- Moore, Jeremy P;
- Gallotti, Roberto G;
- Shannon, Kevin M;
- Bos, J Martijn;
- Sadeghi, Elham;
- Strasburger, Janette F;
- Wakai, Ronald T;
- Horigome, Hitoshi;
- Clur, Sally-Ann;
- Hill, Allison C;
- Shah, Maully J;
- Behere, Shashank;
- Sarquella-Brugada, Georgia;
- Czosek, Richard;
- Etheridge, Susan P;
- Fischbach, Peter;
- Kannankeril, Prince J;
- Motonaga, Kara;
- Landstrom, Andrew P;
- Williams, Matthew;
- Patel, Akash;
- Dagradi, Federica;
- Tan, Reina B;
- Stephenson, Elizabeth;
- Krishna, Mani Ram;
- Miyake, Christina Y;
- Lee, Michelle E;
- Sanatani, Shubhayan;
- Balaji, Seshadri;
- Young, Ming-Lon;
- Siddiqui, Saad;
- Schwartz, Peter J;
- Shivkumar, Kalyanam;
- Ackerman, Michael J
Objectives
This study sought to determine the relationship between long QT syndrome (LQTS) subtype (LTQ1, LTQ2, LTQ3) and postnatal cardiac events (CEs).Background
LQTS presenting with 2:1 atrioventricular block or torsades de pointes in the fetus and/or neonate has been associated with risk for major CEs, but overall outcomes and predictors remain unknown.Methods
A retrospective study involving 25 international centers evaluated the course of fetuses/newborns diagnosed with congenital LQTS and either 2:1 atrioventricular block or torsades de pointes. The primary outcomes were age at first CE after dismissal from the newborn hospitalization and death and/or cardiac transplantation during follow-up. CE was defined as aborted cardiac arrest, appropriate shock from implantable cardioverter-defibrillator, or sudden cardiac death.Results
A total of 84 fetuses and/or neonates were identified with LQTS (12 as LQT1, 35 as LQT2, 37 as LQT3). Median gestational age at delivery was 37 weeks (interquartile range: 35 to 39 weeks) and age at hospital discharge was 3 weeks (interquartile range: 2 to 5 weeks). Fetal demise occurred in 2 and pre-discharge death in 1. Over a median of 5.2 years, there were 1 LQT1, 3 LQT2, and 23 LQT3 CEs (13 aborted cardiac arrests, 5 sudden cardiac deaths, and 9 appropriate shocks). One patient with LQT1 and 11 patients with LQT3 died or received cardiac transplant during follow-up. The only multivariate predictor of post-discharge CEs was LQT3 status (LQT3 vs. LQT2: hazard ratio: 8.4; 95% confidence interval: 2.6 to 38.9; p < 0.001), and LQT3, relative to LQT2, genotype predicted death and/or cardiac transplant (p < 0.001).Conclusions
In this large multicenter study, fetuses and/or neonates with LQT3 but not those with LQT1 or LQT2 presenting with severe arrhythmias were at high risk of not only frequent, but lethal CEs.