eLetters

881 e-Letters

  • CONCORDANT DOMAIN ANALYSIS: THE LAST EXAMPLE OF THE CURRENT CHANGES IN CLINICAL RESEARCH

    We have read with great interest the article written by Jolicoer et al. (1) about the concordant domain analysis, a new method to interpret early phase trials and we applaud their initiative which expands the horizons in the current context of progressive diffuculties to ran studies.
    Randomized controlled trials (RCT) and meta-analysis constitute the highest level of evidence and the chances to succeed are high when there is a strong financial support to launch projects as Further Cardiovascular Outcomes Research with PCSK9 Inhibition in Subjects with Elevated Risk (FOURIER) with 27,564 patients, which in addition to demonstrate the hypothesis of the study, it ensures the external validity and the study of subgroups.
    However, recently we are witnessing a progressively more tortuous environment to launch adequately powered RCTs due to economic restrictions, lower margin to demonstrate cost-effectivity of the new treatments and more strict legal requirements and as the authors quote, only 1 in 10 investigational agents tested in phase III trials reaches the market. Some authors have already raisen concerns about the future of research and the protagonism of new methods as adaptive studies(2) or approaches to emulate RCT (3) are foreseen in the near future.
    In our opinion, the combination of pilot randomized studies with new iniciatives as the described by Jolicoer may be a promising pathway when the conditions to launch large RCTs are not possible and in fa...

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  • Biphasic ventilation for failing Fontan physiology

    Biphasic ventilation for failing Fontan physiology

    Seigo Okada1, MD, PhD, Jun Muneuchi1, MD, PhD, Mamie Watanabe1, MD

    1Department of Pediatrics, Japan Community Healthcare Organization, Kyushu Hospital, 1-8-1, Kishinuora, Yahatanishiku, Kitakyushu, Fukuoka, 806-8501, Japan

    Address correspondence and reprint requests to: Seigo Okada, M.D., Ph.D.
    Department of Pediatrics, Japan Community Healthcare Organization, Kyushu Hospital, 1-8-1, Kishinoura, Yahatanishiku, Kitakyushu, Fukuoka, 806-8501, Japan. Tel: 81-93-641-5111; Fax: 81-93-642-1868; E-mail: sokada0901@gmail.com; ORCID: 0000-0002-9150-1913

    Dear Editor:
    We read the article by Charla et al.1 with great interest. The authors conducted a phase-contrast magnetic resonance study during biphasic ventilation (BPV) in 10 patients aged 20–34 years who had Fontan circulation and 10 matched control subjects. BPV resulted in significant pulmonary blood flow and cardiac output augmentations in the Fontan group, which suggests the importance of “thoracic pump” in Fontan patients without a subpulmonary ventricle. We appreciate the authors’ efforts to assess the efficacy and feasibility of noninvasive external ventilation for Fontan patients. This is a thoughtfully conducted study, but some issues must be further discussed.
    First, the authors mentioned that the study was the first to describe the impact of BPV in the Fontan population. However, we...

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  • What will be done to prevent someone else being harmed in the future

    The soul-searching analysis by Daniel McKenzie deals with the scenario where both the doctor and the patient recognise that something went wrong(1). The dynamics are different when it is only with the benefit of hindsight that it is only the professionals who realise that, all along, they have been inflicting iatrogenic harm on their patients. Even in that scenario what matters is "What will be done to prevent someone else being harmed in the future?".
    The thrombolytic treatment of ST elevation myocardial infarction(STEMI) is a case in point. That treatment strategy was initiated in 1986, and it soon became the standard of care for STEMI(2). Further down the line, in September 2020, a literature review identified 138 cases(with accompanying case histories) of dissecting aortic aneurysm(DAA) characterised by STEMI-like ST segment elevation. These cases were published during the period January 2000 to March 2020(3). Arguably, there must have been, at least, the same number of cases of STEMI-like DAA in the 20 year period following the introduction of thrombolytic treatment of ST elevation myocardial infarction. At the very least, some of those cases must have been harmed by thrombolytic treatment.
    Why does that matter in September 2020? It matters because thrombolysis is "back on the agenda" for some myocardial infarction patients with ST segment elevation(4). All this, without the precaution to rule out DAA either by point-of-c...

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  • Great Relief to the Doctors and Patients Alike!

