International Heart Journal
Online ISSN : 1349-3299
Print ISSN : 1349-2365
ISSN-L : 1349-2365
Clinical Studies
Different Impact of Immunosuppressive Therapy on Cardiac Outcomes in Systemic Versus Isolated Cardiac Sarcoidosis
Tomoka MasunagaToru HashimotoTakeo FujinoKisho OhtaniYusuke IshikawaTomoaki YoshitakeKeisuke ShinoharaShouji MatsushimaTomomi IdeYuzo YamasakiTakuro IsodaShingo BabaKousei IshigamiHiroyuki TsutsuiShintaro Kinugawa
Author information
JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
Supplementary material

2024 Volume 65 Issue 5 Pages 856-865

Details
Abstract

Isolated cardiac sarcoidosis (iCS) is increasingly recognized; however, its prognosis and the efficacy of immunosuppressive therapy remain undetermined. We aimed to compare the prognosis of iCS and systemic sarcoidosis including cardiac involvement (sCS) under immunosuppressive therapy.

We retrospectively reviewed the clinical data of 42 patients with sCS and 30 patients with iCS diagnosed at Kyushu University Hospital from 2004 through 2022. We compared the characteristics and the rate of adverse cardiac events including cardiac death, fatal ventricular tachyarrhythmia, and heart failure hospitalization between the 2 groups. The median follow-up time was 1535 [interquartile range, 630-2555] days, without a significant difference between the groups. There were no significant differences in gender, NYHA class, or left ventricular ejection fraction. Immunosuppressive agents were administered in 86% of sCS and in 73% of iCS patients (P = 0.191). When analyzed only with patients receiving immunosuppressive therapy (sCS, n = 36; iCS, n = 21), the cardiac event-free survival was significantly lower in iCS than sCS (37% versus 79%, P = 0.002). Myocardial LGE content at the initial diagnosis was comparable in both groups. The disease activity was serially evaluated in 26 sCS and 16 iCS patients by quantitative measures of FDG-PET including cardiac metabolic volume and total lesion glycolysis, representing 3-dimensional distribution and intensity of inflammation in the entire heart. Although iCS patients had lower baseline disease activity than sCS patients, immunosuppressive therapy did not attenuate disease activity in iCS in contrast to sCS.

iCS showed a poorer response to immunosuppressive therapy and a worse cardiac prognosis compared to sCS despite lower baseline disease activity.

Content from these authors
© 2024 by the International Heart Journal Association
Previous article Next article
feedback
Top