Brugada Syndrome Clinical Trial
Official title:
Analysis of Distribution of Cell-cell Junction Proteins in Buccal Smear Samples From Patients With Arrhythmic Disorders and Family Members at Risk as a Means for Diagnosis
Every week in the UK, 12 apparently healthy and fit individuals under the age of 35 die suddenly, a tragic event known as sudden cardiac death (SCD). The investigators have shown that heritable cardiac disorders affect the distribution of proteins at the cardiac cell-cell junctions, the areas where cardiac cells are mechanically and electrically coupled. This knowledge has helped the investigators diagnose specific heart disorders in individuals thus reducing the risk and incidence of SCD. Yet, the primary material required is a heart sample. A heart biopsy is an invasive process that comes with risks and is not performed unless absolutely necessary. And it is impossible to obtain a heart sample from an individual that may be carrying a disease-causing mutation (and hence be at risk of SCD) but does not yet show evidence of disease manifestation. The investigators recently showed that buccal cells show changes in protein distribution equivalent to those exhibited by the heart,hence providing them with a surrogate tissue for the myocardium. The investigators aim to use buccal smears as a means to identify those at risk of SCD. Patients regularly seen at the cardiology clinics at St. George's Hospital can participate in the study. The investigators shall take a buccal smear simply by rubbing a soft brush at the inside of their cheek and smearing it on a slide. Most individuals willing to participate in the study will only have to provide the investigators with a sample once. However, in selected cases (for instance, if the patients show disease progression or have a change in medication) they may be asked to provide the investigators with a subsequent sample during one of their scheduled follow-up visits. The process takes only a few seconds, is totally risk- and pain-free and it is anticipated to have great implications in diagnosis and patient management.
Exfoliated buccal mucosa cells have been used as a source of material for various genetic tests and in studies of oral cancer but their use in studies of cardiovascular disease has been limited. Previous applications have included analysis of telomere length in buccal cells from patients with ischemic heart failure and measurements of intracellular magnesium levels in patients undergoing radiofrequency catheter ablation for atrial fibrillation. To the best of the investigators' knowledge, their study published at Circulation Arrhythmia and Electrophysiology 9(2) in 2016, was the first analysis of buccal mucosa cells in patients with a heritable form of heart disease. This analysis included 39 patients diagnosed with arrhythmogenic cardiomyopathy (ACM), a primary myocardial disease characterized by an unusually high burden of arrhythmias and sudden cardiac death as well as 15 carriers of disease-causing mutations without overt disease manifestation. In a subsequent analysis (unpublished data), 55 additional individuals affected by ACM were sampled and the positive predictive value of our approach in diagnosing the disease was 91.9%. Although highly arrhythmogenic, ACM is a relatively rare disorder. The investigators are now at a position to apply this simple, totally risk-free approach to help identify those individuals at risk of SCD due to more common forms of heritable arrhythmic disorders including the cardiac channelopathies. The cardiologists at St. George's University of London evaluate more than 100 families of SCD victims per year for diagnosis and risk assessment. The large number of individuals evaluated at this single site provides the unprecedented opportunity to use this novel diagnostic approach to aid significant numbers of those at risk of developing life-threatening arrhythmias. There are no risks or potential discomfort associated with the study for the volunteer participants. The outcomes, however, may prove highly beneficial for prevention of SCD, timely and accurate diagnosis and management of arrhythmic disorders. The study participants will just be asked to open their mouth. A study team member will rub a soft brush a few times at the inside of their cheek and smear the brush on a microscopy slide. The slide will be sprayed with 70% ethanol to preserve the material and taken to the research laboratory where it will be subjected to immunostaining to study the distribution of key proteins. The patient will have a total of 4 smears taken (2 from each cheek). For the majority of the patients, only a single sampling will be enough which will take place during one of their regular follow-up appointments at the cardiology clinic. There is no pain and no discomfort associated with the procedure and it lasts only a few seconds. In selected cases, however, if for instance the investigators want to use the buccal smear to evaluate the effect of a novel drug treatment on protein distribution, the patient might be asked to provide the study team with another sample, again during one of his scheduled regular follow-up visits ;
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