Contemporary personalized treatment strategies have reduced hypertrophic cardiomyopathy-related mortality to ≤0.5% per year, a 10-fold decrease from early estimates.
Contemporary evidence-based treatments have transformed hypertrophic cardiomyopathy into a low-mortality disease, offering patients the opportunity to achieve normal longevity.
Absolute Event Rate: 0% vs 0%
Once considered rare and essentially untreatable with a grim prognosis and reduced life expectancy, hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) has evolved substantially over 6 decades. Ultimately, HCM has become a contemporary global disease with pharmacologic and interventional options offering effective personalized treatment for all adverse disease pathways. Striking reduction in HCM‐related mortality to ≤0.5%/year in optimally treated cohorts is now comparable to that expected in the US general population, lower than most other disease risks to living, and 10‐fold less than the earliest estimates. The few deaths directly related to HCM are now largely attributable to advanced (end‐stage) heart failure in patients with nonobstructive HCM. Determinants of this transformation to a lower risk disease are evident in hallmark clinical inflection points and breakthroughs, including dedicated HCM programs assembling large clinical databases in which focused (and unfunded) physician‐investigators have derived data directly from patients in clinical practice. Evidence‐based observational studies report emergence of contemporary treatment strategies enhancing survival: implantable defibrillators prevent arrhythmic sudden death globally with 95% sensitive patient selection using an American Heart Association/American College Cardiology risk stratification algorithm; low‐risk, high‐benefit surgical myectomy reverses outflow obstruction and heart failure in >90% with a long‐term survival benefit; and aggressive anticoagulation has reduced embolic strokes. Recent novel pharmacologic alternatives (cardiac myosin inhibitors) are proving effective in relieving obstruction/symptom burden and changing disease management. These principles and time‐tested patient‐centered research strategies uniquely tailored to the heterogeneous HCM clinical spectrum are pivotal in providing practice insights, offering a vulnerable population more optimistic prognosis including opportunity to achieve normal longevity not available to prior generations of patients.
Maron et al. (Wed,) reported a other. Contemporary personalized treatment strategies have reduced hypertrophic cardiomyopathy-related mortality to ≤0.5% per year, a 10-fold decrease from early estimates.