Competitive sports participation among patients with long QT syndrome was associated with a low event rate, with only 1 sport-related event occurring among 130 athletes over 5.5 years.
Cohort (n=353)
No
Congenital long QT syndrome (LQTS) (n=353)
Competitive sports participation vs Discontinuation or no involvement in sports
LQTS-related events during follow-up
BACKGROUND: Competitive sports participation for athletes with congenital long QT syndrome (LQTS) is guided by the 2005 36th Bethesda Conference and the 2005 European Society of Cardiology (ESC) guidelines. The purpose of this study was to determine the prevalence and outcomes of patients with LQTS who chose to remain athletes following their diagnosis. METHODS: Records of all patients between 6 and 40 years of age who were first evaluated in Mayo Clinic's LQTS Clinic from July 2000 to November 2010 were reviewed, for documentation of athletic participation after LQTS diagnosis and LQTS-related events during follow-up. Average follow-up was 5.5±3.4 years. RESULTS: The cohort included 353 patients with LQTS (199 females, mean age 17±11 years, mean QTc 472±42 ms), of whom 182 had LQT1, 130 had LQT2, 37 had LQT3 and 4 had multiple LQTS mutations. The majority of patients (223, 63%) were either not involved in sports (88%) or chose to discontinue sports (12%) following evaluation. 130 patients (37%, 60 females, mean age 11±7 years, mean QTc 471±46 ms) remained in competitive athletics, including 20 with implantable cardioverter defibrillators (ICDs). Of these 130, 70 (54%) were genotype-positive/phenotype-negative and competing contrary to ESC guidelines but within the Bethesda guidelines. None of these athletes had a sport-related event. Of the 60 LQTS athletes continuing in sports contrary to both the Bethesda and ESC guidelines (genotype-positive/phenotype-positive), only one had a sporting-related event with appropriate ICD shock. CONCLUSIONS: Athletes and their families are fully capable of self-disqualification. Among those athletes with LQTS who chose to remain in competitive sports, a low rate of cardiac events and no deaths were observed in over 650 athlete-years of follow-up. Current guideline-based recommendations for disqualification may be excessive for this disease.
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Jonathan N. Johnson
Pediatric Cardiology
Michael J. Ackerman
Electrophysiology
British Journal of Sports Medicine
Mayo Clinic
Mayo Clinic in Florida
WinnMed
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Johnson et al. (Wed,) conducted a cohort in Congenital long QT syndrome (LQTS) (n=353). Competitive sports participation vs. Discontinuation or no involvement in sports was evaluated on LQTS-related events during follow-up. Competitive sports participation among patients with long QT syndrome was associated with a low event rate, with only 1 sport-related event occurring among 130 athletes over 5.5 years.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a0ebc17a14f152feaf9c4fe — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1136/bjsports-2012-091751