Beyond the blueprint: decoding calmodulinopathy—a case report showcasing the utility of multifaceted treatments

European Heart Journal - Case Reports

1 April 2025
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ESC Journals ARRHYTHMIAS AND DEVICE THERAPY Syncope and Bradycardia

Abstract

AbstractBackground

Calmodulinopathies are adrenergically-induced life-threatening arrhythmias. Available therapies are disquietingly insufficient, especially for CALM-LQTS (calmodulinopathy-associated long QT syndrome). This case report illustrates a novel mutation in CALM-LQTS and its response to multimodality treatment strategies.

Case summary

The proband was the first child born to a nonconsanguineous Indian couple, a 26-year-old woman and a 30-year-old man. The child was delivered prematurely, and at birth, a functional 2:1 atrioventricular block was noted with sinus bradycardia with a corrected QT by Bazzet’s of 716 ms. Clinical exome sequencing of the proband revealed a novel missense variant c.287A>G in exon 5 of the CALM3 gene in a heterozygous state, resulting in an Asp96Gly change. The OMIM phenotype associated with it is long QT syndrome 16 (#618782). Despite receiving a dose of 4.5 mg/kg/day of propranolol, the child still had a persistent long QTc. Mexiletine was started at the trial dose of 1.5 mg/kg/day, and after 1 h, QTc was reduced to 507 ms from 560 ms. After a left-cardiac sympathectomy, he remains asymptomatic after 1.3 years of follow-up with a QTc value of 490 ms.

Discussion

CALM3 pathogenic variants are gain-of-function variants mainly affecting amino acids residing in the Ca2-binding loops. Earlier data suggested the role of the Nav1.5 channel in leading to persistent Na+ leaks resulting in LQTS. However, they only focused on LQTS-CALM1 and CALM2 models and did not include CALM3-related genes. Despite similarities, the precise impact of CaM on Nav1.5 channels still needs to be defined as CaV1.2. The exact role of mexiletine is not fully understood.

Contributors

Narayanan Namboodiri
Narayanan Namboodiri

Author

Sree Chitra Tirunal Institute for Medical Sciences & Technology (SCTIMST) Thiruvananthapuram , India

Saikiran Kakarla
Saikiran Kakarla

Author

Sree Chitra Thirunal Institute of Medical Sciences and Technology Thiruvananthapuram , India

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