generally good, with the lowest mortality associated
with episodes triggered by emotional rather than physical triggers.
In-hospital complications and mortality are similar to acute myocardial
infarction. Recurrences have been described in up to 10% of patients.
■ IDIOPATHIC DCM
Idiopathic DCM is a diagnosis of exclusion, when all other known factors have been excluded. Approximately two-thirds of DCMs are still
labeled as idiopathic; however, a substantial proportion of these may
reflect unrecognized genetic disease. Continued reconsideration of
etiology during chronic heart failure management often reveals specific
causes later in a patient’s course.
OVERLAPPING TYPES OF
CARDIOMYOPATHY
The limitations of our phenotypic classification are revealed through
the multiple overlaps between the etiologies and presentations of the three
types. Cardiomyopathy with reduced systolic function but without
severe dilation can represent early DCM, “minimally dilated cardiomyopathy,” or restrictive diseases without marked increases in ventricular
wall thickness. For example, sarcoidosis and hemochromatosis can
present as dilated or restrictive disease. Early stages of amyloidosis
are often mistaken for hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. Progression of
hypertrophic cardiomyopathy into a “burned-out” phase occurs occasionally, with decreased contractility and modest ventricular dilation.
Overlaps are particularly common with the inherited metabolic disorders, which can present as any of the three major phenotypes (Fig. 259-4).
■ DISORDERS OF METABOLIC PATHWAYS
Multiple genetic disorders of metabolic pathways can cause myocardial
disease, due to infiltration of abnormal products or cells containing
them between the myocytes, and storage disease, due to their accumulation within cells (Tables 259-3 and 259-4). Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy may be mimicked by the myocardium thickened with
these abnormal products causing “pseudohypertrophy,” usually with
an abnormally short PR interval. The pseudohypertrophic phenotype
Cardiomyopathy and Myocarditis
1967CHAPTER 259
is most common, but restrictive cardiomyopathy and DCM may occur.
Most of these diseases are diagnosed during childhood.
Fabry’s disease results from a deficiency of the lysosomal enzyme
alpha-galactosidase A caused by one of more than 160 mutations in
GLA. This disorder of glycosphingolipid metabolism is an X-linked
disorder that may also cause clinical disease in female carriers. Glycolipid accumulation may be limited to the cardiac tissues but usually also
involves the skin, peripheral nerve, and kidney. Electron microscopy of
endomyocardial biopsy tissue shows diagnostic vesicles containing
concentric lamellar figures (Fig. 259-11). Diagnosis can be made
through assessment of enzyme activity and/or GLA sequencing and
is crucial because enzyme replacement can reduce abnormal deposits
and improve cardiac and clinical function. The magnitude of clinical
impact has not been well established for this therapy, which requires
frequent infusions of the enzyme at a cost of >$100,000 a year. The
oral chaperone therapy, migalastat, stabilizes mutant forms of alphagalactosidase, increases enzymatic activity, and was approved for use
in a subset of patients with Fabry’s disease bearing mutations amenable
to this therapy. Enzyme replacement can also improve the course of
Gaucher’s disease, in which cerebroside-rich cells accumulate in multiple organs due to a deficiency of beta-glucosidase. Cerebroside-rich
cells infiltrate the heart, which can also lead to a hemorrhagic pericardial effusion and valvular disease.
Glycogen storage diseases lead to accumulation of lysosomal storage products and intracellular glycogen accumulation, particularly
with glycogen storage disease type III, due to a defective debranching
enzyme. There are >10 types of mucopolysaccharidoses, in which autosomal recessive or X-linked deficiencies of lysosomal enzymes lead
to the accumulation of glycosaminoglycans in the skeleton, nervous
system, and occasionally the heart. With characteristic facies, short
stature, and frequent cognitive impairment, most individuals are diagnosed early in childhood and die before adulthood.
Carnitine is an essential cofactor in long-chain fatty acid metabolism. Multiple defects have been described that lead to carnitine
deficiency, causing intracellular lipid inclusions and restrictive cardiomyopathy or DCM, often presenting in children. Fatty acid oxidation
requires many metabolic steps with specific enzymes that can be
deficient, with complex interactions with carnitine. Depending on the
defect, cardiac and skeletal myopathy can be ameliorated with replacement of fatty acid intermediates and carnitine.
Two monogenic metabolic cardiomyopathies cause markedly
increased ventricular wall thickness without an increase of muscle
subunits or an increase in contractility. Mutations in the gamma-2
regulatory subunit of the adenosine monophosphate (AMP)-activated
protein kinase important for glucose metabolism (PRKAG2) have
been associated with a high prevalence of conduction abnormalities,
such as AV block and ventricular preexcitation. Several defects have
been reported in an X-linked lysosome-associated membrane protein
(LAMP2). This defect can be maternally transmitted or sporadic and
has occasionally been isolated to the heart, although it often leads to
a syndrome of skeletal myopathy, mental retardation, and hepatic dysfunction referred to as Danon’s disease. Extreme left ventricular hypertrophy appears early, often in childhood, and can progress rapidly to
end-stage heart failure with low ejection fraction. Electron microscopy
of these metabolic disorders shows that the myocytes are enlarged by
multiple intracellular vacuoles of metabolic by-products.
RESTRICTIVE CARDIOMYOPATHY
Restrictive cardiomyopathy is dominated by abnormal diastolic function, often with mildly decreased contractility and ejection fraction
(usually 30–50%). Both atria are enlarged, sometimes massively.
Modest left ventricular dilation can be present, usually with an enddiastolic dimension <6 cm. End-diastolic pressures are elevated in both
ventricles, with preservation of cardiac output until late in the disease.
Subtle exercise intolerance is usually the first symptom but is often
not recognized until after clinical presentation with congestive symptoms. The restrictive diseases often present with relatively more rightsided symptoms, such as edema, abdominal discomfort, and ascites,
although filling pressures are elevated in both ventricles. The cardiac
impulse is less displaced than in DCM and less dynamic than in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. A fourth heart sound is more common than
a third heart sound in sinus rhythm, but atrial fibrillation is common.
Jugular venous pressures often show rapid Y descents and may increase
during inspiration (positive Kussmaul’s sign). Most restrictive cardiomyopathies are due to infiltration of abnormal substances between
myocytes, storage of abnormal metabolic products within myocytes, or
fibrotic injury (Table 259-5). The differential diagnosis should include
constrictive pericardial disease, which may also be dominated by rightsided heart failure.
■ INFILTRATIVE DISEASE
The most common restrictive cardiomyopathy is amyloidosis, in which
a common protein assembles into β-pleated sheets of amyloid fibrils
that infiltrate between cells of target organs (Figs. 259-12, 259-13, and
259-14). Almost all amyloid that affects the heart is caused by assembly
either of immunoglobulin light chains from clonal plasma cells (AL or
“primary” amyloid) or of transthyretin (ATTR), which is made in the
liver and can either be an inherited mutant protein (ATTRm) or the
normal protein (ATTRwt [wild-type], which accumulates with age,
leading to cardiac amyloid in half of people >90 years old, but clinically much more common in men than women). There are multiple
mutations in the transthyretin molecule, of which the most common is
V1221, which confers a 50% increased risk of heart failure in the 3-4%
of African Americans who are heterozygous, but it is often clinically
silent.
Right heart failure often dominates the clinical presentation of cardiac amyloidosis, although both ventricles are affected. Conduction
system disease and atrial fibrillation are common. Nephrotic syndrome
is common in AL amyloid, which may also cause angina as the amyloid encircles the coronary arteries. Because the ventricular cavity is
diminished by amyloid infiltration, cardiac output may be very low
with a modest ejection fraction reduction. Peripheral and autonomic
neuropathy are common in both AL amyloidosis and ATTRm amyloidosis. A history of carpal tunnel syndrome is common in ATTRm and
ATTRwt, often preceding cardiac symptoms by many years. ATTRwt
is also associated with spinal stenosis.
Amyloidosis should be suspected when ventricular myocardium
appears thick on imaging with low ECG voltage, but this mismatch is
more common with AL than TTR amyloidosis. Atrial enlargement is
prominent and diastolic dysfunction more severe than that of other
causes of hypertrophy. Longitudinal strain is frequently more preserved at the apex, creating a “bull’s-eye” pattern. MRI shows diffuse
late gadolinium enhancement. Technetium-pyrophosphate scanning
reliably highlights TTR amyloidosis but does not detect AL amyloid.
FIGURE 259-11 Fabry’s disease. Transmission electron micrograph of a right
ventricular endomyocardial biopsy specimen at high magnification showing the
characteristic concentric lamellar inclusions of glycosphingolipids accumulating
as a result of deficiency of the lysosomal enzyme alpha-galactosidase A. Image
taken at 15,000× original magnification. (Image courtesy of Robert Padera, MD, PhD,
Department of Pathology, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston.)
