Official Title
Cardiomyocyte Specific Cell Free DNA as a Marker of Cardiac Sarcoidosis
Brief Title
Cell Free DNA in Cardiac Sarcoidosis
Protocol ID
NCT03858777
Lead Sponsor
Nabeel Hamzeh
Brief Summary
Sarcoidosis is a multisystem granulomatous disease of unknown cause that can affect any
organ in the body, including the heart. Granulomatous myocarditis can lead to ventricular
dysfunction and ventricular arrhythmias causing significant morbidity and mortality.
Immunosuppressive therapy (IST) has been shown to reverse active myocarditis and preserve
left ventricular (LV) function and in some cases improve LV function. In addition, IST
can suppress arrhythmias that develop due to active myocarditis and prevent the formation
of scar.
The potential role of cardiac biomarkers, including brain natriuretic peptide (BNP),
atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP), and cardiac troponins, in detecting active myocarditis
is limited and studies have been disappointing. At present, there are no biomarkers to
detect active myocarditis and the use of advanced imaging modalities (FDG-PET) for
assessing and monitoring active myocarditis is not feasible or practical and is associate
with high radiation exposure. As such, a biomarker that is reflective of active
myocarditis and that is cardiac specific will assist physicians in assessing the presence
of active myocarditis to guide therapeutic decisions and to assess response to therapy
which can limit further cardiac damage.
Cell free DNA (cfDNA) are fragments of genomic DNA that are released into the circulation
from dying or damaged cells. It is a powerful diagnostic tool in cancer, transplant
rejection and fetal medicine especially when the genomic source differs from the host. A
novel technique that relies on tissue unique CpG methylation patterns can identify the
tissue source of cell free DNA in an individual reflecting potential tissue injury. We
will be conducting a pilot study to explore the utility of this diagnostic tool to
identify granulomatous myocarditis in patients with sarcoidosis.
Detailed Description
Sarcoidosis is a multisystem granulomatous disease of unknown cause that can affect any
organ in the body, including the heart. Sarcoidosis results from an immune reaction to an
environmental exposure to yet unknown antigen(s) in a genetically predisposed individual.
Autopsy studies have suggested that cardiac involvement with sarcoidosis occurs in up to
25% of cases, although more than half of these cases are sub-clinical. Cardiac
sarcoidosis (CS) CS can lead to life-threatening heart failure, heart block, or rhythm
disturbance and accounts for 13-25% of all sarcoidosis deaths in the USA. Therefore,
although respiratory failure from lung sarcoidosis is the most common cause of
sarcoidosis-related death in the USA, sudden death from cardiac sarcoidosis is a major
concern owing to its acute nature. CS can present in a multitude of ways. It can be the
initial manifestation of sarcoidosis in an individual not known to have sarcoidosis (a
cohort beyond the aims of this proposal), patients can present with cardiac symptoms
which can include palpitations, near-syncope or syncopal episodes which require a
complete workup for potential CS and patients can be asymptomatic which is a sizable
cohort considering the discrepancy between the expected prevalence of CS (25-40%) and CS
that is detected clinically (5%).
Granulomatous myocarditis can lead to ventricular dysfunction and ventricular arrhythmias
causing significant morbidity and mortality. Immunosuppressive therapy (IST) has been
shown to reverse active myocarditis and preserve left ventricular (LV) function and in
some cases improve LV function. In addition, IST can suppress arrhythmias that develop
due to active myocarditis and prevent the formation of scar. Cardiac MRI (cMRI) and
cardiac PET scans are currently used as complementary diagnostic tests for cardiac
sarcoidosis, although with some limitations. Cardiac MRI with gadolinium has a
sensitivity of 76-100% and specificity of 78-92% for the diagnosis of cardiac
sarcoidosis, but its use is limited in patients with implantable cardiac devices. The
presence of delayed enhancement on gadolinium-enhanced MRI is suggestive of scar tissue
formation. 18FDG PET uses radioactive glucose to detect areas of active inflammation. The
use of 18FDG PET as a marker of active granulomatous myocarditis should be interpreted
carefully as several studies have shown the limitations of such protocols that force the
myocardium to generate energy using free fatty acid metabolism exclusively. In addition,
studies have also shown that the presumed pathological patterns, focal and focal on
diffuse uptake, are also seen in healthy controls and patients with ischemic congestive
heart failure who have undergone 18-FDG-PET12 and that a blood glucose level of
>7.5mmol/L (>137mg/dl) at the time of the study results in absent or minimal myocardial
FDG activity.
The potential role of cardiac biomarkers, including brain natriuretic peptide (BNP),
atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP), and cardiac troponins, in detecting active myocarditis
is limited and studies have been disappointing. At present, there are no biomarkers to
detect active myocarditis and the use of advanced imaging modalities (FDG-PET) for
assessing and monitoring active myocarditis is not feasible or practical and is associate
with high radiation exposure. As such, a biomarker that is reflective of active
myocarditis and that is cardiac specific will assist physicians in assessing the presence
of active myocarditis to guide therapeutic decisions and to assess response to therapy
which can limit further cardiac damage.
Cell free DNA (cfDNA) are fragments of genomic DNA that are released into the circulation
from dying or damaged cells. It is a powerful diagnostic tool in cancer, transplant
rejection and fetal medicine especially when the genomic source differs from the host. A
novel technique that relies on tissue unique CpG methylation patterns can identify the
tissue source of cell free DNA in an individual reflecting potential tissue injury. A
recent paper utilized this technique to identify cardiac specific cfDNA in the
bloodstream of patients with acute myocardial injury and sepsis reflecting cardiomyocyte
injury/death. We will be conducting a pilot study to explore the utility of this
diagnostic tool to identify granulomatous myocarditis in patients with sarcoidosis.
Study Period
-
Enrollment Count
120 participants
Eligibility Criteria
1. Sarcoidosis patients without evidence of active myocarditis:
- Inclusion:
- Diagnosis of sarcoidosis based on the ATS/ERS criteria.
- Normal 12 lead ECG within the past one year.
- Non-smoker.
- No immunosuppressive therapy for at least one year.
- Exclusion:
- Known cardiac disease.
- Active smoker.
- On immunosuppressive therapy.
2. Sarcoidosis patients with evidence of active myocarditis:
- Inclusion:
- Diagnosis of sarcoidosis based on the ATS/ERS criteria.
- Evidence of active myocarditis based on recent cMRI or cFDG-PET.
- Non-smoker.
- Exclusion:
- Known cardiac disease other than sarcoidosis.
- Active smoker.
- On immunosuppressive therapy.
3. Acute ST elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI):
- Inclusion:
- Diagnosis STEMI based on 1mm ST elevation in 2 or more contiguous leads.
- Symptom onset within 12 hours.
- Undergoing cardiac intervention for acute coronary syndrome.
- Able to consent for blood draw.
- Exclusion:
- Active smoker.
- Hemodynamically unstable.
4. Healthy controls:
- Inclusion:
- No known cardiac disease.
- No known cardiovascular risk factors: hypertension, diabetes.
- Non-smoker.
Filters
Sarcoidosis With Myocarditis
Sarcoidosis
Healthy
ST Elevation Myocardial Infarction
NA
RECRUITING
ADULT
OLDER_ADULT