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The Long QT Syndrome Overview and Management Edited by A.Kharazi M.D Cardiac electrophysiologist

The Long QT Syndrome Overview and Management Edited by A.Kharazi M.D Cardiac electrophysiologist

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Page 1: The Long QT Syndrome Overview and Management Edited by A.Kharazi M.D Cardiac electrophysiologist

The Long QT Syndrome

Overview and Management

Edited by A.Kharazi M.DCardiac electrophysiologist

Page 2: The Long QT Syndrome Overview and Management Edited by A.Kharazi M.D Cardiac electrophysiologist

LQTS Outline

• Background

• Identification

• Therapies Available

• Current Management

• Ongoing Research

• Case Studies

• Conclusions

Page 3: The Long QT Syndrome Overview and Management Edited by A.Kharazi M.D Cardiac electrophysiologist

Long QT Syndrome

Background and the Risk of Sudden Cardiac Death

Page 4: The Long QT Syndrome Overview and Management Edited by A.Kharazi M.D Cardiac electrophysiologist

Sudden Cardiac Death (SCD)

• Affects 350,000 - 400,000 each year in the US alone

• Only 5% of victims survive

• Causes of SCD may include structural heart disease or a genetic channelopathy

• Recognition of risk factors can help identify those at risk of SCD

Page 5: The Long QT Syndrome Overview and Management Edited by A.Kharazi M.D Cardiac electrophysiologist

Risk Factors for SCD in Young People

• Structural congenital heart disease - before and after corrective surgery

• Congenital anomalies of coronaries

• Myocarditis

• Hypertrophic and other cardiomyopathies

• Wolff-Parkinson-White Syndrome

• Long QT Syndrome

Page 6: The Long QT Syndrome Overview and Management Edited by A.Kharazi M.D Cardiac electrophysiologist

LQTS: Historical Aspects

1957: 1st LQTS family reported

1963-1964: Romano-Ward Syndrome

1958-1970: 25 LQTS cases reported

1971: 1st LQTS Rx (left stellate ganglionectomy)

1979: LQTS Registry Started

1991-2001: 6 LQTS genes identified

Page 7: The Long QT Syndrome Overview and Management Edited by A.Kharazi M.D Cardiac electrophysiologist

Long QT Syndrome

• Genetic disorder (1:5,000-10,000)

• ECG evidence: QTc interval prolonged

• >440 ms in males

• >450 ms in females

• Hallmark arrhythmia: Torsade de pointes VT

• Primary presenting symptom: Syncope

• SCD in children or young adults

Page 8: The Long QT Syndrome Overview and Management Edited by A.Kharazi M.D Cardiac electrophysiologist

LQTS: Identification

Page 9: The Long QT Syndrome Overview and Management Edited by A.Kharazi M.D Cardiac electrophysiologist

LQTS: Identification of Risk

• Most common presenting symptom: unexplained syncope.

• Syncope on exertion in pediatric patients should be considered malignant until proven otherwise.

• History & ECG:

– Onset and offset of syncopal episode

– Siblings, or family members with unexplained syncope or sudden death

– Family history of “seizures” or congenital deafness

– Prolonged QTc on ECG

Page 10: The Long QT Syndrome Overview and Management Edited by A.Kharazi M.D Cardiac electrophysiologist

Syncope

Slow Onset Abrupt Onset Abrupt Onset

Slow Offset Abrupt Offset Slow Offset

Seizure disorderHyperventilation

Hypoglycemia

Obstructive Arrhythmic Vascular

Aortic Stenosis,HCM, Myxoma

BradyTachy

Vasovagal,Orthostatic

Hypertension

Page 11: The Long QT Syndrome Overview and Management Edited by A.Kharazi M.D Cardiac electrophysiologist

Causes of Arrhythmic Syncope

• Very rapid VT or TdP, with hypotension

• Atrial fibrillation or atrial flutter with very rapid ventricular response as in WPW

• AV block

• Sinus arrest

Page 12: The Long QT Syndrome Overview and Management Edited by A.Kharazi M.D Cardiac electrophysiologist

Holter ECG Recording in LQTS Patient with Syncope (representative strips of ECG recording, part 1 of 2)

