Sex specific differences patients with arrhythmic mitral valve prolapse with in sustained arrhythmias - a SAVE-MVP collaboration sub analysis
E Heller, E W Aabel, P Ollitrault, P Baudinaud, M Bergonti, P K Bhardwaj, F Delling, M De Riva, C Haddad, O Huttin, A Krebsova, K Siontis, M Laredo, A Nagy, A SabbagAbstract
Background
Arrhythmogenic mitral valve prolapse (AMVP) is increasingly recognized as a cause of sustained ventricular arrhythmias (VA) and sudden cardiac death. Although prior studies have identified clinical and imaging risk markers in AMVP, it remains unclear whether the arrhythmogenic phenotype differs between women and men.
Purpose
To investigate sex-specific differences in clinical profiles, structural substrates, and arrhythmia presentations in patients with AMVP who experienced sustained VA.
Methods
We conducted a sex-based sub-analysis of a multicenter cohort (35 centers from 15 countries) of patients with AMVP and sustained VA. Participants were grouped by sex and by initial arrhythmia type (sustained monomorphic ventricular tachycardia [SMVT] vs ventricular fibrillation [VF]). Data collected included clinical history, ECG findings, echocardiographic measurements, and cardiac MRI (CMR) markers, such as late gadolinium enhancement (LGE) patterns and mitral annular disjunction (MAD). These factors were compared across groups.
Results
The study comprised 129 women (57%) and 96 men (43%). Women were diagnosed at younger ages (39±16 years vs. 49±16 years, p<0.03) and had more frequently a family history of MVP (22% vs 10%, p=0.027). MAD was significantly more common in women (66% vs 48%, p=0.015) while LGE was more frequently observed in men than women (N=39 (72%) vs N=41 (53%), p=0.028), with no significant regional patterns (myocardial and/or papillary muscle). ECG T-wave inversion (p=0.627), PVC burden (p>0.03) and arrhythmia types were similar in men and women. However, stress was a more often commonly recognized as the initiating trigger for VA in men than in women (38% [N=24] vs. 18% [N=18], p<0.05). The overwhelming majority of VA were initiated by PVCs in both sexes with no differences in the initiating mechanisms.
Conclusion
In patients with AMVP presenting with sustained VA, the arrhythmic phenotype and initiating mechanisms are similar between sexes, although stress was a significantly stronger trigger for VA in men. Women more often exhibited MAD, whereas LGE was more frequent in men. These findings suggest that structural and tissue-based markers, rather than sex alone, contribute to the development of malignant arrhythmias in AMVP.