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Original

Clinical implications of anti-heart autoantibodies in myocarditis and dilated cardiomyopathy

, , , , , , & show all
Pages 35-45 | Received 15 Feb 2007, Accepted 15 May 2007, Published online: 07 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

Dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM), a leading cause of heart failure and heart transplantation in younger adults, is characterized by dilatation and impaired contraction of the left or both ventricles; it may be idiopathic, familial/genetic (20–30%), viral, and/or immune. On endomyocardial biopsy there is chronic inflammation in 30–40% of cases. Mutations in genes encoding myocyte structural proteins, cardiotoxic noxae and infectious agents are known causes; due to high aetiologic and genetic heterogeneity, the gene defects identified so far account for a tiny proportion of the familial cases. In at least two thirds of patients, DCM remains idiopathic. Myocarditis may be idiopathic, infectious or autoimmune and may heal or lead to DCM. Circulating heart-reactive autoantibodies are found in myocarditis/DCM patients and symptom-free relatives at higher frequency than in normal or noninflammatory heart disease control groups. These autoantibodies are directed against multiple antigens, some of which are expressed only in the heart (organ-specific); some autoantibodies have functional effects on cardiac myocytes in vitro as well as in animal models. Depletion of nonantigen-specific antibodies by extracorporeal immunoadsorption is associated with improved ventricular function and reduced cardiac symptoms in some DCM patients, suggesting that autoantibodies may also have a functional role in humans. Immunosuppression seems beneficial in patients who are virus-negative and cardiac autoantibody positive. Prospective family studies have shown that cardiac-specific autoantibodies are present in at least 60% of both familial and non familial pedigrees and predict DCM development among asymptomatic relatives, years before clinical and echocardiographic evidence of disease. Animal models have shown that autoimmune myocarditis/DCM can be induced by virus as well as reproduced by immunization with a well-characterized autoantigen, cardiac myosin. Thus, in a substantial proportion of patients, myocarditis and DCM represent different stages of an organ-specific autoimmune disease, that represents the final common pathogenetic pathway of infectious and noninfectious myocardial injuries in genetically predisposed individuals.

Abbreviations
ANT=

Adenine nucleotide translocator

AHA=

Anti-heart autoantibodies

BCKD-E2=

Branched chain α-ketoacid dehydrogenase dihydrolipoyl transacylase

cTnI=

cardiac Troponin I

CB3=

Coxsackie B3

DCM=

Dilated cardiomyopathy

dFS=

depressed fractional shortening

ELISA=

Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay

FPIR=

First-phase insulin response

HSP-60=

Heat shock protein-60

LVE=

Left ventricular enlargement

SPRIA=

Micro solid-phase radioimmunoassay

MHC=

Myosin heavy chain

PKA=

Protein kinase A

s-I IFL=

Standard indirect immunofluorescence

Abbreviations
ANT=

Adenine nucleotide translocator

AHA=

Anti-heart autoantibodies

BCKD-E2=

Branched chain α-ketoacid dehydrogenase dihydrolipoyl transacylase

cTnI=

cardiac Troponin I

CB3=

Coxsackie B3

DCM=

Dilated cardiomyopathy

dFS=

depressed fractional shortening

ELISA=

Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay

FPIR=

First-phase insulin response

HSP-60=

Heat shock protein-60

LVE=

Left ventricular enlargement

SPRIA=

Micro solid-phase radioimmunoassay

MHC=

Myosin heavy chain

PKA=

Protein kinase A

s-I IFL=

Standard indirect immunofluorescence

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