Page 13: The Long QT Syndrome Overview and Management Edited by A.Kharazi M.D Cardiac electrophysiologist

Holter ECG Recording in LQTS Patient with Syncope (representative strips of ECG recording, part 2 of 2)

Page 14: The Long QT Syndrome Overview and Management Edited by A.Kharazi M.D Cardiac electrophysiologist

LQTS: Clinical Features

Symptoms

• Syncope

• Seizures

• Sudden death

• Palpitations or “chest pain”

ECG Signs

• Prolonged QTc

• Torsade de pointes

Page 15: The Long QT Syndrome Overview and Management Edited by A.Kharazi M.D Cardiac electrophysiologist

LQTS ECG Patterns

Circ 1992;85[Suppl I]:I140-I144

Page 16: The Long QT Syndrome Overview and Management Edited by A.Kharazi M.D Cardiac electrophysiologist

Circ 1992;85[Suppl I]:I140-I144

Additional LQTS ECG Patterns

Page 17: The Long QT Syndrome Overview and Management Edited by A.Kharazi M.D Cardiac electrophysiologist

What Should You do with the ECG?

• Don’t rely on computer evaluation of ECG

• Obtain an independent review of the ECG

• Have an experienced cardiologist measure the QTc interval

• If the ECG is suspicious for LQTS, refer the patient for cardiac evaluation

Page 18: The Long QT Syndrome Overview and Management Edited by A.Kharazi M.D Cardiac electrophysiologist

Circ 1993;88:782-784

LQTS: Diagnostic Criteria

• ECG findings: QTc, TdP, notched T waves, slow heart rate for age

• Clinical history: syncope, seizures, aborted cardiac arrest

• Family history: family member with LQTS, unexplained SCD in a first-degree relative who was <55yrs of age

Page 19: The Long QT Syndrome Overview and Management Edited by A.Kharazi M.D Cardiac electrophysiologist

AJC 1993;72:21B

QTc Interval and Risk

1.0

1.6

2.2

2.8

440 520 600 680

QTc

Ris

k fo

r C

ard

iac

Eve

nt

Page 20: The Long QT Syndrome Overview and Management Edited by A.Kharazi M.D Cardiac electrophysiologist

LQTS: Who is at Risk for SCD?

• Aborted cardiac arrest

• Family history of unexplained sudden death

• Syncope

• Torsade de pointes

• T-wave alternans

• Prolonged QTc

Page 21: The Long QT Syndrome Overview and Management Edited by A.Kharazi M.D Cardiac electrophysiologist

Circ 1991;84:1136-1144

Probands

Affected

UndeterminedUnaffected

Probability of Cardiac Event in LQTS

Page 22: The Long QT Syndrome Overview and Management Edited by A.Kharazi M.D Cardiac electrophysiologist

Circ 2001;103:89-95Mayo Clin Proc. 1999;74:1088-1094

Triggering Events for Syncope or SCD

• 3 main factors contributing to syncope or SCD

– Exercise (LQT1), especially swimming

– Emotions or emotional stress (LQT2)

– Events occurring during sleep or at rest, with or without arousal (LQT2 or LQT3)

Page 23: The Long QT Syndrome Overview and Management Edited by A.Kharazi M.D Cardiac electrophysiologist

Circ 2001;103:89-95

62

26

3

13

43

29

1319

39

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

LQT1 LQT2 LQT3

ExerciseEmotional StressRest

Pe

rce

nt

Occurrence of Gene-Specific Triggers

Page 24: The Long QT Syndrome Overview and Management Edited by A.Kharazi M.D Cardiac electrophysiologist

JCE 1999;10:1664-1683

Basis for the Long QT Syndrome

Page 25: The Long QT Syndrome Overview and Management Edited by A.Kharazi M.D Cardiac electrophysiologist

LQTS: Phenotype-Genotype Considerations

• 6 genotypes; ~200 different mutations

• Clinical differences among LQT1, LQT2, & LQT3 genotypes

• Clinical variability within a genotype

• Clinical variability among members of a family with the same gene mutation suggests presence of modifier genes

Page 26: The Long QT Syndrome Overview and Management Edited by A.Kharazi M.D Cardiac electrophysiologist

