Anterior mitral valve leaflet length and response to mavacamten in obstructive hypertrophic cardiomyopathy
Danish Saleh, Ellis Y Kim, Kifah Hussain, Vinesh Appadurai, Kayla Mueller, Abigail Garza, Baljash Cheema, Dominic E Fullenkamp, Vera H Rigolin, Akhil Narang, Paul C Cremer, Lubna Choudhury

TL;DR
Shorter anterior mitral valve leaflet length is linked to better response to the drug mavacamten in patients with a heart condition called obstructive hypertrophic cardiomyopathy.
Contribution
This study identifies a potential biomarker, AMVL length, for predicting response to mavacamten in obstructive HCM.
Findings
Shorter AMVL length correlates with a lower effective dose of mavacamten.
Shorter AMVL length is associated with a faster response to mavacamten therapy.
AMVL length may help guide optimal dosing of myosin inhibitors in obstructive HCM.
Abstract
This study examines whether anterior mitral valve leaflet (AMVL) length is associated with response to mavacamten in patients with obstructive hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM). Obstruction of the left-ventricular outflow tract (LVOT) in HCM has been associated with asymmetric septal hypertrophy and abnormalities of the mitral valve and sub-valvular apparatus. Mavacamten is a myosin-inhibitor shown to decrease LVOT gradient and improve functional status in patients with obstructive HCM. Measurements of cardiac structural elements were obtained from magnetic resonance imaging and echocardiography data among patients with obstructive HCM treated with mavacamten. Endpoints were effective mavacamten dose, defined as the dose required to achieve a Valsalva LVOT gradient <30 mmHg, and rapid response to mavacamten therapy, defined as achieved Valsalva LVOT gradient <20 mmHg within 8 weeks of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCardiomyopathy and Myosin Studies · Cardiovascular Function and Risk Factors · Congenital Heart Disease Studies
