Circulation Journal
Online ISSN : 1347-4820
Print ISSN : 1346-9843
ISSN-L : 1346-9843
Myocardial Disease
Effect of Corticosteroid Therapy on Long-Term Clinical Outcome and Left Ventricular Function in Patients With Cardiac Sarcoidosis
Toshiyuki NagaiNobutaka NaganoYasuo SuganoYasuhide AsaumiTakeshi AibaHideaki KanzakiKengo KusanoTeruo NoguchiSatoshi YasudaHisao OgawaToshihisa Anzai
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2015 Volume 79 Issue 7 Pages 1593-1600

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Abstract

Background:Cardiac involvement is the worst prognostic determinant in patients with sarcoidosis, but the long-term prognostic significance of corticosteroid therapy for cardiac sarcoidosis (CS) remains unclear.Methods and Results:We examined 83 consecutive patients diagnosed with CS. Patients were divided into 2 groups based on the presence or absence of corticosteroid therapy at diagnosis. Patients with corticosteroid therapy had lower age and higher rate of positive findings in the myocardium on gallium scintigraphy (Ga) at diagnosis than those without. LVEF, biomarkers, and use of cardiovascular medication were similar between the 2 groups. During the follow-up (7.6±4.4 years), corticosteroid therapy was associated with fewer long-term adverse events (overall, P=0.005; cardiac death, P=0.92; symptomatic arrhythmias, P=0.89; heart failure admission, P<0.0001) and a greater % increase in LVEF than those without (7.9±36.3% vs. –16.7±34.8%, P=0.03). On Cox proportional hazards modeling, corticosteroid therapy (HR, 0.41; 95% CI: 0.20–0.89) was an independent determinant of long-term adverse event-free survival, but age, sex, LVEF, and Ga findings were not.Conclusions:Corticosteroid therapy might have a beneficial effect on long-term clinical outcome in CS patients, particularly by reduction of heart failure admission and retarding the progression of LV systolic dysfunction. (Circ J 2015; 79: 1593–1600)

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© 2015 THE JAPANESE CIRCULATION SOCIETY
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