Moss AJ, et al. Circulation 1995;92:2929-2934

T-wave Morphology in LQTS by Genotype

Page 27: The Long QT Syndrome Overview and Management Edited by A.Kharazi M.D Cardiac electrophysiologist

NEJM 1998;339:960-965

Probability of a Cardiac Event

No. of SubjectsLQT1 group 112 72 36 27 19LQT2 group 72 56 29 16 11LQT3 group 62 56 36 24 16

Page 28: The Long QT Syndrome Overview and Management Edited by A.Kharazi M.D Cardiac electrophysiologist

Therapies Available and Current Management

Page 29: The Long QT Syndrome Overview and Management Edited by A.Kharazi M.D Cardiac electrophysiologist

Drugs in Long QT

• Certain drugs may provoke life-threatening arrhythmias in LQTS patients

– Examples:• Antiarrhythmic: procainamide, quinidine, amiodarone, sotalol, et al

• Antihistamine: astemizole, terfenadine, et al

• Antimicrobial/antifungal: thiomethoprim sulfa, erythromycin, ketoconazole, et al

• Psychotropics: haloperidol, risperidone, thioridazine, tricyclics, et al

• Other: epinephrine, diuretics, cisapride, bepridil, ketanserin, et al

• Avoid nonessential OTC medications

• For more information see: www.qtdrugs.org

Page 30: The Long QT Syndrome Overview and Management Edited by A.Kharazi M.D Cardiac electrophysiologist

Current Treatments

• Left stellate ganglionectomy (occasionally utilized in infants and patients refractory to other forms of therapy)

• Beta blockers

• Pacemakers

• Implantable Cardioverter Defibrillators (ICDs)

Page 31: The Long QT Syndrome Overview and Management Edited by A.Kharazi M.D Cardiac electrophysiologist

Management by Genotype

• LQT1 and LQT2 benefit the most from ß-blocker therapy

• The benefit of ß-blocker therapy is less clear in LQT3.

• ICDs indicated:

– if the patient presents as SCD survivor or aborted cardiac arrest

– if ß-blockers are not effective in preventing cardiac events

Page 32: The Long QT Syndrome Overview and Management Edited by A.Kharazi M.D Cardiac electrophysiologist

Probands AFM†

(n=581) (n=288)

Risk exposure, yrs 5.2 4.5(pre- and post- B)

Pre-B Post- B Pre- B Post B

Pts with events 462194* 92 49*

Number events 1671 623* 245 138*

Events/pt 3.0 1.1* 0.9 0.5*

Events/pt/year 1.0 0.3* 0.3 0.15*

LQTS: Cardiac Events Before and After -blockers

Circ 2000;101:616-623 †Affected Family Member * P<0.01 vs. pre--blocker

Page 33: The Long QT Syndrome Overview and Management Edited by A.Kharazi M.D Cardiac electrophysiologist

Circ 2000;101:616-623

Efficacy of -blockers in LQTS

• Significant reduction in frequency of syncopal events

• Cardiac events continued to occur

• May reduce the rate of SCD

• Reductions in rate of cardiac events

– 0.97±1.42 to 0.31±0.86 events/year in probands

– 0.26±0.84 to 0.15 ±0.69 events/year in affected family members

• P<0.001

Page 34: The Long QT Syndrome Overview and Management Edited by A.Kharazi M.D Cardiac electrophysiologist

Circ 2000;101:616-623

Probability of Cardiac Event

Page 35: The Long QT Syndrome Overview and Management Edited by A.Kharazi M.D Cardiac electrophysiologist

Cumulative Probability of LQTS- Related Death w/ ß-blockers

Circ 2000;101:616-623

Page 36: The Long QT Syndrome Overview and Management Edited by A.Kharazi M.D Cardiac electrophysiologist

Limitations of -blockers in LQTS

• SCD can occur despite Rx with -blockers

• Long-term compliance with daily therapy is problematic

• Usual side effects of -blockers

Page 37: The Long QT Syndrome Overview and Management Edited by A.Kharazi M.D Cardiac electrophysiologist