1968 PART 6 Disorders of the Cardiovascular System
Endomyocardial biopsy is virtually 100% reliable for the diagnosis of
all amyloid due to the characteristic birefringence pattern of Congo
red staining of the amyloid fibrils under polarized light, but immunohistochemistry may be necessary to confirm the amyloid type, as
serum or urine electrophoresis may be misleading. Until recently, the
therapy of amyloidosis was limited to the treatment of congestion and
arrhythmias. There is no evidence for benefit from neurohormonal
antagonists, which may complicate the postural hypotension and fixed
low stroke volume of amyloid disease. However, specific therapies for
amyloidosis are changing the prognosis. Median survival with AL amyloidosis was previously 6–12 months but has markedly improved with
the use of the proteasome inhibitor bortezomib. If present, multiple
myeloma may be treated with conventional chemotherapy, if not limited by cardiac dysfunction. AL amyloid can sometimes be treated with
heart transplantation followed by delayed stem cell transplantation,
with some risk of recurrence of amyloid in the transplanted heart. The
course of TTR amyloidosis is measured in years even after the typical
delay in diagnosis and may be affected by new therapies. Stabilizers of
the normal transthyretin structure, tafamidis and diflusinal, have been
approved for therapy of the associated neuropathy and are now being
studied for effect on cardiac outcomes. Expression of transthyretin
can be decreased by patisiran, a small interfering RNA that decreases
message production, or inotersen, an antisense mRNA that enhances
mRNA degradation. Both have been approved as treatment for the
polyneuropathy of TTR amyloid, with possible benefit on long-term
outcomes. These therapies have not yet been approved for a cardiac
indication.
■ FIBROTIC RESTRICTIVE CARDIOMYOPATHY
Progressive fibrosis can cause restrictive myocardial disease without
ventricular dilation. Thoracic radiation, common for breast and lung
cancer or mediastinal lymphoma, can produce early or late restrictive
TABLE 259-5 Causes of Restrictive Cardiomyopathies
Infiltrative (Between Myocytes)
Amyloidosis
Primary (light chain amyloid)
Familial (abnormal transthyretin)a
Senile (normal transthyretin or atrial peptides)
Inherited metabolic defectsa
Storage (Within Myocytes)
Hemochromatosis (iron)a
Inherited metabolic defectsa
Fabry’s disease
Glycogen storage disease (II, III)
Fibrotic
Radiation
Scleroderma
Endomyocardial
Possibly related fibrotic diseases
Tropical endomyocardial fibrosis
Hypereosinophilic syndrome (Löffler’s endocarditis)
Carcinoid syndrome
Radiation
Drugs: e.g., serotonin, ergotamine
Overlap with Other Cardiomyopathies
Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy/”pseudohypertrophic”a
“Minimally dilated” cardiomyopathy
Early-stage dilated cardiomyopathy
Partial recovery from dilated cardiomyopathy
Sarcoidosis
Idiopathica
a
Can be familial.
FIGURE 259-12 Restrictive cardiomyopathy—amyloidosis. Gross specimen of a heart
with amyloidosis. The heart is firm and rubbery with a waxy cut surface. The atria are
markedly dilated, and the left atrial endocardium, normally smooth, has yellow-brown
amyloid deposits that give texture to the surface. (Image courtesy of Robert Padera,
MD, PhD, Department of Pathology, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston.)
LV
LA
Septum
RA
RV
Pacing
lead in
RV
Lateral
wall of
LV
Pericardial
effusion
FIGURE 259-13 Restrictive cardiomyopathy—amyloidosis. Echocardiogram showing
thickened walls of both ventricles without major chamber dilation. The atria are
markedly dilated, consistent with chronically elevated ventricular filling pressures. In
this example, there is a characteristic hyperrefractile “glittering” of the myocardium
typical of amyloid infiltration, which is a nonspecific finding with contemporary
echocardiography. The mitral and tricuspid valves are thickened. A pacing lead is
visible in the right ventricle (RV), and a pericardial effusion is evident. Note that
the echocardiographic and pathologic images are vertically opposite, such that the
left ventricle (LV) is by convention on the top right in the echocardiographic image
and bottom right in the pathologic images. LA, left atrium; RA, right atrium. (Image
courtesy of Justina Wu, MD, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston.)
cardiomyopathy. Patients with radiation cardiomyopathy may present
with a possible diagnosis of constrictive pericarditis, as the two conditions often coexist. Careful hemodynamic evaluation and, often,
endomyocardial biopsy should be performed if considering pericardial
Cardiomyopathy and Myocarditis
1969CHAPTER 259
FIGURE 259-14 Amyloidosis—microscopic images of amyloid involving the myocardium. The left
panel (hematoxylin and eosin stain) shows glassy, gray-pink amorphous material infiltrating between
cardiomyocytes, which stain a darker pink. The right panel shows a sulfated blue stain that highlights the
amyloid green and stains the cardiac myocytes yellow. (The Congo red stain can also be used to highlight
amyloid; under polarized light, amyloid will have an apple-green birefringence when stained with Congo
red.) Images at 100× original magnification. (Image courtesy of Robert Padera, MD, PhD, Department of
Pathology, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston.)
LV Chamber
LV free
wall
IVS
RV Chamber
RV free
wall
Mitral valve Tricuspid valve
FIGURE 259-15 Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. Gross specimen of a heart with
hypertrophic cardiomyopathy removed at the time of transplantation, showing
asymmetric septal hypertrophy (septum much thicker than left ventricular free wall)
with the septum bulging into the left ventricular outflow tract causing obstruction.
The forceps are retracting the anterior leaflet of the mitral valve, demonstrating the
characteristic plaque of systolic anterior motion, manifest as endocardial fibrosis
on the interventricular septum in a mirror-image pattern to the valve leaflet. There is
patchy replacement fibrosis, and small thick-walled arterioles can be appreciated
grossly, especially in the interventricular septum. IVS, interventricular septum;
LV, left ventricle; RV, right ventricle. (Image courtesy of Robert Padera, MD, PhD,
Department of Pathology, Brigham and Women’s Hospital, Boston.)
stripping surgery, which is unlikely to be successful in the presence of
underlying restrictive cardiomyopathy. Scleroderma causes small vessel
spasm and ischemia that can lead to a small, stiff heart with reduced
ejection fraction without dilation. The pulmonary hypertension associated with scleroderma may lead to more clinical right heart failure
because of concomitant fibrotic disease of the right ventricle.
■ ENDOMYOCARDIAL DISEASE
The physiologic picture of elevated filling pressures with atrial enlargement and preserved ventricular contractility with normal or reduced
ventricular volumes can result from extensive fibrosis of the endocardium, without transmural myocardial disease. For patients who have
not lived in the equatorial regions, this picture is rare, and when seen is
often associated with a history of chronic hypereosinophilic syndrome
(Löffler’s endocarditis), which is more common in men than women.
In this disease, persistent hypereosinophilia of >1500 eosinophils/μL
for at least 6 months can cause an acute phase of eosinophilic injury in
the endocardium (see earlier discussion of eosinophilic myocarditis),
with systemic illness and injury to other organs. Hypereosinophilic
syndromes can occasionally be explained by allergic or parasitic disease, but are increasingly being recognized as due to myeloproliferative
variants. It is postulated to be followed by a period in which cardiac
inflammation is replaced by evidence of fibrosis with superimposed
thrombosis. In severe disease, the dense fibrotic layer can obliterate the
ventricular apices and extend to thicken and tether the AV valve leaflets. The clinical disease may present with heart failure, embolic events,
and atrial arrhythmias. While plausible, the sequence of transition
from eosinophilic myocarditis or Löffler’s endocarditis to endomyocardial fibrosis has not been clearly demonstrated.
In tropical countries, up to one-quarter of heart failure may be due
to endomyocardial fibrosis, affecting either or both ventricles. This
condition shares with the previous condition the partial obliteration
of the ventricular apex with fibrosis extending into the valvular inflow
tract and leaflets; however, it is not clear that the etiologies are the
same for all cases. Pericardial effusions frequently accompany endomyocardial fibrosis but are not common in Löffler’s endocarditis. For
endomyocardial fibrosis, there is no gender difference, but there is a
higher prevalence in African-American populations. While tropical
endomyocardial fibrosis could represent the end-stage of previous
hypereosinophilic disease triggered by endemic parasites, neither prior
parasitic infection nor hypereosinophilia is usually documented. Geographic nutritional deficiencies have also been proposed as an etiology.
Clonal proliferation with specific mutations may respond to monoclonal antibody therapy. Other treatment includes glucocorticoids
to suppress hypereosinophilia when present. Fluid retention may
become increasingly resistant to diuretic therapy. Anticoagulation is
recommended. Atrial fibrillation is associated with
worse symptoms and prognosis but may be difficult to suppress. Surgical resection of the apices
and replacement of the fibrotic valves can improve
symptoms, but surgical morbidity and mortality
and later recurrence rates are high.
