4.7 Article

Myocardial fibrosis and arrhythmic burden in systemic sclerosis

Journal

RHEUMATOLOGY
Volume 61, Issue 11, Pages 4497-4502

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/rheumatology/keac065

Keywords

SSc (scleroderma); myocardial fibrosis; arrhythmia

Categories

Funding

  1. National Heart Foundation of Australia Vanguard Grant [102206]
  2. Arthritis Australia-Australian Rheumatology Association Project Grant
  3. Scleroderma Victoria Project Grant
  4. St Vincent's Hospital Research Endowment Fund Project Grant [88371]
  5. University of Melbourne Research Establishment Grant
  6. MSK Australia PhD Scholarship
  7. Australian Government Research Training Program Scholarship
  8. University of Melbourne Research Training Scholarship
  9. National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia Investigator Grant [GNT 1176538]
  10. Australian National Heart Foundation Future Leader Fellowship [102021]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The aim of this study was to quantify the burden of asymptomatic fibro-inflammatory myocardial disease and assess the relationship between asymptomatic myocardial fibrosis and cardiac arrhythmias in SSc. The study found a high burden of myocardial fibrosis and arrhythmias in SSc patients, but there was no clear association between focal or diffuse myocardial fibrosis and arrhythmias.
Objectives Cardiac complications of SSc are a leading cause of SSc-associated death. Cardiac imaging for identifying substrate abnormality may be useful in predicting risk of cardiac arrhythmias or future cardiac failure. The aim of this study was to quantify the burden of asymptomatic fibro-inflammatory myocardial disease using cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (CMR) and assess the relationship between asymptomatic myocardial fibrosis and cardiac arrhythmias in SSc. Methods Thirty-two patients with SSc with no documented history of pulmonary vascular or heart disease underwent CMR with gadolinium and 24-h ambulatory ECG. Focal myocardial fibrosis was assessed using post-gadolinium imaging and diffuse fibro-inflammatory myocardial disease quantified using T1- and T2-mapping. CMR results were compared with an age- and sex-matched control group. Results Post-gadolinium focal fibrosis was prevalent in SSc but not controls (30% vs 0%, p < 0.01).. T1-mapping values (as a marker of diffuse fibrosis) were greater in SSc than controls [saturated recovery single-shot acquisition (SASHA): 1584 ms vs 1515 ms, P < 0.001; shortened Modified look locker sequence (ShMOLLI): 1218 ms vs 1138 ms, p < 0.001]. More than one-fifth (22.6%) of the participants had ventricular arrhythmias on ambulatory ECG, but no associations between focal or diffuse myocardial fibrosis and arrhythmias were evident. Conclusion In SSc patients without evidence of overt cardiac disease, a high burden of myocardial fibrosis and arrhythmias was identified. However, there was no clear association between focal or diffuse myocardial fibrosis and arrhythmias, suggesting CMR may have limited use as a screening tool to identify SSc patients at risk of future significant arrhythmias.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available