This report presents the diagnostic yields of pathogenic/likely pathogenic in cardiac arrythmia and cardiomyopathy genes, and genotypes and phenotypes correlations, in an expanded cohort of more than one thousand demographically diverse decedents with various pathological findings; the goal of the project was to provide insight for better cause-of-death determinations through postmortem investigations, and better clinical care to prevent premature deaths; the report describes the research study subjects and design, characteristics of the decedent cohort, and the project results and outcomes.
Few reports describe the yield of postmortem genetic testing from medical examiners’ offices or correlate genetic test results with autopsy-confirmed phenotypes from a large cohort. The authors’ objective for this project, was to report results from cardiomyopathy- and cardiac arrhythmia-associated genetic testing in conjunction with autopsy findings of cases investigated at the United States’ largest medical examiner office. Postmortem cases tested from 2015 to 2022 with a cardiomyopathy- and cardiac arrhythmia-associated gene panel were reviewed. American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics/Association for Molecular Pathology guidelines were used to classify variant pathogenicity. Correlations of pathogenic/likely pathogenic variants (P/LPVs) with cardiac pathology were evaluated. The cohort included 1107 decedents of diverse ages and ethnicities. P/LPVs were detected in 87 (7.9%) cases, with 73 and 14 variants in cardiomyopathy and cardiac arrhythmia genes, respectively. Variants of uncertain significance were detected in 437 (39.5%) cases. The diagnostic yield (percentage of P/LPV) in decedents with cardiomyopathy (26.1%) was significantly higher than those without (P<.0001). The diagnostic yield was significantly lower in infants (0.7%) than older age groups (ranging from 1 to 74 years old, 5.7%-25.9%), which had no statistical difference between their yields. The diagnostic yields by cardiac autopsy findings were 54.0% for hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, 47.1% for arrhythmogenic cardiomyopathy, 20.0% for myocardial fibrosis, 19.0% for dilated cardiomyopathy, and 11.3% for myocarditis. Most P/LPVs were in MYBPC3, TTN, PKP2, SCN5A, MYH7, and FLNC. Ten P/LPVs were novel. The research results support the importance of performing postmortem genetic testing on decedents of all ages with cardiomyopathy, cardiac lesions insufficient to diagnosis a specific cardiomyopathy (e.g., myocardial fibrosis), and myocarditis. Combined postmortem cardiac examination and genetic analysis are advantageous in accurately determining the underlying cause of death and informing effective clinical care of family members. (Published Abstract Provided)
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