ICD Experience in LQTS

• An ICD is indicated for all patients with documented VT, VF or aborted cardiac arrest

• Prevents SCD in patients with prior cardiac events

• Provides a back-up for patients on -blocker therapy who continue to be symptomatic

Page 38: The Long QT Syndrome Overview and Management Edited by A.Kharazi M.D Cardiac electrophysiologist

ICD Experience in LQTS

N 88

Age at ICD, y 23±10

Female 71%

QTc, sec 0.52±0.06

-B before/after ICD 82% / 89%

ACA before/after ICD 48% / 4%

Death after ICD 0 in 2.5yr (0.1-9.0yr)

A.J. Moss; AHA Abstracts Online. 1999.

Page 39: The Long QT Syndrome Overview and Management Edited by A.Kharazi M.D Cardiac electrophysiologist

Circ. 1999;100:2431-2436

Pacemaker Experience in LQTS

• Reduces frequency of syncope in pts. with bradycardia-triggered events

• Most useful when combined with -blocker therapy

• Does not prevent SCD in long-term therapy

• Appears most useful in patients with LQT3 and bradycardia

Page 40: The Long QT Syndrome Overview and Management Edited by A.Kharazi M.D Cardiac electrophysiologist

NEJM 2000;342:398

Sinus rhythm

Page 41: The Long QT Syndrome Overview and Management Edited by A.Kharazi M.D Cardiac electrophysiologist

Sinus rhythm

Torsade de pointes

NEJM 2000;342:398

Page 42: The Long QT Syndrome Overview and Management Edited by A.Kharazi M.D Cardiac electrophysiologist

Sinus rhythm

Torsade de pointes

Ventricular fibrillation and sinus rhythm

NEJM 2000;342:398

Page 43: The Long QT Syndrome Overview and Management Edited by A.Kharazi M.D Cardiac electrophysiologist

Ongoing Research

Page 44: The Long QT Syndrome Overview and Management Edited by A.Kharazi M.D Cardiac electrophysiologist

LQTS: Studies in Progress

• LQTS Registry: risk-factor identification

• Trigger factors

• New gene identification – LQTx ?

• Exercise stress testing for diagnosis and risk stratification

• Modifier genes

• Mutation-specific therapy

Page 45: The Long QT Syndrome Overview and Management Edited by A.Kharazi M.D Cardiac electrophysiologist

Case Studies

Page 46: The Long QT Syndrome Overview and Management Edited by A.Kharazi M.D Cardiac electrophysiologist

Case Study 1

• 13 year old male presents with syncope while swimming

• QTc prolongation on ECG (>500ms)

• Beta-blocker therapy initiated

• No further cardiac events noted over 5 years

• Can you consider withdrawing beta-blocker therapy?

• Is an ICD indicated?

Page 47: The Long QT Syndrome Overview and Management Edited by A.Kharazi M.D Cardiac electrophysiologist

Case Study 2

• Young male athlete diagnosed with LQTS

• Beta-blockers prescribed

• Patient stops drugs because he feels better without them

• What should the physician do?

Page 48: The Long QT Syndrome Overview and Management Edited by A.Kharazi M.D Cardiac electrophysiologist

Case Study 3

• 15 year old male

• ECG as part of routine physical

• QTc = 450ms

• Asymptomatic

• No family history

• Question: Is this LQTS?

Page 49: The Long QT Syndrome Overview and Management Edited by A.Kharazi M.D Cardiac electrophysiologist

Conclusions

• Unexplained syncope with exertion in children and young adults should be considered serious until proven otherwise.

• ECGs should be obtained on the patient and read by a cardiologist or pediatric cardiologist if patient is a child.

• ECGs should be obtained on all immediate family members.

• Referral to a cardiac specialist if suspicious for LQTS.

Page 50: The Long QT Syndrome Overview and Management Edited by A.Kharazi M.D Cardiac electrophysiologist

Long QT Resources

• Cardiac Arrhythmias Research and Education (CARE) Foundation: www.longqt.org

• Cardiac Arrest Survivors Network (CASN): www.casn-network.org

• International Registry for Drug-Induced Arrhythmias, including drugs to use with caution or avoid in Long QT patients: www.qtdrugs.org