Cardiomyopathy is a disease of the heart muscle. It is rare, but it can be serious. Cardiomyopathy in children can result in death, disability, heart transplantation or serious heart rhythm disorders. Natural substances in the blood called cardiac biomarkers can be measured in the laboratory and could be a less invasive way (compared to echocardiograms or MRIs) to detect heart dysfunction in children with cardiomyopathy. Little is known about how useful and valid cardiac biomarkers are in the diagnosis and determination of the symptoms in children with cardiomyopathy. The long-term goal of this project is to study how helpful measuring cardiac biomarkers in children with cardiomyopathy is to their doctors in managing the care of these patients as well as improving their overall health. Measures of these cardiac biomarkers could help doctors in determining how best to care for a child with cardiomyopathy, including when to consider heart transplantation as a treatment option.
Pediatric cardiomyopathy is a heterogeneous disease with high morbidity and mortality in which children often present with fulminant disease leading to death or transplant. Highly sensitive and specific cardiac biomarkers or panels of biomarkers, representing different pathologic mechanisms or pathways, are the least invasive (a particularly important consideration in children) and most-cost-effective approach to the early detection of cardiac dysfunction. The long-term goal of this project is to identify such biomarkers in children with cardiomyopathy. These findings could represent a major advance in determining the most appropriate evidence-based clinical care for these children, including when to consider heart transplantation. The specific aims of this study are: 1. To determine the ability of established and novel cardiac biomarkers to predict short- and long-term outcomes in children with newly diagnosed (incident) dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) 2. To assess the clinical utility of cardiac biomarkers of collagen metabolism in determining the presence of myocardial fibrosis, as established by cardiac MRI (cMRI), and left ventricular (LV) diastolic dysfunction, as established by echocardiography in both newly diagnosed and existing cases of idiopathic and familial hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) in children. 3. To determine whether longitudinal changes in cardiac biomarkers are associated with worsening heart failure (HF) class in clinically stable children with dilated or hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. This study will determine the importance of serological biomarkers, in conjunction with cardiac imaging, in the early identification of heart disease before cardiac remodeling and functional impairment have become irreversible in a pediatric population. This is a 5-year prospective study of up to 480 children with either primary dilated or hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. The study will have three components: 1) clinical data collection by chart review, 2) biospecimen collection and testing, and 3) centralized review and measurement of echocardiograms and cMRIs.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
288
Children's Hospital Colorado
Aurora, Colorado, United States
Ann and Robert H. Lurie Children's Hospital
Chicago, Illinois, United States
Children's Hospital Boston
Boston, Massachusetts, United States
Washington University School of Medicine
St Louis, Missouri, United States
Children's Hospital of New York, Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center
New York, New York, United States
Children's Hospital at Montefiore
The Bronx, New York, United States
Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center
Cincinnati, Ohio, United States
Children's Hospital of Philadelphia
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh of UMPC
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States
Le Bonheur Children's Hospital
Memphis, Tennessee, United States
...and 3 more locations
Time to Death
Time frame: 2 years
Time to heart transplant
Time frame: 2 years
Worsening heart failure
Time frame: 2 years
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