Antemortem and Post-Mortem Characteristics of Lethal Mitral Valve Prolapse Among All Countywide Sudden Deaths

JACC Clin Electrophysiol. 2021 Aug;7(8):1025-1034. doi: 10.1016/j.jacep.2021.01.007. Epub 2021 Feb 24.

Abstract

Objectives: The goal of this study was to investigate the characteristics of mitral valve prolapse (MVP) in a post-mortem study of consecutive sudden cardiac deaths (SCDs) in subjects up to 90 years of age.

Background: Up to 2.3% of subjects with MVPs experience SCD, but by convention SCD is rarely confirmed by autopsy. In a post-mortem study of persons <40 years of age, 7% of SCDs were caused by MVP; bileaflet involvement, mitral annular disjunction (MAD), and replacement fibrosis were common.

Methods: In the San Francisco POST SCD (Postmortem Systematic Investigation of Sudden Cardiac Death) study, autopsies have been performed on >1,000 consecutive World Health Organization-defined (presumed) cases of SCD in subjects aged 18 to 90 years since 2011; a total of 603 were adjudicated. Autopsy-defined sudden arrhythmic death (SAD) required absence of nonarrhythmic cause; MVP diagnosis required leaflet billowing. One hundred antemortem echocardiograms were revised to identify additional MVPs missed on autopsy.

Results: Among the 603 presumed SCDs, 339 (56%) were autopsy-defined SADs, with MVP identified in 7 (1%). Six additional MVPs were identified by review of echocardiograms, for a prevalence of at least 2% among 603 presumed SCDs and 4% among 339 SADs (vs. 264 non-SADs; p = 0.02). All 6 additional MVPs had monoleaflet rather than bileaflet involvement and mild mitral regurgitation, ruling out hemodynamic cause. Less than one-half had MAD with replacement fibrosis, but all had multisite interstitial fibrosis.

Conclusions: In a countywide post-mortem study of all adult cases of SCD, MVP prevalence was at least 4% of SADs, but one-half were missed on autopsy. Monoleaflet MVP was often underdiagnosed post-mortem. Compared with young cases of SCD, lethal MVP in older cases of SCD did not consistently have bileaflet anatomy, replacement fibrosis, or MAD.

Keywords: arrhythmias; mitral valve prolapse; pathology; sudden cardiac death.

Publication types

  • Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural
  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Aged
  • Autopsy
  • Death, Sudden, Cardiac / epidemiology
  • Death, Sudden, Cardiac / etiology
  • Echocardiography
  • Humans
  • Mitral Valve / diagnostic imaging
  • Mitral Valve Prolapse* / epidemiology