
Abstract
The epidemiology of peripartum cardiomyopathy (PPCM) in Europe is poorly understood and data on long-term outcomes are lacking. A retrospective, observational, population-level study of validated cases of PPCM in Scotland from 1998 to 2017 was conducted.
Women hospitalized with presumed
The incidence of PPCM was 1 in 4950 deliveries. Among 225 women with PPCM, obesity, gestational hypertensive disorders, and multi-gestation were found to be associated with having the condition. Over a median of 8.3 years (9.7 years for echocardiographic outcomes), 8% of women with PPCM died and 75% were rehospitalized for any cause at least once. Mortality and rehospitalization rates in women with PPCM were ∼12- and ∼3-times that of controls, respectively. The composite of all-cause death, mechanical circulatory support, or cardiac transplantation occurred in 14%. LV recovery occurred in 76% and, of those who recovered, 13% went on to have a decline in LV systolic function despite initial recovery. The mortality rate for children born to women with PPCM was ∼5-times that of children born to controls and they had an ∼3-times greater incidence of cardiovascular disease over a median of 8.8 years.
PPCM affected 1 in 4950 women around the time of pregnancy. The condition is associated with considerable morbidity and mortality for the mother and child. There should be a low threshold for investigating at-risk women. Long term follow-up, despite apparent recovery, should be considered.
Contributors

Alice M Jackson
Author

Mark Macartney
Author

Katriona Brooksbank
Author

Carolyn Brown
Author

Dana Dawson
Author

Mark Francis
Author

Alan Japp
Author

Vera Lennie
Author

Stephen J Leslie
Author

Thomas Martin
Author

Paul Neary
Author

Sowmya Venkatasubramanian
Author

Debra Vickers
Author

Robin A Weir
Author

John J V McMurray
Author

Pardeep S Jhund
Author
University of Glasgow Glasgow , United Kingdom of Great Britain & Northern Ireland

Mark C Petrie
Author
University of Glasgow Glasgow , United Kingdom of Great Britain & Northern Ireland