The serotonin secreted by carcinoid tumors can
produce fibrous plaques in the endocardium and
right-sided cardiac valves, occasionally affecting
left-sided valves as well. Valvular lesions may
be stenotic or regurgitant. Systemic symptoms
include flushing and diarrhea. Liver disease from
hepatic metastases may play a role by limiting
hepatic function and thereby allowing more serotonin to reach the venous circulation.
HYPERTROPHIC
CARDIOMYOPATHY
Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy is defined as left
ventricular hypertrophy that develops in the
absence of causative hemodynamic factors, such
as hypertension, aortic valve disease, or systemic
infiltrative or storage diseases (Figs. 259-15 and 259-16). It has previously been termed hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy (HOCM),
asymmetric septal hypertrophy (ASH), and idiopathic hypertrophic subaortic stenosis (IHSS). However, the accepted terminology is now hypertrophic cardiomyopathy with or without obstruction. Prevalence in North
America, Africa, and Asia is about 1:500. It is a leading cause of sudden
death in the young and is an important cause of heart failure. Although
pediatric presentation is associated with increased early morbidity and
mortality, the prognosis for patients diagnosed as adults is generally
favorable, although worse than for age-matched individuals without
hypertrophic cardiomyopathy.
A sarcomere mutation is present in ~50% of patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy and is more common in those with familial disease
and characteristic asymmetric septal hypertrophy. More than nine different genes with >1500 mutations have been implicated, although ~80% of
patients have a mutation in either MYH7 or MYBPC3 (Table 259-3).
1970 PART 6 Disorders of the Cardiovascular System
Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy is characterized by age-dependent
and incomplete penetrance. The defining phenotype of left ventricular
hypertrophy is rarely present at birth and usually develops later in life.
Women appear to have lower penetrance of sarcomere mutations and
an older age at hypertrophic cardiomyopathy diagnosis but subsequently increased rates of heart failure and mortality thereafter. Accordingly, screening of family members should begin in adolescence and
extend through adulthood. In MYBPC3 mutation carriers, the average
age of disease development is ~40 years, while 30% remain free from
hypertrophy after 70 years. Related individuals who carry the same
mutation may have a different extent and pattern of hypertrophy (e.g.,
asymmetric vs concentric), occurrence of outflow tract obstruction,
and associated clinical outcomes, although sudden death and progression to heart failure occur more commonly in families with that history.
At the level of the sarcomere, hypertrophic cardiomyopathy mutations lead to enhanced calcium sensitivity, maximal force generation,
and ATPase activity. Calcium handling is affected through modification of regulatory proteins. Sarcomere mutations lead to abnormal
energetics and impaired relaxation, both directly and as a result
of hypertrophy. Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy is characterized by
misalignment and disarray of the enlarged myofibrils and myocytes
(Fig. 259-17), which can also occur to a lesser extent in other cardiac
diseases. Although hypertrophy is the defining feature of hypertrophic
cardiomyopathy, fibrosis and microvascular disease are also present.
Interstitial fibrosis is detectable before overt hypertrophy develops
and likely results from early activation of profibrotic pathways. In the
majority of patients with overt cardiomyopathy, focal areas of replacement fibrosis can be readily detected with MRI. These areas of “scar”
may represent substrate for the development of ventricular arrhythmias. Increased thickness and decreased luminal area of the intramural
vessels in hypertrophied myocardium contribute to microvascular
ischemia and angina. Microinfarction of hypertrophied myocardium is
a hypothesized mechanism for replacement scar formation.
Macroscopically, hypertrophy is typically manifest as nonuniform
ventricular thickening (Fig. 259-15). The interventricular septum is the
typical location of maximal hypertrophy, although other patterns of hypertrophic remodeling include concentric and midventricular. Hypertrophy
confined to the ventricular apex (apical hypertrophic cardiomyopathy) is
less often familial and has a different genetic substrate, with sarcomere
mutations present in only ~15%. Left ventricular outflow tract obstruction represents the most common focus of diagnosis and intervention,
although diastolic dysfunction, myocardial fibrosis, and microvascular
ischemia also contribute to contractile dysfunction and elevated intracardiac pressures. Obstruction is present in ~30% of patients at rest and can
be provoked by exercise in another ~30%. Systolic obstruction is initiated
by drag forces, which push an anteriorly displaced and enlarged anterior
mitral leaflet into contact with the hypertrophied ventricular septum.
Mitral leaflet coaptation may ensue, leading to posteriorly directed mitral
regurgitation. In order to maintain stroke volume across outflow tract
obstruction, the ventricle generates higher pressures, leading to higher
wall stress and myocardial oxygen demand. Smaller chamber size and
increased contractility exacerbate the severity of obstruction. Conditions
of low preload, such as dehydration, and low afterload, such as arterial
vasodilation, may lead to transient hypotension and near-syncope. The
systolic ejection murmur of left ventricular outflow tract obstruction is
harsh and late peaking and can be enhanced by bedside maneuvers that
diminish ventricular volume and transiently worsen obstruction, such as
the Valsalva maneuver or standing from a squatting position.
DIAGNOSIS
The substantial variability of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy pathology
is reflected in the diversity of clinical presentations. Patients may be
diagnosed after undergoing evaluations triggered by the abnormal
physical findings (murmur) or by symptoms of exertional dyspnea,
angina, or syncope. Alternatively, diagnosis may follow evaluations
prompted by the detection of disease in family members. Cardiac
imaging (Fig. 259-16) is central to diagnosis, for which the physical
examination and ECG are insensitive. The identification of a disease-causing mutation in a proband can focus family evaluations on
mutation carriers, but this strategy requires a high degree of certainty
that the mutation is truly pathogenic and not a benign DNA variant.
Biopsy is not needed to diagnose hypertrophic cardiomyopathy but can
be used to exclude infiltrative and metabolic diseases. Rigorous athletic
training (athlete’s heart) may cause intermediate degrees of physiologic hypertrophy difficult to differentiate from mild hypertrophic
LV
LA
MV
Septum
FIGURE 259-16 Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. This echocardiogram of hypertrophic
cardiomyopathy shows asymmetric hypertrophy of the septum compared to the
lateral wall of the left ventricle (LV). The mitral valve (MV) is moving anteriorly
toward the hypertrophied septum in systole. The left atrium (LA) is enlarged. Note
that the echocardiographic and pathologic images are vertically opposite, such that
the LV is by convention on the top right in the echocardiographic image and bottom
right in the pathologic images. (Image courtesy of Justina Wu, MD, Brigham and
Women’s Hospital, Boston.)
FIGURE 259-17 Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. Microscopic image of hypertrophic
cardiomyopathy showing the characteristic disarrayed myocyte architecture with
swirling and branching rather than the usual parallel arrangement of myocyte
fibers. Myocyte nuclei vary markedly in size and interstitial fibrosis is present.
(Image courtesy of Robert Padera, MD, PhD, Department of Pathology, Brigham and
Women’s Hospital, Boston.)
Cardiomyopathy and Myocarditis
1971CHAPTER 259
cardiomyopathy. Unlike hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, hypertrophy in
the athlete’s heart regresses with cessation of training and is accompanied by supernormal exercise capacity (VO2max >50 mL/kg per min),
mild ventricular dilation, and normal diastolic function.
TREATMENT
Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy
Management focuses on treatment of symptoms and prevention
of sudden death and stroke (Fig. 259-18). Left ventricular outflow
tract obstruction can be controlled medically in the majority of
patients. β-Adrenergic blocking agents and L-type calcium channel
blockers (e.g., verapamil) are first-line agents that reduce the severity of obstruction by slowing heart rate, enhancing diastolic filling,
and decreasing contractility. Persistent symptoms of exertional dyspnea or chest pain can sometimes be controlled with the addition
of disopyramide, an antiarrhythmic agent with potent negative inotropic properties. Novel small-molecule inhibitors of actin-myosin
interactions are being developed for obstructive and nonobstructive
hypertrophic cardiomyopathy.
Patients with or without obstruction may develop heart failure
symptoms due to fluid retention and require diuretic therapies for
venous congestion. Severe medically refractory symptoms develop
in ~5% of patients, for whom surgical myectomy or alcohol septal
ablation may be effective. Developed over 60 years ago, surgical
myectomy effectively relieves outflow tract obstruction by excising
part of the septal myocardium involved in the dynamic obstruction.
In selected patients, perioperative mortality is extremely low with
excellent long-term survival free from recurrent obstruction and
symptoms. Mitral valve repair or replacement is usually unnecessary as associated eccentric mitral regurgitation resolves with
myectomy alone. Alcohol septal ablation in patients with suitable
coronary anatomy can relieve outflow tract obstruction via a controlled infarction of the proximal septum, which produces similar
periprocedural outcomes and gradient reduction as surgical myomectomy. Until long-term outcomes are demonstrated for septal
ablation procedures, they are relegated primarily to patients who
wish to avoid surgery or who have limiting comorbidities. Neither
procedure has been shown to improve outcomes other than symptoms. With both procedures, the most common complication is the
development of complete heart block necessitating permanent pacing. However, ventricular pacing as a primary therapy for outflow
tract obstruction is ineffective and not generally advised.
Patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy have an increased
risk of sudden cardiac death from ventricular tachyarrhythmias.
Vigorous physical activity and competitive sports have been historically prohibited; however, ongoing studies are reexamining the
relationship between exertion and ventricular arrhythmias in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. Factors that increase the risk of sudden
death from a baseline of 0.5% per year are presented in Table 259-6.
As sudden death has not been reduced by medical or procedural
interventions, traditionally an implantable cardioverter-defibrillator
has been advised for patients with two or more risk factors and
advised on a selected basis for patient with one risk factor. Nevertheless, the positive predictive value of most risk factors is low, and many
patients receiving a defibrillator never receive an appropriate device
therapy. A complementary approach to sudden death risk stratification and discussion with patients is the application of an externally
validated risk score using major criteria from Table 259-6 and
Use diuretics with caution
to avoid hypovolemia,
particularly in presence of
outflow gradient
Evidence of
fluid retention?
Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy
Septal ablation Mitral surgery
In all patients,
evaluate risk for
sudden death
Symptomatic?
If low, follow with
serial evaluation
Reevaluate cause
of symptoms
Rarely, consider
cardiac transplantation
Refractory
severe symptoms
Consider procedure
Evidence of severe
progressive LV dysfunction?
Titrate beta blocker
and/or calcium
channel blocker
If high,
consider ICD
No
Yes
Yes
No
No Yes
Yes
Persistent
symptoms
Outflow
gradient?
Try disopyramide
FIGURE 259-18 Treatment algorithm for hypertrophic cardiomyopathy depending on the presence and severity of symptoms and the presence of an intraventricular gradient
with obstruction to outflow. Note that all patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy should be evaluated for atrial fibrillation and risk of sudden death, whether or not they
require treatment for symptoms. ICD, implantable cardioverter-defibrillator; LV, left ventricular.
1972 PART 6 Disorders of the Cardiovascular System
continuous variables such as outflow tract gradient and left atrial
size. Shared decision-making around implantable cardioverterdefibrillator implantation for primary prevention has emphasized
discussions of estimated risk levels rather than dichotomous yes-no
criteria. Long-term use of a defibrillator may be associated with
serious device-related complications, particularly in young active
patients. Refinement of sudden death risk through the application of
contemporary technologies such as cardiac MRI is ongoing.
Atrial fibrillation is common in patients with hypertrophic
cardiomyopathy and may lead to hemodynamic deterioration and
embolic stroke. Rapid ventricular response is poorly tolerated
and may worsen outflow tract obstruction. β-Adrenergic blocking agents and L-type calcium channel blockers slow AV nodal
conduction and improve symptoms; cardiac glycosides should be
avoided, as they may increase contractility and worsen obstruction.
Even with adequate rate control, symptoms exacerbated by atrial
fibrillation may persist due to loss of AV synchrony and may require
restoration of sinus rhythm. Disopyramide and amiodarone are
the preferred antiarrhythmic agents, with radiofrequency ablation
considered for medically refractory cases. Anticoagulation to prevent embolic stroke in atrial fibrillation is recommended.
PROGNOSIS
The general prognosis for hypertrophic cardiomyopathy is better than in
early studies of referral populations, but mortality remains higher than
in an age-matched population without cardiomyopathy. The sudden
death risk is <1% per year; however, up to 1 in 20 patients will progress to
overt systolic dysfunction with a reduced ejection fraction (<50%) with
or without dilated remodeling (i.e., “burned out” or end-stage hypertrophic cardiomyopathy). These patients may suffer from low cardiac
output and have an increased risk of death from progressive heart failure
and sudden death unless they undergo timely cardiac transplantation.
GLOBAL PERSPECTIVES
The worldwide prevalence of myocarditis and cardiomyopathy combined is estimated at 5.4 million people, compared to 26 million people
with heart failure. The estimated prevalence of myocarditis/cardiomyopathy has increased by >50% since 1990 due to the growing population, while the rate per 100,000 people has declined by >20% during
the same period to 68, with an estimated mortality of 4.8 per 100,000.
The highest age-standardized prevalence is reported in central Europe,
whereas the highest attributed mortality is in Eastern Europe; however,
comparison of myocardial diseases across eras and countries is complicated by differing ascertainment and techniques for cardiac diagnoses.
For comparison, the current mortality rates are similar to that of
rheumatic heart disease, which has declined overall by 26.5% and by
55% after adjustment for age. Deaths from Chagas’ cardiomyopathy
worldwide have declined from 12.7 thousand to 10.6 thousand, with a
reduction of 51.7% in the age-adjusted rates per 100,000 population to
0.2, attributable, in major part, to improved health conditions in rural
areas of South and Central America.
Health care for other diseases affects myocarditis and cardiomyopathy. Developed nations will see a higher prevalence of cardiomyopathy
due to chemotherapy. However, vaccination has reduced deaths from
diphtheria-associated myocarditis to <50 per 100 million population,
currently most common in Russia. World regions providing HAART for
HIV have decreased not only transmission but also the rate of associated
cardiomyopathy by several-fold. Increasing global availability of genetic
testing is expected to shift the apparent epidemiology of cardiomyopathy
away from acquired causes toward causative and facilitating genetic factors. For example, heart failure with preserved ejection fraction attributed to hypertension and diabetes is increasingly recognized to represent
amyloidosis from mutant transthyretin, with distinct, recognized mutations in Portugal, Japan, and the African-Caribbean population.
■ FURTHER READING
Bozkurt BJ et al: Current diagnostic and treatment strategies for
specific dilated cardiomyopathies: A scientific statement from the
American Heart Association. Circulation 134:e579, 2016.
Ho CY et al: Genotype and lifetime burden of disease in hypertrophic
cardiomyopathy insights from the Sarcomeric Human Cardiomyopathy Registry (SHaRe). Circulation 138:1387, 2018.
Hu JR et al: Cardiovascular toxicities associated with immune checkpoint inhibitors. Cardiovasc Res 115:854, 2019.
Kociol RD et al: Recognition and initial management of fulminant
myocarditis. Circulation 141:e69, 2020.
Maurer MS et al: Tafamidis treatment for patients with transthyretin
amyloid cardiomyopathy. N Engl J Med 379:1007, 2018.
Mazzarotto F et al: Reevaluating the genetic contribution of monogenic dilated cardiomyopathy. Circulation 141:387, 2020.
Morillo CA et al: Randomized trial of benznidazole for chronic
Chagas’ cardiomyopathy. N Engl J Med 373:1295, 2015.
Moslehi JJ: Cardiovascular toxic effects of targeted cancer therapies.
N Engl J Med 375:1457, 2016.
Page RL et al: Drugs that may cause or exacerbate heart failure: AHA
scientific statement. Circulation 134:e332, 2016.
Ware JS et al: Genetic etiology for alcohol-induced cardiac toxicity. J
Am Coll Cardiol 71:2293, 2018.
TABLE 259-6 Risk Stratification for Sudden Death in Hypertrophic
Cardiomyopathy
RISK FACTOR SCREENING TECHNIQUE
History of cardiac
arrest or spontaneous
sustained ventricular
tachycardiaa
History
Syncope Nonvagal, often with or
after exertion
History
Family history of sudden
cardiac death
Family history
Spontaneous
nonsustained ventricular
tachycardia
>3 beats at rate >120 Exercise or 24- to 48-h
ambulatory recording
LV thickness >30 mm Present in <10% of
patients
Echocardiography
Abnormal blood pressure
response to exerciseb
Systolic blood pressure
fall or failure to increase
at peak exercise
Maximal upright exercise
testing
Variables Utilized in the European Society of Calculator for Estimated Risk of
Sudden Death
LV outflow tract gradient Peak gradient measured
at rest or with the
Valsalva maneuver,
mmHg
Echocardiography
Left atrial diameter Diameter measured in
the parasternal long
axis, mm
Echocardiography
LV thickness Maximal wall thickness,
mm
Echocardiography
Age
Syncope, family history,
nonsustained ventricular
tachycardia
As above As above
Emerging Risk Factors
Late gadolinium
enhancement
As a percentage of
myocardial mass
Cardiac magnetic
resonance imaging
Left ventricular apical
aneurysm
Generally applicable
to patients with apical
hypertrophy
Echocardiography
with contrast, cardiac
magnetic resonance
imaging
a
Implantable cardioverter-defibrillator advised for patients with prior arrest or
sustained ventricular tachycardia regardless of other risk factors if life expectancy
is estimated to be >1 year. b
Prognostic value most applicable to patients <40 years
old. The European Society of Cardiology risk calculator can be found at https://
doc2do.com/hcm/webHCM.html and provides an estimated 5-year risk of cardiac
arrest. Patients with estimated risk of ≥6% are generally advised placement of an
implantable cardioverter-defibrillator; those with risk between 4 and 6% can be
considered for implant, and implant is not advised when risk is <4%. Emerging risk
factors merit further clinical validation.
