Conference Coverage

Liberalized European sports cardiology guidelines break new ground


 

FROM ESC CONGRESS 2020

Exercise and heart failure

Massimo F. Piepoli, MD, PhD, noted that the guidelines give a class IIb, LOE C recommendation for consideration of high-intensity recreational endurance and power sports in patients with heart failure with either midrange or preserved ejection fraction, provided they are stable, asymptomatic, on optimal guideline-directed medical therapy, and without abnormalities on a maximal exercise stress test.

Dr. Massimo Piepoli of Guglielmo da Saliceto Hospital in Placenza, Italy European Society of Cardiology

Dr. Massimo Piepoli

However, such intense physical activity is not recommended in patients with heart failure with reduced ejection fraction, regardless of their symptom status, added Dr. Piepoli of Guglielmo da Saliceto Hospital in Placenza, Italy.

“We’re talking here, I think for the first time, about possible competitive sports participation in individuals with heart failure, depending on their clinical condition. We are really opening the barriers to sports participation, even in these patients in whom we never thought of it before,” Dr. Pelliccia observed.

Valvular heart disease and exercise

Guidelines panelist Sabiha Gati, MRCP, PhD, said asymptomatic individuals with mild valvular abnormalities can participate in all recreational and competitive sports; that’s a class I, LOE C recommendation.

Dr. Sabiha Gati, a cardiologist at Royal Brompton Hospital, London European Society of Cardiology

Dr. Sabiha Gati

“Moderate regurgitant lesions are better tolerated than stenotic lesions, and those with preserved systolic function, good functional capacity, without any exercise-induced arrhythmias or ischemia or abnormal hemodynamic response are considered to be low risk and can participate in all sports,” added Dr. Gati, a cardiologist at Royal Brompton Hospital, London.

The two most common valvular abnormalities encountered in clinical practice are bicuspid aortic valve and mitral valve prolapse. Dr. Gati noted that, while mitral valve prolapse has a benign prognosis in the great majority of affected individuals, the presence of specific features indicative of increased risk for sudden cardiac death precludes participation in strenuous exercise. These include T-wave inversion in the inferior leads on a 12-lead ECG, long QT, bileaflet mitral valve prolapse, basal inferolateral wall fibrosis, severe mitral regurgitation, or a family history of sudden cardiac death.

Bicuspid aortic valve has a prevalence of 1%-2% in the general population. It can be associated with aortic stenosis, aortic regurgitation, and increased risk of ascending aortic aneurysm and dissection. Since it remains unclear whether intensive exercise accelerates aortic dilatation, a cautious approach to sports participation is recommended in patients with an ascending aorta above the normal limit of 40 mm, she said.

The 80-page ESC sports cardiology guidelines, published online simultaneously with their presentation, cover a broad range of additional topics, including exercise recommendations for the general public, for the elderly, as well as for patients with cardiomyopathies, adult congenital heart disease, arrhythmias, and channelopathies. Gaps in evidence are also highlighted.

SOURCE: Pelliccia A. ESC 2020 and Eur Heart J. 2020 Aug 29. doi: 10.1093/eurheartj/ehaa605.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Beginning estrogen soon after menopause slows atherosclerosis progression
Clinician Reviews
Gender, racial disparities persist in statin use by ASCVD patients
Clinician Reviews
Childhood CV health tied to reduced risk later in life
Clinician Reviews
AHA updates management when CAD and T2DM coincide
Clinician Reviews
U.S. adults reach Healthy People 2020 cholesterol goal
Clinician Reviews
AHA statement recommends dietary screening at routine checkups
Clinician Reviews
Statins linked to reduced mortality in COVID-19
Clinician Reviews
Novel calculator predicts cancer risk in patients with CVD
Clinician Reviews
Diffuse idiopathic skeletal hyperostosis heart risk higher than expected
Clinician Reviews
Biologics for psoriasis may also reduce coronary plaque
Clinician Reviews