    There had been controversies raging whether Angiotensin Converting Enzyme Inhibitors and Angiotensin Receptor Blocking Agents may be harmful, neutral or protective to the people affected by SARS-CoV-2.
    The findings of this study, especially because it encompasses such huge study population will provide great relief from uncertainty and anxiety to the doctor's prescribing these class of medicines to their hypertensive patients and to the people alrady taking these medicines.
    Great many sinceremost thanks to the investigators of this study!
    -Arvind Joshi;
    MBBS, MD; FCGP, FAMS, FICP;
    Founder Convener and President:
    Our Own Discussion Group (OODG);
    602-C, Megh Apartments;
    Ganesh Peth Lane, Dadar West, Mumbai; Maharashtra State,INDIA, PIN 400028;
    Consultant Physician at:
    Ruchi Clinical Laboratory/Ruchi Diagnostic Center, Sunshine CHS,
    Plot 58, Sector 21, Kharghar;
    Maharashtra State, INDIA, PIN 410210.

  • Specification of criteria for diagnosis of prosthetic valve endocarditis is fundamental

    A review of comparative incidence of infective endocarditis in bioprosthetic vs mechanical valves (1) can only be complete if there is a clear statement of the criteria for the diagnosis of infective endocarditis. An important characteristic of prosthetic valve endocarditis is that "the diagnosis[of endocarditis] is more difficult in the presence of a prosthetic valve when compared with a native valve" due to the fact that "the Duke criteria have been shown to be less helpful in prosthetic valve endocarditis because of lower sensitivity in this setting"(2). Furthermore,
    the diagnostic accuracy of some imaging modalities is suboptimal in prosthetic valve endocarditis(3). According to the latter review , among patients with suspected prosthetic valve endocarditis sensitivity of transthoracic echocardiography can be as low as 17%-36%. For transoesophageal echocardiography(TOE) that parameter increases to 82-96%, the latter statistic comparable to the sensitivity associated with 18 Fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography/CT(PET/CT). Also in the context of prosthetic valve endocarditis, TOE and PET/CT also have comparable specificities in the range 80-96%(3). The major limitation of TOE is that it is invasive and also operator dependent. By contrast PET/CT not only increases the sensitivity of the modified Duke criteria from 70% to 97%(without affecting specificity) but that modality also identifies metastatic septic embol...

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  • Stress echocardiography a low cost alternative to CTFFR

    The authors (Nazir et al) of the review of CT fractional flow reserve published in Heart are to be congratulated on very well balanced and well written review of this relatively new technology (1).

    We would like to raise a couple of points regarding imaging stress tests functioning as a gatekeeper to invasive coronary angiography after a stenosis is identified on CTCA. A recent survey of UK cardiologists identified imaging stress tests as the most common approach to assess the functional significance of a moderate stenosis (50-70%) on CTCA, with only 2% electing to use CT-FFR (2). The current increase in the use of CT-FFR is because it is nationally funded. Importantly, stress echocardiography is a very low cost test with a national tariff of £177, which compares favourably with the new reduced tariff for CT-FFR of £530. With time, this may be re-balance in favour of CT-FFR if the tariff drops further, particularly given the attraction of a single patient episode and with an anticipated growth of cardiac CT in line with NICE recommendations.

    It is important to remind readers that the PLATFORM (3) trial compared CTCA plus CT-FFR versus the standard of care in patients with stable chest pain. The patients were divided into an invasive sub-study (n=380) and a non-invasive sub-study (n=204) and the end point of the study was reduction of invasive coronary angiography that showed no obstructive CAD. In the non-invasive sub-study there was no difference in the r...

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  • Release of troponin after exercise stress test in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy

    Release of troponin after exercise stress test in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy

    Pawel Petkow Dimitrow1, Renata Rajtar-Salwa2, Tomasz Tokarek2
    1 2nd Department of Cardiology, Jagiellonian University Medical College, Kraków, Poland
    2 Department of Cardiology and Cardiovascular Interventions, University Hospital, Krakow, Poland
    Correspondence to: Paweł Petkow Dimitrow, 2nd Department of Cardiology, Jagiellonian University Medical College, Jakubowskiego 2 Str., 30-688 Krakow, Poland, e-mail: dimitrow@mp.pl, tel. 0048 12 400 22 50

    Recently Cramer et al. demonstrated very important observation on troponin level increase after exercise in patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) [1]. Several concerns regarding to methodology of their study should be explained. Authors decided to perform only one measurement of troponin level at 6 hours after end of exercise. In our opinion, sampling after 6, 12, 18 and 24 hours after exercise provide more adequate profile of troponin level and allow to monitor possible post-exercise ischemia. Furthermore, data on prevalence of silent myocardial ischemia (only troponin increase) should be provided. In our study [2] painless ischemia detected by troponin measurement after normal daily physical activity was present in 25% of HCM patients. In another study [3], among HCM patients monitored by HOLTER ECG during normal daily physical activity, maximum heart rate was higher in th...

