Arrhythmia Induced Cardiomyopathy: What are Predictors of
Myocardial Recovery?
Acile Nahlawi BS, Marwan M. Refaat MD
Department of Internal Medicine, Division of Cardiology, American
University of Beirut Medical Center, Beirut, Lebanon
Running Title: AIC and Predictors of Myocardial Recovery
Disclosures: None
Funding: None
Keywords: Cardiac Arrhythmias, Cardiovascular Diseases, Heart Diseases,
Congestive Heart Failure, Cardiomyopathy
Words: 958 (excluding references)
Correspondence:
Marwan M. Refaat, MD, FACC, FAHA, FHRS, FASE, FESC, FACP, FRCP
Associate Professor of Medicine
Director, Cardiovascular Fellowship Program
Department of Internal Medicine, Cardiovascular Medicine/Cardiac
Electrophysiology
Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Genetics
American University of Beirut Faculty of Medicine and Medical Center
PO Box 11-0236, Riad El-Solh 1107 2020- Beirut, Lebanon
Fax: +961-1-370814
Clinic: +961-1-759616 or +961-1-355500 or +961-1-350000/+961-1-374374
Extension 5800
Office: +961-1-350000/+961-1-374374 Extension 5353 or Extension 5366
(Direct)
Email: mr48@aub.edu.lb
Cardiomyopathies cause a significant public health burden and
improvement in sudden cardiac death risk stratification helped in
decreasing mortality by improved pharmacotherapy as well as device
implantations including implantable cardiac defibrillators and cardiac
resynchronization therapy [1-4]. Arrhythmia induced cardiomyopathy
(AIC) is a major cause of non-ischemic cardiomyopathy and heart failure
(HF) worldwide [5]. It is characterized by an impairment of left
ventricular systolic function secondary to high heart rate
(tachycardia-induced), asynchrony (frequent premature ventricular
contractions-induced or right ventricular pacing-induced) or an
irregular rhythm (such as atrial fibrillation-induced) that serves as
the trigger of AIC and this is mediated by calcium mishandling. The
distinctive feature of AIC is the substantial improvement in left
ventricular systolic function following arrhythmia suppression or
elimination [5]. Atrial Fibrillation (AF) is concomitantly present
with and potentially the cause of 10 to 50% of HF cases [6]. AIC is
an important, commonly encountered and potentially reversible entity
that is often under-recognized. The exact incidence and prevalence of
AIC remains poorly defined in the literature [7]. In some studies,
it was present in as high as 50% of patients with AF undergoing
ablation, while it was reported to be present in 10% of patients with
focal atrial tachycardia undergoing ablation [8]. In addition, very
little attention, if any, is given to AIC in major trials on AF and HF,
despite its significant implications on morbidity and mortality and the
promising benefits of treatment [7]. Many aspects of AIC are yet to
be understood. In fact, few studies limited by small sample size
constitute our main source of knowledge on extent and predictors of
ventricular recovery after treatment initiation in patients with AIC
[9,10].
In their multicenter retrospective study, Gopinathannair et al. aimed to
assess the degree of recovery of the left ventricular systolic function
after suppression/elimination of the underlying arrythmia and to
evaluate factors influencing this response such as baseline patient and
arrhythmia characteristics. The study sample comprised 243 patients from
3 different institutions whose charts were reviewed retrospectively (no
recruitment timeframe was indicated). The patient characteristics
studied included baseline left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF),
presence of structural heart disease (SHD) [ defined as significant
coronary artery disease, prior myocardial infarction, hemodynamically
significant valvular heart disease, or other structural
cardiomyopathies] and medications used. As for the arrhythmia
characteristics, they included arrhythmia duration and arrhythmia type.
The authors used echocardiography as the imaging modality to determine
extent of ventricular function recovery by comparing myocardial function
before and after treatment of the culprit arrhythmia. The
echocardiographic parameters that were assessed included LVEF, LV
end-diastolic and end-systolic diameters, left atrial dimension,
valvular abnormalities, right ventricular systolic pressures, and
pulmonary arterial pressures.
In contrast to reported literature on the topic, Gopinathannair et al.
found that none of the studied patient and arrhythmia characteristics
had a significant effect on the recovery of ventricular function. Their
results showed that initiation of aggressive arrhythmia treatment is
warranted in patients with suspected AIC, regardless of arrhythmia
duration, arrhythmia type, severity of baseline LVEF, and underlying
structural heart disease. This was concluded based on the consistent
substantial improvement in LVEF after arrhythmia
suppression/elimination, mainly through rhythm control, across all
different subgroups. In fact, the extent of LVEF improvement was similar
whether comparing the group with known arrhythmia duration [KN] to
that with unknown arrhythmia duration [UKN] (21.2±9 % vs 19.4±11
%, p-value =0.16) or comparing the group with longest arrhythmia
duration to the rest (21.5±7.5 % vs 21.0 ± 9.2%, p-value=0.77). On the
other hand, greatest improvement was seen in the group with lowest
initial LVEF (24±17 vs 19±7%; p-value <0.0001), making low
index LVEF the only predictor of LVEF recovery after arrhythmia
treatment in patients with AIC. However, the LVEF in these patients did
not reach complete normalization; they had lower post-treatment LVEF
compared to other groups (45±14 vs 54±8%; p<0.0001), a
finding consistent with the available literature. Also similar to
previous studies, the authors found that patients with PVCs experienced
smaller extent of recovery compared to other arrhythmia types. The
authors concluded by stressing the importance of suspecting AIC in
patients having cardiomyopathy with a persistent arrhythmia and
initiating aggressive arrhythmia treatment regardless of initial patient
and arrhythmia characteristics.
As for the limitations of the study by Gopinathannair et al., there are
few to mention. First, the study had a retrospective design and
therefore findings only serve to generate hypotheses that need further
testing and validation. Second, there is a lack of a control group to
exclude interference of confounding factors. Although the use of
Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme inhibitors (ACEi)/ Angiotension receptor
blockers (ARB) did not independently predict LVEF improvement in
multivariate analysis, it could still be a confounder given the lower
rates of ACEi/ARB use in the cohort. Third, the timeframe of the study
and the period of follow-up were not clearly defined. Fourth, there is
lack of blinding of echocardiographic analyses which can potentially
lead to inter- and intra-observer variability. Finally, the sample
population was not diverse as it consisted in its majority of
Caucasians.
The Gopinathannair et al. study demonstrated several points of strength.
Among these are its multicenter nature and its relatively larger sample
size compared to similar studies, giving its findings more weight.
Moreover, the authors appropriately and clearly defined their inclusion
and exclusion criteria. Furthermore, no funding was needed for the study
which potentially frees it from direct or indirect influences on its
design, execution and interpretation. Finally, the study has
successfully improved our understanding of predictors of ventricular
recovery in patients with AIC and showed that patients with AIC who had
the longest duration of arrhythmia still had LV systolic function
improvement with arrhythmia suppression/elimination. This study paves
the way for prospective studies and randomized clinical trials to
validate the generated hypotheses and corroborate the observational
findings.