Abbreviation: LV, left ventricle.
Cardiac Transplantation and Prolonged Assisted Circulation
1973CHAPTER 260
Advanced heart failure, a distinct syndrome, is characterized by
refractoriness to conventional therapy and represents a vexing clinical dilemma that is associated with an increased symptom burden,
frequent hospitalization, a poor quality of life, and high risk of death.
Such individuals do not tolerate neurohormonal antagonists at recommended doses, exhibit cardiorenal syndrome, maintain markedly
poor cardiac reserve on cardiopulmonary stress testing, and typically
display a low cardiac output state with elevated pulmonary pressures.
In general, therapeutic targets shift away from disease-modifying
neurohormonal therapy to surgical options that attend directly to
supporting the dysfunctional heart and address myocardial stress
and strain relationships. Most often, prolonged circulatory assistance
using mechanical ventricular assist devices or cardiac transplantation
is required to reliably improve quality of life and long-term survival.
CARDIAC TRANSPLANTATION
A decade after Norman Shumway had accomplished the technique of a
successful heart transplant in canines, Christiaan Barnard successfully
performed the first human-to-human transplant on December 3, 1967.
Now, >5 decades later, this surgery has become entrenched in the standard armamentarium for treating patients with advanced heart failure
who are otherwise healthy enough to receive such a life-altering treatment. Globally, >150,000 patients have undergone cardiac transplantation with a 1-year survival >80% and median survival of 12.5 years and
conditional survival of 14.8 years if the recipient survives the first year
after transplant. These gains have been ushered by advances in immunosuppression, identification and management of allograft rejection,
and a comprehensive appreciation for late complications including
accelerated coronary artery disease, malignancy, and renal failure.
■ CANDIDATES FOR CARDIAC TRANSPLANTATION
The demand for cardiac transplantation outstrips the availability of
organ donors. Hence, attention to the optimal utility, equitable allocation, and patient autonomy must dominate the decisions to identify and list candidates for transplantation. Simultaneously, attempts
at expanding the donor pool have surfaced. However, vigilance to
evaluating candidates most likely to have a successful outcome from
transplantation takes pre-eminence. In 2006, the International Society
for Heart and Lung Transplantation identified a set of criteria to guide
listing of patients. These criteria were updated in 2016 and include
additional attention to the growing epidemiology of candidates suffering from congenital heart disease, restrictive and infiltrative cardiomyopathy (such as amyloidosis), and chronic infections in recipients
(such as Chagas’ disease, tuberculosis and viral hepatitis). Selected
general principles for listing candidates for cardiac transplantation are
enumerated in Table 260-1.
■ PRINCIPLES OF DONOR RECOVERY AND
ALLOCATION
Although listing criteria for candidates are typically adjudicated at
a center level, organ allocation is handled by national regulatory
processes in most countries. The allocation of donor hearts is based
on (1) the urgency of the clinical situation, (2) the time spent on the
waiting list, and (3) the distance from the recipient center. Candidates
who are hospitalized in critical status and require extracorporeal
membrane oxygenation or temporary mechanical circulatory support
devices to support both ventricles are given the highest urgency status,
followed by those requiring daily invasive hemodynamic evaluation
and intravenous inotropic therapy to maintain stability, or those with
260 Cardiac Transplantation
and Prolonged Assisted
Circulation
Mandeep R. Mehra
complications of a durable left ventricular assist device. Others stable
at home while supported by a left ventricular assist device or those
able to ambulate and live at home receive a lower urgency status. The
geographical regional reach for allocation is based not only on territorial considerations but also on the time that a donor heart would be in
transit and therefore in out of body “ischemia time,” which is typically
limited to 4 h. The final key feature that is included in the allocation
offer relates to the ABO blood group. Donor organs are offered based
on these initial characteristics and then a more detailed donor assessment ensues, resulting in acceptance or decline for any given donor
heart. It is important to note that the time constraints imposed on the
retrieval process make it difficult to invoke HLA matching of the donor
and recipient. In cases where there is a high likelihood of sensitization in the recipient (preformed circulating antibodies against donor
antigens), a prospective or virtual cross match is entertained prior
to acceptance. Other clinical criteria that are employed in the decision on
accepting an offered donor include the donor-recipient size match, the
age of the donor (typically restricted to <55 years, but is often exceeded
due to organ shortages), and presence or absence of concomitant
pathology such as coronary artery disease, left ventricular hypertrophy,
or severe injury to the allograft manifest by excess leak of injury markers (troponins) or poor contractile performance. In many cases, the
prospective cardiac allograft can be reconditioned by use of hormonal
therapy (including thyroid hormone supplementation) and used for
transplantation even if the initial evaluation suggests poor function. In
efforts to enhance the donor pool, systems that allow ex vivo normothermic perfusion to evaluate and reanimate organs with a prolonged out
of body time are being developed. The classic heart donor is derived
from a donor with brain death; however, donors with circulatory death
are being increasingly evaluated as candidates for cardiac reanimation
using a variety of techniques including ex vivo reanimation and subsequent transplantation. Such donor organs obtained after circulatory
death are gaining more widespread acceptance, and early outcomes
suggest that their outcomes after transplantation are no different from
those of organs retrieved from brain death donors. In order to increase
TABLE 260-1 Principles for Listing Candidates for Cardiac
Transplantation
PRINCIPLE COMMENT
Advanced
Disease
Severity
Refractory heart failure with a VO2
of <14 mL/kg per min (<12, if
on beta blockers) or percent predicted VO2
<50%; combination
of intolerance to disease-modifying therapy, cardiorenal
syndrome, use of inotropic therapy to maintain stability, or need
for a left ventricular assist system.
Comorbidity Age is not an absolute contraindication, but frailty should
be considered a relative contraindication; a BMI >35 kg/m2
should require weight loss; cancer should be dealt with on
an individual basis (e.g., low-grade prostate cancer may not
be a contraindication); poorly controlled diabetes mellitus or
end-organ damage may be a contraindication; eGFR <30 mL/
min/1.73 m2
is a relative contraindication, if persistent; severe
cerebrovascular disease or peripheral vascular disease
(which will limit rehabilitation or function) is also a relative
contraindication.
DonorRecipient
Matching
Sensitized individuals with circulating antibodies should have
a prospective or virtual cross match; pulmonary vascular
resistance with a transpulmonary gradient >15, PVR >3
Wood units, and absolute PA systolic pressure >50 mmHg
provided the systolic blood pressure is >85 mmHg is a relative
contraindication unless reactive to therapy.
Psychosocial
Issues
Tobacco use in any form limits posttransplant survival and
should be stopped for at least 6 months; substance abuse,
including marijuana, should be a contraindication if the
individual cannot demonstrate control and cessation; patients
with severe cognitive-behavioral disabilities or dementia
(inability to ever understand and cooperate with medical care)
have the potential for self-harm and should not receive a
transplant.
Abbreviations: BMI, body mass index; eGFR, estimated glomerular filtration rate;
PA, pulmonary artery; PVR, pulmonary vascular resistance; VO2
, peak oxygen
consumption.
1974 PART 6 Disorders of the Cardiovascular System
the number of viable donors, organs from those infected with hepatitis
C virus are increasingly being utilized since curative antiviral therapy
can be used in the recipient shortly after transplantation.
■ SURGERY FOR CARDIAC TRANSPLANTATION
The most common contemporary operation is referred to as a “bi-caval”
orthotopic cardiac transplant that mimics the natural anatomic position. In this operation, the donor and recipient superior and inferior
venae cavae are connected as are the aortic and pulmonary great
vessels. The left atrium of the recipient retains its roof including the
draining pulmonary veins, and the donor left atrium is then sutured
to the retained atrial tissue. This technique maintains function of the
donor right atrium, important for governing early postoperative right
heart output, and may prevent atrial arrhythmias. The recipient is left
with a surgical denervation, and the allograft is not responsive to any
physiologic sympathetic or parasympathetic stimuli. Therefore, early
in the adaptive postoperative phase, high-dose catecholamines are
required to maintain adequate function. Due to denervation, bradycardia in a cardiac allograft cannot be treated with atropine and the
drug of choice is isoproterenol, or temporary electrical pacing is used.
Once the cardiac allograft adapts to its host circulation, the function is
usually adequate at rest and with exercise to provide normal physical
activity and quality of life.
■ CARDIAC ALLOGRAFT REJECTION AND
IMMUNOSUPPRESSION
The ability to perform endomyocardial biopsies and evaluate rejection
pathologically and the introduction of the immunosuppression agent
cyclosporine heralded cardiac transplantation as a viable clinical therapy.
