Login / Signup

Novel Cardiac Myosin Inhibitor Therapy for Hypertrophic Cardiomyopathy in Adults: A Contemporary Review.

Jan K KalinskiBo XuRamone BoydNatalie TasseffKaty RutkowskiSusan OspinaNicholas SmediraMaran ThamilarasanZoran B PopovicMilind Y Desai
Published in: American journal of cardiovascular drugs : drugs, devices, and other interventions (2024)
Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) affects as many as 1 in 200 people in the adult population globally. Patients may present with exertional dyspnea, presyncope or syncope, atrial and ventricular arrhythmias, heart failure, and even sudden cardiac death. Current guideline-based therapy involves medical therapy for treatment of symptoms in milder forms of the disease and surgical or catheter-based septal reduction therapies in obstructive HCM. Until recently, there has existed a gap between these two approaches that is now being filled by a new class of drugs, cardiac myosin inhibitors, which directly target the underlying disease process in HCM. Current investigations examine the effects of two cardiac myosin inhibitors on reported symptoms, echocardiographic evidence of disease, and the associated need for septal reduction. This paper reviews the contemporary evidence for the use of cardiac myosin inhibitors in HCM in adults and highlights future directions for this exciting field of cardiovascular medicine.
Keyphrases