ESC Heart Failure (Feb 2024)

Multimodal characterization of dilated cardiomyopathy: Geno‐ And Phenotyping of PrImary Cardiomyopathy (GrAPHIC)

  • Laura Keil,
  • Filip Berisha,
  • Stella Ritter,
  • Johanna Skibowski,
  • Hariharan Subramanian,
  • Viacheslav O. Nikolaev,
  • Christian Kubisch,
  • Rixa Woitschach,
  • Larissa Fabritz,
  • Raphael Twerenbold,
  • Stefan Blankenberg,
  • Sören Weidemann,
  • Tanja Zeller,
  • Paulus Kirchhof,
  • Daniel Reichart,
  • Christina Magnussen

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/ehf2.14544
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
pp. 541 – 549

Abstract

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Abstract Aims Cardiomyopathies (CMPs) are a heterogeneous group of diseases that are defined by structural and functional abnormalities of the cardiac muscle. Dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM), the most common CMP, is defined by left ventricular dilation and impaired contractility and represents a common cause of heart failure. Different phenotypes result from various underlying genetic and acquired causes with variable effects on disease development and progression, prognosis, and response to medical treatment. Current treatment algorithms do not consider these different aetiologies, due to lack of insights into treatable drivers of cardiac failure in patients with DCM. Our study aims to precisely phenotype and genotype the various subtypes of DCM and hereby lay the foundation for individualized therapy. Methods and results The Geno‐ And Phenotyping of PrImary Cardiomyopathy (GrAPHIC) is a currently ongoing prospective observational monocentric cohort study that recruits patients with DCM after exclusion of other causes such as coronary artery disease, valvular dysfunction, myocarditis, exposure to toxins, and peripartum CMP. Patients are enrolled at our heart failure outpatient clinic or during hospitalization at the University Hospital Hamburg. Clinical parameters, multimodal imaging and functional assessment, cardiac biopsies, and blood samples are obtained to enable an integrated genomic, functional, and biomarker analysis. Conclusions The GrAPHIC will contribute to a better understanding of the heterogeneous nature of primary CMPs focusing on DCM and provide improved prognostic approaches and more individualized therapies.

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