Family screening for hypertrophic cardiomyopathy: Is it time to change practice guidelines?
European Heart Journal

Abstract
Current guidelines recommend initiating family screening for hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) after age 10 or 12 years unless early screening criteria are met. The aim was to evaluate if current screening guidelines miss early onset disease.
Children who underwent family screening for HCM before age 18 years were analysed. Major cardiac events (MaCEs) were defined as death, sudden cardiac death (SCD), or need for major cardiac interventions (myectomy, implantable cardioverter-defibrillator insertion, transplantation). Of 524 children screened, 331 were under 10 years of age, 9.9% had echocardiographic evidence of HCM, and 1.1% were symptomatic at first screening. The median (interquartile range) age at HCM onset was 8.9 (4.7–13.4) years, and at MaCE was 10.9 (8.5–14.3) years with a median time to MaCE from HCM onset of 1.5 (0.5–4.1) years. About 52.5% phenotype-positive children and 41% with MaCEs were <10 years old. Only 69% children with early HCM met early screening criteria. Cox regression identified male gender, family history of SCD, and pathogenic variants in
A third of children not eligible for early screening by current guidelines had phenotype-positive HCM.
Contributors

Myriam Lafreniere-Roula
Author

Yoav Bolkier
Author

Laura Zahavich
Author

Jacob Mathew
Author

Kristen George
Author

Judith Wilson
Author

Elizabeth A Stephenson
Author

Leland N Benson
Author

Cedric Manlhiot
Author
