Calmodulinopathy in Japanese Children ― Their Cardiac Phenotypes Are Severe and Show Early Onset in Fetal Life and Infancy

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Abstract

Background: Cardiac calmodulinopathy, characterized by a life-threatening arrhythmia and sudden death in the young, is extremely rare and caused by genes encoding calmodulin, namely calmodulin 1 (CALM1), CALM2, and CALM3. Methods and Results: We screened 195 symptomatic children (age 0–12 years) who were suspected of inherited arrhythmias for 48 candidate genes, using a next-generation sequencer. Ten probands were identified as carrying variants in any of CALM1–3 (5%; median age 5 years), who were initially diagnosed with long QT syndrome (LQTS; n=5), catecholaminergic polymorphic ventricular tachycardia (CPVT; n=3), and overlap syndrome (n=2). Two probands harbored a CALM1 variant and 8 probands harbored 6 CALM2 variants. There were 4 clinical phenotypes: (1) documented lethal arrhythmic events (LAEs): 4 carriers of N98S in CALM1 or CALM2; (2) suspected LAEs: CALM2 p.D96G and D132G carriers experienced syncope and transient cardiopulmonary arrest under emotional stimulation; (3) critical cardiac complication: CALM2 p.D96V and p.E141K carriers showed severe cardiac dysfunction with QTc prolongation; and (4) neurological and developmental disorders: 2 carriers of CALM2 p.E46K showed cardiac phenotypes of CPVT. Beta-blocker therapy was effective in all cases except cardiac dysfunction, especially in combination with flecainide (CPVT-like phenotype) and mexiletine (LQTS-like). Conclusions: Calmodulinopathy patients presented severe cardiac features, and their onset of LAEs was earlier in life, requiring diagnosis and treatment at the earliest age possible.

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Fukuyama, M., Horie, M., Kato, K., Aoki, H., Fujita, S., Yoshida, Y., … Ohno, S. (2023). Calmodulinopathy in Japanese Children ― Their Cardiac Phenotypes Are Severe and Show Early Onset in Fetal Life and Infancy. Circulation Journal, 87(12), 1828–1835. https://doi.org/10.1253/circj.CJ-23-0195

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