학술논문
Genotype-Phenotype Correlation of Mutation for the Clinical and Electrocardiographic Characteristics of Probands with Brugada Syndrome: A Japanese Multicenter Registry.
Document Type
Journal Article
Author
Kenichiro Yamagata; Minoru Horie; Takeshi Aiba; Satoshi Ogawa; Yoshifusa Aizawa; Tohru Ohe; Masakazu Yamagishi; Naomasa Makita; Harumizu Sakurada; Toshihiro Tanaka; Akihiko Shimizu; Nobuhisa Hagiwara; Ryoji Kishi; Yukiko Nakano; Masahiko Takagi; Takeru Makiyama; Seiko Ohno; Keiichi Fukuda; Hiroshi Watanabe; Hiroshi Morita
Source
Subject
*ELECTROCARDIOGRAPHY
*GENOTYPES
*PHENOTYPES
*GENETIC mutation
*PATIENT selection
*CARDIAC arrest
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Language
ISSN
0009-7322
Abstract
Background -The genotype-phenotype correlation of SCN5A mutations as a predictor of cardiac events in Brugada syndrome remains controversial. We aimed to establish a registry limited to probands, with a long follow-up period, so that the genotype-phenotype correlation of SCN5A mutations in Brugada syndrome can be examined without patient selection bias. Methods -This multicenter registry enrolled 415 probands (n=403; men, 97%; age, 46±14 years) diagnosed with Brugada syndrome whose SCN5A gene was analyzed for mutations. Results -During a mean follow-up period of 72 months, the overall cardiac event rate was 2.5%/year. Compared with probands without mutations (SCN5A (-), n=355), probands with SCN5A mutations (SCN5A(+), n=60) experienced their first cardiac event at a younger age (34 vs. 42 years, P=0.013), had a higher positive rate of late potentials (89% vs. 73%, P=0.016), exhibited longer P-wave, PQ, and QRS durations, and had a higher rate of cardiac events (P=0.017 by log-rank). Multivariate analysis indicated that only SCN5A mutation and history of aborted cardiac arrest were significant predictors of cardiac events (SCN5A(+) vs. SCN5A(-): hazard ratio, 2.0 and P=0.045; history of aborted cardiac arrest vs. no such history: hazard ratio, 6.5 and P<0.001). Conclusions -Brugada syndrome patients with SCN5A mutations exhibit more conduction abnormalities on electrocardiogram and have higher risk for cardiac events. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]