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  • ACUTE AUTOIMMUNE REACTION: AN OBSCURE MECHANISM OF COVID-19-RELATED MYOCARDIAL INJURY ?

    ACUTE AUTOIMMUNE REACTION: AN OBSCURE MECHANISM OF COVID-19-RELATED MYOCARDIAL INJURY ?

    Kenan YALTA, MD a
    Ertan YETKIN, MD b
    Gokay TAYLAN, MD a
    Tulin YALTA, MD c

    a Trakya University, Cardiology Department, Edirne, TURKEY
    b Istinye University, Liv Hospital, Cardiology Department, Istanbul, TURKEY
    c Trakya University, Pathology Department, Edirne, TURKEY

    Corresponding Author: Kenan YALTA Trakya University, Cardiology Department, Edirne, TURKEY
    Email- kyalta@gmail.com, akenanyalta@trakya.edu.tr Phone: 00905056579856

    Acute myocardial injury has been suggested as an important prognostic factor in Covid-19 patients (1-3). In their recently published article (1), Wei JF, et al. have demonstrated a significant association of acute myocardial injury (defined as elevation of high sensitive troponin-T (hs-TnT) levels) with older age, pre-existing cardiovascular disease, disease severity (and hence; general frailty) and adverse prognosis in Covid-19 patients . The authors have principally attributed this injury to certain factors including systemic inflammation, hypoxemia and direct myocardial invasion by the viral agent (1). However, as described below, an acute autoimmune reaction triggered by the virus might also be considered as an alternative mechanism of myocardial injury par...

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  • narroe complex ventricular tachycardia should be included in the differential diagnosis

    For the sake of completeness, the approach to narrow complex tachycardia(1), and the differential diagnosis of that disorder, should also include the entity of fascicular ventricular tachycardia, in which the duration of the QRS complex does not exceed 120 ms during ventricular tachycardia(VT)(2)(3). There are 3 subtypes, namely, left posterior fascicular VT with right bundle branch(RBBB) morphology and left axis deviation, left anterior fascicular VT with RBBB pattern and right axis deviation, and upper septal fascicular VT with a narrow QRS and normal axis configuration(2).
    Talib et al evaluated 10 patients aged 14-66 with upper septal ventricular tachycardia in whom there was no structural heart disease, and in whom the QRS duration amounted to < 120 ms during VT. In 8 instances VT could be terminated by administration of verapamil. In the other 2 instances no attempt had been made to terminate the episodes of VT with that drug. In the verapamil-responsive subjects, the episodes of VT were characterised by QRS duration amounting to 75 ms, 90 ms(two patients), 93 ms, 96 ms, 105 ms, 115 ms, and 118 ms, respectively. In 4 patients precordial QRS configuration during VT was identical to QRS configuration during sinus rhythm. In the other four, QRS configuration was of the RBBB subtype during VT(3).
    Narrow complex VT can also be a manifestation of coronary artery disease, but, in this context, there appears to be no involvement of the His-Purki...

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  • A new role for exercise echocardiography? Can we abandon athletic deconditioning advice?

    The benefits of regular exercise are non deniable with reduction in all cause, cardiovascular and cancer mortality (1,2,3). Endurance exercise with increase in cardiac output results in dilatation of left ventricular cavity size and eccentric hypertrophy with low normal ejection fraction that is a dilated cardiomyopathy phenocopy. The ability to distinguish true pathology from physiological remodelling remains a difficult area for cardiologists. Frequently asymptomatic athletic individuals are referred to the cardiology service with abnormal resting 12 lead ECGs. They must be appropriately investigated. The dimema for the investigating cardiologist is to determine the healthy athlete from the athlete with DCM. An erroneous diagnosis of DCM in an athlete may lead to unnecessary disqualification from sport, unnecessary pharmacotherapy and a decline in physical and psychological well being as well as implications for life insurance. Millar et al study adds vital information to the field (4). It is reassuring that the study reported that none of the athletes with a physiologically increased LV size and borderline or low resting LV ejection fraction (grey-zone participants) had replacement fibrosis of the left ventricular myocardium on cardiac MRI. In addition, the authors have reported that functional assessment of the heart by stress echocardiography can discriminate between DCM and DCM phenocopy with high sensitivity and specificity. This study will likely be a game...

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