Triple-drug immunosuppression, which includes a calcineurin inhibitor (cyclosporine or tacrolimus), corticosteroids, and antiproliferative
immunosuppression (azathioprine, mycophenolate mofetil, sirolimus,
or everolimus), is now the standard combination used. The combination immunosuppression strategy that is most commonly used and
that achieves the best standard outcomes includes tacrolimus, mycophenolate mofetil, and prednisone. In those at high risk for rejection
(multiparous women, sensitized individuals) or in situations where use
of calcineurin inhibitors needs to be delayed (renal dysfunction), induction therapy using monoclonal (basiliximab) or polyclonal antibodies
(antithymocyte globulin) to provide augmented immunosuppression
is used. Over several months, as surveillance endomyocardial biopsies
are regularly performed and clinical as well as subclinical pathologic
quiescence is established, gradual weaning of steroids is undertaken.
Table 260-2 describes the immunosuppression drugs in common use.
Acute cellular rejection (ACR) and antibody-mediated rejection
(AMR) are two separate forms of cardiac allograft rejection that are
TABLE 260-2 Immunoprophylaxis Drugs in Cardiac Transplantation
DRUG CLASS GENERIC DRUG CELLULAR TARGET MAJOR SIDE EFFECTS
Calcineurin
inhibitors
Cyclosporine Binds to cyclophilin, which then inhibits calcineurin Hypertension, dyslipidemia, gum hypertrophy,
hypertrichosis
Tacrolimus Binds to immunophilin FK506 binding protein, which inhibits calcineurin Hypertension, dyslipidemia, alopecia, diabetes
mellitus
Antithymocyte
globulin (ATG)
Rabbit ATG T-cell depletion in blood and peripheral lymphoid tissues through
complement-dependent lysis and T-cell activation and apoptosis
Cytokine release syndrome, leukopenia,
thrombocytopenia, serum sickness
Horse ATG Same as above Same as above
Interleukin-2
receptor antagonists
Basiliximab Inhibition of CD-25 of interleukin 2 receptor Well tolerated; rare hypersensitivity; increased
infection risk if used with calcineurin inhibitors
Antimetabolites Azathioprine Imidazolyl derivative and prodrug of 6-mercaptopurine (cell cycle
inhibitor)
Bone marrow suppression, pancreatitis, hepatitis
Mycophenolate
Mofetil
Inhibits inosine monophosphate dehydrogenase, which controls
guanine monophosphate in the de novo pathway of purine synthesis
(inhibits T- and B-cell proliferation)
Leukopenia, gastrointestinal toxicity
Proliferation signal
inhibitors
Sirolimus Binds with FKBP12 and complex inhibits the mechanistic target of
rapamycin (mTOR)
Delayed wound healing, nonspecific
pneumonia, pericardial effusion, hyperlipidemia
(hypertriglyceridemia)
Everolimus Binds to FKBP12, which inhibits mTORC1 (and not mTORC2) Dyslipidemia, stomatitis, pericardial effusions, and
pancytopenia
recognized and can sometimes coexist. ACR occurs early after transplantation and then tends to decline in incidence after 6 months.
This occurs due to a T cell–mediated assault on the donor allograft
tissue and histologically is characterized by lymphocytic infiltrates in
the myocardium. In mild cases, these infiltrates are localized to the
perivenular regions, and in severe cases, they progress diffusely into the
cardiac interstitium. In late stages of severe ACR, most often associated
with hemodynamic compromise, multiclonal cells such as macrophages, neutrophils, and eosinophils are observed with intramyocardial
hemorrhage, myocyte injury, and myocyte necrosis. Subclinical ACR
is typically treated with high doses of corticosteroid pulses, although
some centers choose to simply observe mild forms of infiltration since
it is known that many of these patients may recover spontaneously
over time. If hemodynamic compromise occurs, rescue polyclonal
antibodies are used in tandem with corticosteroids. Conversely, AMR
is immunologically described as a noncellular antibody-driven phenomenon associated with a pattern of immunopathologic findings of
immunoglobulin deposition and complement fixation on immunofluorescence, along with histopathologic findings of endothelial swelling
and interstitial edema and cardiac allograft arteriolar vasculitis. AMR
is characterized by the emergence of circulating donor-specific antibodies that are thought to fix complement and bind to the allograft.
Commonly, AMR leads to allograft dysfunction, increases the risk
for development of cardiac allograft vasculopathy, and is associated
with worsened cardiac allograft survival compared with ACR. In this
form of rejection, therapy is directed toward suppression and removal
of circulating antibodies using plasmapheresis and drugs such as
rituximab (chimeric monoclonal antibody directed against the CD20
antigen) or, in refractory cases, bortezomib (a proteasome inhibitor)
or eculizumab (a terminal complement inhibitor). The treatment with
immunosuppression requires prophylaxis for opportunistic infections
and ongoing surveillance and expertise in recognizing the more common clinical presentations of infections caused by cytomegalovirus
(CMV), Aspergillus, and other opportunistic agents such as Nocardia
and toxoplasmosis.
■ LATE COMPLICATIONS AFTER CARDIAC
TRANSPLANTATION
The long-term consequences of exposure to chronic immunosuppression result in a variety of nonimmunologic cardiometabolic effects
such as hypertension, hyperlipidemia, and hyperglycemia, as well as
systemic disorders of bone loss and renal dysfunction. One aggressive
complication that limits late survival of cardiac allografts includes the
development of an accelerated form of coronary artery disease, referred
to as cardiac allograft vasculopathy (CAV). This is characterized by a
Cardiac Transplantation and Prolonged Assisted Circulation
1975CHAPTER 260
proliferative thickening of the vascular intima of the vasculature that
is initiated as a diffuse endothelialitis in the setting of the confluence
of the consequences of brain death, ischemia reperfusion injury during
the transplant process, and early immunologic insults. Chronically, the
metabolic consequences of hypertension, hyperlipidemia, and disordered glucose regulation result in worsening of vascular lesions that
are diffuse and noted throughout the coronary tree. Early diagnosis
and preventative therapy are critical since it is commonly silent in its
development. Intravascular ultrasound is more sensitive than routine coronary angiography for the diagnosis of CAV. A standardized
grading scheme for CAV was proposed by the International Society
for Heart and Lung Transplantation in 2010. CAV is graded as absent
(CAV0), mild (CAV1), moderate (CAV2), or severe (CAV3) based on
extent of angiographic disease and presence of allograft dysfunction
by echocardiography or restrictive cardiac physiology. The grade of
CAV correlates with patient prognosis. Angiographic CAV is present
in ~30% of patients by 5 years after transplant and ~50% of patients
by 10 years after transplant. Use of statins may help prevent CAV
development after heart transplantation. Antihypertensive agents and
anti-CMV therapy have demonstrated some benefits in reducing CAV
with varying degrees of supportive evidence. Antiproliferative immunosuppressive therapy such as mycophenolate mofetil and sirolimus or
everolimus prevents vascular intimal thickening compared with azathioprine-based regimens. Options for medical treatment of established
CAV remain limited. Revascularization using percutaneous coronary
intervention or coronary artery bypass grafting may be employed
in selected cases with focal lesions but does not improve survival in
patients with CAV. However, retransplantation is the only definitive
form of therapy for advanced CAV (Fig. 260-1).
Another concern in cardiac transplantation is the development of
malignancy with a greater frequency than in the normal population,
suggesting that immunosuppression plays a sentinel role in its generation. Posttransplant lymphoproliferative disorders, typically driven
by Epstein-Barr virus, occur most frequently and require a reduction
in immunosuppression, administration of antiviral agents, and traditional chemo- and radiotherapy. Specific antilymphocyte (targeted
against CD20) therapy has also shown promise. Solid cancers most
often manifest as skin malignancies (both basal cell and squamous cell
carcinomas), and regular use of sunscreen is advised. Future research
is required to define strategies for immune modulation, immune suppression, and malignancy prevention; however, the impact of decreasing immunosuppression in the treatment of these cancers is unclear.
PROLONGED ASSISTED CIRCULATION
The quest for a prolonged and durable implantable mechanical circulatory support device has led to the development of continuous flow
left ventricular assist systems (LVAS). Initially designed for short-term
support as a bridge to recovery or to cardiac transplantation, the most
frequent use today entails permanent support for lifetime therapy
(“destination therapy”). The decision to implant LVAS dichotomously
as either a bridge to transplantation or for destination therapy is not
always clear, and in several instances, these devices are used as a
“bridge to decision” (in those with potentially reversible underlying
relative contraindications such as renal insufficiency or pulmonary
hypertension, who may become future candidates for transplantation).
