June 22, 2016
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Athletic participation risk appears acceptable in properly managed CPVT

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Athletes with catecholaminergic polymorphic ventricular tachycardia, or CPVT, may safely compete if shared decision making and effective treatment are utilized, according to data published in JACC: Clinical Electrophysiology.

Perspective from Brian Olshansky, MD

“While breakthrough events can and do occur even among CPVT patients receiving the best care at dedicated CPVT centers of excellence, there are also the known risks of a sedentary lifestyle as well as a decreased quality of life that may come with quitting physical activity and/or athletics,” Michael J. Ackerman, MD, PhD, director of the Long QT Syndrome/Genetic Heart Rhythm Clinic and the Windland Smith Rice Sudden Death Genomics Laboratory at Mayo Clinic, said in a press release.

Michael J. Ackerman, MD, PhD

Michael J. Ackerman

Ackerman and colleagues performed a retrospective analysis of 63 patients (46% male; mean age, 26 years) who were seen at Mayo Clinic’s Long QT Syndrome/Genetic Heart Rhythm Clinic after 1995 with a diagnosis of CPVT, a genetic condition. Of those, 24 identified as current athletes at time of diagnosis and 21 of them continued competition after diagnosis.

The researchers collected information on treatment, sports played before and after diagnosis, and cardiac events before and after initiation of treatment. Patients and their families were informed about the risks and benefits associated with competitive sports and CPVT and the side effects of treatment before a shared decision was made.

Athlete vs. n onathlete

According to the results, nine patients (14%) experienced a CPVT-associated cardiac event during follow-up. At the time of the event, three of the patients were athletes and six were nonathletes; no difference in event rate was observed between the two groups (P = .7). An 86% event-free survival rate in 583 combined years of follow-up was observed regardless if the patient was athletic. Three of the 21 athletes (14%) who continued to compete experienced three events compared with the seven events experienced by six of the nonathletes (14%; P = 1). No deaths occurred, and all patients who experienced an event received adjustment to their therapy.

The researchers wrote their data suggest that “after correct diagnosis and implementation of a robust CPVT-directed program, the likelihood of a nonlethal cardiac event was the same among our CPVT patients whether currently an athlete or not.”

Shared decision making

In an accompanying editorial, Andrew D. Krahn, MD, head of the division of cardiology at the University of British Columbia in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, and Shubhayan Sanatani, MD, of the BC Children’s Hospital, department of pediatrics, University of British Columbia, wrote that, “Shared decision making supported by evidence-guided medical therapy and incremental interventions lays the foundation for a more permissive approach to not only allowing but also potentially encouraging participation in physical activity, including competitive sports.

“Although highly publicized, sudden death in the young, particularly during athletic competition, is rare, even in CPVT. None of the events in this series would be prevented by activity restriction, and our bias should be toward health promotion and athletic participation,” Krahn and Sanatani wrote. – by Tracey Romero

Disclosure: Ackerman reports consulting for Boston Scientific, Gilead Sciences, Medtronic and St. Jude Medical. Ackerman and Mayo Clinic report receiving sales-based royalties from Transgenomic for two genetic tests. Please see the full study for a list of all other researchers’ relevant financial disclosures. Krahn and Sanatani report no relevant financial disclosures.