# Countywide burden, pathology, and genetics of lethal hypertrophic cardiomyopathy: from the POST SCD study

**Authors:** Leila Haghighat, Andrew Connolly, Francesca Nesta Delling, Theodore Pravinchandra Abraham, Ellen Moffatt, Zian H Tseng

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/europace/euaf088 · Europace · 2025-04-18

## TL;DR

This study finds that hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) causes a significant but often undiagnosed portion of sudden cardiac deaths, especially in younger individuals.

## Contribution

The study provides the first countywide post-mortem analysis of HCM-related sudden cardiac deaths using multiple diagnostic criteria.

## Key findings

- HCM accounted for 2% of arrhythmic sudden deaths up to age 90, with the highest burden in those under 35.
- 85% of HCM-related sudden deaths were undiagnosed before death, suggesting underestimation of HCM's true impact.
- Genetic testing identified additional HCM cases without clinical symptoms, highlighting the value of post-mortem genetic analysis.

## Abstract

Incidence of sudden cardiac death (SCD) is 1%/year in cohorts with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM), but this estimate presumes arrhythmic cause and misses occult cases dying before diagnosis.

POST SCD (POstmortem Systematic InvesTigation of Sudden Cardiac Death) is a prospective cohort study using autopsy, clinical records, and toxicology to adjudicate arrhythmic or non-arrhythmic causes among presumed SCDs (pSCDs) meeting WHO criteria aged 0–90 years in San Francisco County. We included all incident cases 2/1/2011–3/1/2014 (n = 525) and approximately every third day 3/1/2014–9/1/2022 (n = 497) based on medical examiner call schedule. We identified HCM victims via three approaches: (i) pathology; (ii) echocardiogram [transthoracic echocardiogram (TTE)]; (iii) genetic criteria. Incidence calculations used county data and estimated HCM prevalence of 1:500 from studies of persons aged 23–35 years old. Of 1022 pSCDs [558 (54.6%) arrhythmic deaths] during the study period, 13 had HCM: 10 met pathology criteria; 2 via review of 203 TTEs (missed on initial report); 1 via genetic testing. Of these, 11 were arrhythmic deaths, yielding 1.3% burden of sudden death (pSCD) and 2% of arrhythmic death. Only 2 of 13 (15%) pSCDs with HCM had pre-mortem diagnosis. Incidence for persons with HCM 18–35 years old was 0.2% pSCDs/year and 0.1% SADs/year. pSCDs with HCM had a higher proportion of arrhythmic cause [11/13 (85%) vs. 547/1009 (54%), P = 0.03] than those without. pSCD burden due to HCM decreased with age (P = 0.003), highest among victims <35 years old, for whom HCM accounted for 7.1% of pSCD and 9.4% of arrhythmic death. Genetic testing of 317 consented pSCDs yielded pathogenic or likely pathogenic variants in 40% (2/5) and identified one additional case without clinical phenotype.

In this 11-year countywide post-mortem study, HCM meeting pathologic, clinical, or genetic criteria was associated with autopsy-confirmed arrhythmic cause of sudden death, accounting for 2% of SADs up to age 90, highest in cases <35 years old. Since 85% of cases were undiagnosed before pSCD, the true burden of HCM-related sudden death may be substantially underestimated.

Graphical Abstract

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (MONDO:0005045), sudden cardiac death (MONDO:0007264)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** arrhythmic (OMIM:212500), HCM (MESH:D002312), arrhythmic death (MESH:D003643), SCD (MESH:D016757), sudden death (MESH:D003645), dying (MESH:D064806)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

3 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12107038/full.md

## References

54 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12107038/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12107038