■ LEFT VENTRICULAR ASSIST SYSTEMS AND
CLINICAL TRIALS
A pivotal trial, REMATCH, published in 2001, was the first study to
reliably demonstrate that survival of patients with transplant-ineligible,
refractory, predominantly inotropic therapy–supported heart failure
is improved by implantation of an LVAS. This study used an early
generation pulsatile flow device and demonstrated a 48% reduction in
risk of death. However, the LVAS used was of limited durability, and
meaningful “out of hospital” survival was prolonged by a median of
only 5 months. Furthermore, complications of strokes, multisystem
organ failure, and infections reduced enthusiasm for widespread adoption. Over time, continuous flow systems that had small turbo-pumps
with minimal moving parts and no valves were introduced, leading to
greater durability and more generalized worldwide adoption.
A landmark trial compared the older bulky pulsatile LVAS studied
in the REMATCH trial with a newer generation axial continuous flow
LVAS, the HeartMate II, and demonstrated a marked improvement
in short- and long-term survival, along with an improvement in
functional capacity and meaningful quality-of-life enhancement. A
centrifugal continuous flow LVAS, the HeartWare HVAD, was also
Severe, diffuse, mid to distal luminal loss
Angiogram Pathology
Severe fibrotic intimal proliferation leading to luminal loss
IMMUNOLOGIC
FACTORS
IMMUNE ACTIVATION–
RELATED
INFLAMMATION
NONIMMUNOLOGIC
FACTORS
VASCULOPATHY
IVUS
FIGURE 260-1 Cardiac allograft vasculopathy is initiated and propagated by the combined influence of immunologic and nonimmunologic insults on the allograft vasculature.
An inflammatory milieu determines the development of diffuse, aggressive luminal blockages that in early forms exhibit intimal thickening and fibrosis. IVUS, intravascular
ultrasound (can be used to diagnose early forms of intimal thickening).
1976 PART 6 Disorders of the Cardiovascular System
introduced and demonstrated noninferiority to the HeartMate II pump.
A newer centrifugal device with a fully magnetically levitated system, the HeartMate 3 LVAS, is now the most commonly used pump.
Unlike the HeartMate II LVAS, which requires an abdominal pump
pocket, this smaller device is fully implanted in the thoracic cavity
(Fig. 260-2). This LVAS has been shown to nearly eliminate the complication of pump thrombosis and markedly reduce stroke rates, as
well as decrease bleeding complications. Real-world experience from
registry analyses has pointed to a median survival of >50% at 4 years
with currently available LVAS; however, long-term durability beyond
5–10 years remains a question. The patients for whom LVAS should
ideally be employed include those with severe persistent systolic heart
failure symptoms who have failed to respond to optimal medical management. Commonly, these patients have marked functional limitation
indicated by a peak oxygen consumption of <12 mL/kg per min, or the
patient is bound to continuous intravenous inotropic therapy owing to
symptomatic hypotension or demonstrates worsening renal function
or persistent refractory congestion. Currently, the role of LVAS in “less
sick” patients (those with moderate symptoms) is less well supported
since sufficient equipoise does not exist due to the adverse risk-benefit
ratio from device-related complications and because it needs to be tethered to an external driveline that connects to a power source.
■ MANAGEMENT OF LVAS AND THEIR
COMPLICATIONS
Continuous flow LVAS rely on pressure gradients between the left
ventricular cavity and the aorta. As such, forward flow is critically
dependent on management of systemic blood pressure. Due to the low
pulsatile nature of the blood flow, blood pressure is measured by using a
Doppler ultrasound (which measures mean or opening blood pressure,
which is less than the systolic blood pressure) since a peripheral pulse is
usually not detectable. The ideal mean arterial blood pressure should be
kept to ≤90 mmHg and antihypertensive drug therapy prescribed using
renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system drugs or other vasodilators. The
blood flow path through current devices results in increased shear
stress which may manifest in the form of low-grade hemolysis and the
development of an acquired von Willebrand disease due to loss of highmolecular-weight multimers of von Willebrand Factor. This hematologic aberration has been associated with a risk of gastrointestinal
bleeding, particularly resulting from arteriovenous malformations
in the intestines. Therefore, a common complication encountered in
patients is that of an anemia, often due to iron deficiency.
The unsupported right ventricle often demonstrates worsening
function and results in congestion requiring diuretic therapy. While
unloading of the left ventricle decreases right-sided afterload, increased
device flow results in a greater right heart preload, and effects of the
LVAS on the septum reduce right ventricular contractile efficiency,
leading to development of right ventricular dilatation and maladaptation between the right ventricle and pulmonary circuit. Cardiac
arrhythmias are common in patients supported with LVAS and often
require antiarrhythmic therapy since such events can trigger low flow
through the device.
Hemocompatibility-related adverse outcomes include neurologic
events (ischemic and hemorrhagic strokes), device-related thrombosis
leading to pump malfunction, and nonsurgical bleeding complications
(Fig. 260-3). Antiplatelet therapy using aspirin in doses of 81–325 mg
daily along with warfarin targeted to an international normalized ratio
of 2–3 is used with current LVAS to avoid the morbidity of hemocompatibility-related adverse events. On one hand, this therapy protects
against thrombotic complications, whereas on the other hand, it predisposes the patient to bleeding complications. Strokes occur with a
frequency ranging from 10% with the HeartMate 3 LVAS to as high
as 29% with the HeartWare HVAD device by 2 years of treatment.
Optimal control of blood pressure is associated with improved rates of
strokes with some devices such as the HeartWare HVAD pump; however, this complication is an important reason for lack of adoption of
device therapy in the less sick population. Another cause of morbidity
is pump thrombosis requiring reoperation for device malfunction.
This complication with the older devices was noted in 6–12% of LVAS
implants, occurs early (in the first 6 months), and is more commonly
encountered with the HeartMate II device than with the HeartWare
HVAD pump. The subclinical phase of LVAS thrombosis is characterized by increasing hemolysis and elevation in the device power.
Progressively, inability to “unload” the left ventricle is manifest leading
to decompensated heart failure and possibly hemodynamic compromise. Lactate dehydrogenase is an excellent (although nonspecific)
biomarker of hemolysis and hence impending or established pump
thrombosis. Patients who have suspected left ventricular assist device
LOW PULSE PRESSURE
Axial Flow Centrifugal Flow
Magnetically Levitated
Intrathoracic
Wide Blood Paths
Intrinsic Pulse @30 beats/min
HeartMate II HeartMate 3
Mechanical Bearing
Intrathoracic and Abdominal
Restrictive Blood Paths
No Intrinsic Pulse
Better device durability
Absence of pump thrombosis, fewer strokes, and less bleeding
Current New
CLINICAL IMPROVEMENT
FIGURE 260-2 Continuous flow left ventricular assist systems (LVAS) and their types and mechanisms. The mechanical bearing, axial flow HeartMate II pump is prone to
thrombosis, while the frictionless, magnetically levitated, centrifugal flow HeartMate 3 does not induce hemolysis or pump thrombosis.
Cardiac Transplantation and Prolonged Assisted Circulation
1977CHAPTER 260
(LVAD) thrombosis and do not undergo LVAD exchange or cardiac
transplantation have a 6-month mortality rate of 48%, inferring that
medical therapy for ventricular assist device thrombosis may be inadequate (or cause harm in the case of thrombolytic use). Reoperation
(pump exchange) carries a modest 6.5% perioperative mortality risk
and a 65% 2-year survival following exchange.
Infection is common, most often involving the driveline (the conduit connecting the device to the external controller and batteries) and
occurs in 1 in 5 patients following LVAS implant. Such an infection is
treated with local internal exploration and requires long-term suppressive antibiotics unless the patient undergoes cardiac transplantation
or the device is exchanged. Infection and its inflammatory sequelae
predispose to thrombosis and heighten the risk of neurologic complications, leading to a worsening milieu in hemocompatibility.
■ NOVEL DEVICES
The HeartMate 3 is a centrifugal, continuous flow pump that is placed
in the thorax and is engineered to be a more hemocompatible LVAS.
This device is constructed with a fully magnetically levitated motor,
offers wider blood flow paths, and exhibits a fixed intrinsic pulse (by
the motor ramping its speed up and down at 2-s intervals). These
features have been shown to reduce rates of hemolysis and decrease
the shearing of high-molecular-weight multimers of von Willebrand
factor. This pump has been tested in the MOMENTUM 3 trial, which
reported its final results in 1028 patients randomly allocated to either
the HeartMate 3 pump or the HeartMate II LVAS. The fully magnetically levitated HeartMate 3 pump was associated with less frequent
need for pump replacement than the HeartMate II device and was
superior with respect to survival free of disabling stroke or reoperation
to replace or remove a malfunctioning device. The need for pump
replacement and occurrence of stroke of any severity, major bleeding,
or gastrointestinal hemorrhage were lower in the centrifugal-flow
pump group than in the axial-flow pump group. Experience beyond
5 years with this LVAS will be important in discerning whether these
findings result in improved long-term survival.
■ TOTAL ARTIFICIAL HEART
Not all patients are candidates for an LVAS, particularly those with
severe right-sided heart failure or conditions that do not allow placement of an LVAS (restrictive cardiomyopathy, massive anterior myocardial infarction, complex congenital heart disease). In such patients,
either a biventricular assist device approach or a total artificial heart
pump can be considered. The SynCardia total artificial heart is a
pulsatile, implantable pump that consists of two polyurethane ventricles
with pneumatically driven diaphragms and four tilting disc valves. This
requires excision of the native ventricles and thus cannot be employed
as a myocardial recovery strategy. There are specific clinical issues that
are unique to the total artificial heart management. This device operates
on a steep physiologic curve and has little adaptability to tolerate either
systemic blood pressure changes or large shifts in blood volume. As
the ventricles are excised, most patients exhibit a sharp decline in renal
function due to the loss of natriuretic peptide expression by the myocardium. Severe hemolysis is common due to the presence of four mechanical valves, and aberrant erythropoiesis is noted, leading to a severe
anemia. Newer artificial hearts using biocompatible surfaces are under
development, as well as those that use continuous flow technology.
■ GLOBAL CONSIDERATIONS
While LVAS are available worldwide, their use and indications vary
from country to country. In the United States, payers used to require
discrete discrimination of indication into either a bridge to transplant
or destination therapy, whereas in most European countries, this
artificial segregation was not used. Cost-effectiveness studies suggest
improvement with the newer devices, yet some countries only allow
use of this technology as a bridge to transplantation (United Kingdom)
while awaiting more definitive long-term studies for lifetime use. The
use of LVAS in moderately symptomatic ambulatory patients with
chronic systolic heart failure is still discouraged throughout the world,
awaiting the availability of hemocompatible devices that can be fully
internalized without the need for an external driveline. Globally, the
rates of myocardial recovery allowing for decommissioning or removal
of devices remain low.
■ FURTHER READING
Aslam S et al: Utilization of hepatitis C virus-infected organ donors
in cardiothoracic transplantation: An ISHLT expert consensus statement. J Heart Lung Transplant 39:418, 2020.
Berry GJ et al: The 2013 International Society for Heart and Lung
Transplantation Working Formulation for the standardization of
nomenclature in the pathologic diagnosis of antibody-mediated rejection in heart transplantation. J Heart Lung Transplant 32:1147, 2013.
Mehra MR: Contemporary concepts in prevention and treatment of
cardiac allograft vasculopathy. Am J Transplant 6:1248, 2006.
Mehra MR et al: International Society for Heart and Lung Transplantation working formulation of a standardized nomenclature for cardiac
allograft vasculopathy-2010. J Heart Lung Transplant 29:717, 2010.
02
03
01
HEMOCOMPATIBILITY-RELATED ADVERSE EVENTS
PUMP
THROMBOSIS
01
GASTROINTESTINAL
BLEEDING
02 CEREBROVASCULAR
DISEASE
03
PUMP THROMBOSIS results in need for reoperation and
occurs with a high rate with the HeartMate II (10–14%) and
HeartWare HVAD (6–8%) LVAS; no hemolysis and near
elimination of pump thrombosis with the HeartMate 3 LVAS
GASTROINTESTINAL BLEEDING is associated with
diminished pulsatility, defects in von Willebrand factor,
development of AV malformations, and antiplatelet and
anticoagulation intensity
CEREBROVASCULAR DISEASE includes strokes
(ischemic and bleeds), TIA, and seizures; occurrence
correlated with blood pressure control and antiplatelet
therapy for some devices
FIGURE 260-3 Hemocompatibility-related adverse events with left ventricular assist systems (LVAS) are often interrelated and typically result in cerebrovascular,
gastrointestinal, or pump malfunction events. AV, atrioventricular; TIA, transient ischemic attack.
1978 PART 6 Disorders of the Cardiovascular System
Mehra MR et al: The 2016 International Society for Heart Lung Transplantation listing criteria for heart transplantation: A 10-year update.
J Heart Lung Transplant 35:1, 2016.
Mehra MR et al: A fully magnetically levitated left ventricular assist
device: Final report. N Engl J Med 380:1618, 2019.
Messer S et al: Outcome after heart transplantation from donation
after circulatory-determined death donors. J Heart Lung Transplant
36:1311, 2017.
Nair N et al: Long-term immunosuppression and malignancy in thoracic transplantation: Where is the balance? J Heart Lung Transplant
33:461, 2014.
Rogers JG et al: Intrapericardial left ventricular assist device for
advanced heart failure. N Engl J Med 376:451, 2017.
Stewart GC, Mehra MR: A history of devices as an alternative to
heart transplantation. Heart Fail Clin 10:S1, 2014.
GLOBAL BURDEN OF VALVULAR
HEART DISEASE
Primary valvular heart disease ranks well below coronary heart disease, stroke, hypertension, obesity, and diabetes as a major threat to
the public health. Nevertheless, it can cause significant morbidity and
lead to premature death. Rheumatic fever (Chap. 359) is the dominant
cause of valvular heart disease in low- and middle-income countries.
Its prevalence has been estimated to range from as low as 1 per 100,000
school-age children in Costa Rica to as high as 150 per 100,000 in
China (Fig. 261-1). Rheumatic heart disease accounts for 12–65% of
hospital admissions related to cardiovascular disease and 2–10% of
hospital discharges in some endemic countries. Prevalence and mortality rates vary among communities even within the same country as
a function of overcrowding and the availability of medical resources
and population-wide programs for detection and treatment of group A
streptococcal pharyngitis. In economically deprived areas, tropical and
subtropical climates (particularly on the Indian subcontinent and in
261 Aortic Stenosis
Patrick T. O’Gara, Joseph Loscalzo
Southeast Asia), Central America, and the Middle East, rheumatic valvular disease progresses more rapidly than in more developed nations
and frequently causes serious symptoms in patients aged <20 years. This
accelerated natural history may be due to repeated infections with more
virulent strains of rheumatogenic streptococci. Approximately 30–35
million people live with rheumatic heart disease worldwide, an estimated prevalence characterized by 300,000 new cases and 233,000 case
fatalities per year, with the highest prevalence and age-adjusted mortality rates in sub-Saharan Africa, South Asia, and Oceania. The major
drivers of untreated streptococcal pharyngitis in these endemic areas
include reduced access to high-quality health care and social determinants of health. In the United States, rheumatic heart disease accounted
for 3320 deaths in 2017. Although globally the age standardized mortality rate from rheumatic heart disease declined by nearly 50% between
1990 and 2015, the prevalence of heart failure attributable to rheumatic
heart disease increased by nearly 90% over the same time interval.
Although there have been recent reports of isolated outbreaks of
streptococcal infection in North America, valve disease in high-income
countries is dominated by degenerative or inflammatory processes
that lead to valve thickening, fibrosis, calcification, and dysfunction.
The prevalence of valvular heart disease increases significantly with
age. The prevalence of undiagnosed moderate or severe valvular heart
disease is ~6% in individuals aged >65 years. Significant left-sided
valve disease may affect as many as 12–13% of adults aged >75 years
(Fig. 261-2). Severe aortic stenosis (AS) is estimated to affect 3.5%
of the population aged >75 years. A Swedish epidemiologic study
estimated the incidence of newly diagnosed valvular heart disease at
64 per 100,000 person-years. AS and mitral regurgitation contributed
approximately one-half and one-quarter, respectively, of the valvular
heart disease diagnoses in this study.
The incidence of infective endocarditis (Chap. 128) has increased
with the aging of the population, the more widespread prevalence
of vascular grafts and intracardiac devices, the emergence of more
virulent multidrug-resistant microorganisms, the growing epidemic
of diabetes mellitus, and the opioid crisis. The more restricted use of
antibiotic prophylaxis since 2007 has not been convincingly associated
with an increase in incidence rates for infective endocarditis cases
attributable to oropharyngeal pathogens. Infective endocarditis has
become a relatively more frequent cause of acute valvular regurgitation. Valve surgery during the acute phase of infective endocarditis is
performed in ~50% of hospitalized patients. Duration of intravenous
antibiotic use may be shortened in selective cases.
Change in agestandardized prevalence
(1990–2013)
>20% decrease
<50,000
<100,000
<500,000
<1,000,000
<2,500,000
<5,000,000
<8,000,000
<8,000,000
>20% increase
No data available
<5% decrease
<5% increase
11–20% decrease
5–10% decrease
5–10% increase
5–20% increase
Number of prevalent
case (2013)
FIGURE 261-1 The global burden of rheumatic heart disease. This world map provides a snapshot of both the change in prevalence of rheumatic heart disease cases
between 1990 and 2013 (upper right legend) and the estimated number of rheumatic heart disease cases per country (lower right legend). Regions in which the disease is
highly prevalent include sub-Saharan Africa, India, China, and Southeast Asia. (Reproduced with permission from JR Carapetis et al: Acute rheumatic fever and rheumatic
heart disease. Nat Rev Dis Primers 2:15084, 2016.)
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