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– Myths and misconceptions abound regarding the merits of universal incorporation of the resting 12-lead ECG into preparticipation cardiovascular screening of young athletes, Aaron L. Baggish, MD, declared at the annual Cardiovascular Conference at Snowmass sponsored by the American College of Cardiology.

Bruce Jancin/MDedge News
Dr. Aaron L. Baggish

Dr. Baggish, director of the Cardiovascular Performance Program at Massachusetts General Hospital and a cardiologist at Harvard Medical School, Boston, set out to pop the balloons of a handful of these widely floating myths. These are commonly held fictions: In an electronic poll at the outset of his talk, only one in five members of his large audience recognized all of the following boldface statements as false.

“Preparticipation cardiovascular screening (PPCVS) has been shown to reduce the incidence of sudden cardiac death (SCD) among young competitive athletes.”

FALSE. Not for PPCVS by history and physical examination alone, or with the addition of a screening 12-lead ECG. In Italy, where a cluster of high-profile sudden cardiac deaths led to passage of a 1982 national law mandating 12-lead ECG screening as part of the PPCVS, investigators presented studies purporting to demonstrate a subsequent reduction in the risk of SCD. But those studies were subsequently shown to be fraught with problems. And a high-quality study capable of convincingly demonstrating such a benefit would need to be prohibitively large and expensive. “Don’t hold your breath waiting for that to happen anytime soon,” advised Dr. Baggish, who is medical director for the Boston Marathon, as well as team cardiologist for Harvard University Athletics, the New England Patriots, the Boston Bruins, USRowing, and U.S. Soccer.

“Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy is the leading cause of sudden death among young competitive athletes.”

FALSE. A study of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) comprehensive database, with 4.2 million athlete-years of follow-up, showed that the most common cause of SCD was autopsy-negative sudden unexplained death (SUD), accounting for 25% of cases. Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy was deemed the cause of 8% of the SCDs (Circulation. 2015 Jul 7;132[1]:10-9).

“The same thing has been shown in studies done in the United Kingdom and in Australia: The vast majority of people who drop dead at a young age have a totally normal-looking heart. Over the next 10 years, I suspect that one of the most important areas that we’ll be looking into will be this SUD area, perhaps using molecular autopsy to make some headway there,” according to the cardiologist.

SCD is rare. In the NCAA study, the incidence was 1 in 53,703 athlete-years. In sobering contrast, accidents, suicide, and homicide accounted for 50% of all deaths in the collegiate athletes.

“When you think about what’s important in terms of educating young people to be safe, the history and physical exam and 12-lead ECG are nowhere near as important as talking with them about minimizing accident risk and staying away from guns,” Dr. Baggish commented.

 

 


“Contemporary ECG interpretation criteria designed specifically for use in young athletes have eliminated the problem of false-positive testing.”

FALSE. The story of adding ECG screening to the PPCVS is one of dramatically improved sensitivity over history and physical exam alone, but always at the cost of reduced specificity. In the Harvard Athlete Initiative Study, Dr. Baggish and coworkers reported that adding the 12-lead ECG resulted in a 17% false-positive rate (Ann Intern Med. 2010 Mar 2;152[5]:269-75). Similar findings were reported in independent studies at two other large universities.

“An ECG false-positive rate of 16%-20%? That’s big trouble. Remember, the conditions we’re looking for are uncommon, with a prevalence of maybe 1 in 500 at most. So if you’re flagging one-fifth or one-sixth of your athletes, the ECG is really not an appropriate tool for screening,” he commented.



Recognition of this limitation has led to development of refined, improved ECG criteria: most notably, the 2012 Seattle criteria, with an associated false-positive rate of 4%-8%, followed by the 2017 International Consensus Criteria (J Am Coll Cardiol. 2017 Feb 28;69[8]:1057-75), with a false-positive rate of 1%-2%. That’s a great improvement. Still, when Dr. Baggish, a marathoner himself, thinks about the roughly 32,000 Boston Marathon runners at the starting line each year, that false-positive rate would translate into 320-640 of those individuals being needlessly subjected to the not-insignificant time and expense of further testing, along with considerable anxiety for the runners and their families, and perhaps even inappropriate disqualification.

“Current ACC/AHA guidelines recommend against the use of the 12-lead ECG during the PPCVS.”

FALSE. Dr. Baggish was a coauthor of the current guidelines, which he described as “an open-door invitation to local decisions, with some important caveats” (Circulation. 2015 Dec 1;132[22]:e267-72).

The guidelines state that the minimum requirement and legal standard for PPCVS of young competitive athletes is a focused history and physical examination, such as the American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association 14-point screen, which consists of 10 elements addressing personal and family history and 4 focused on the physical examination, or the American Academy of Pediatrics Preparticipation Physical Evaluation. Further, while mandatory universal inclusion of the 12-lead ECG is not recommended – it’s rated Class III, meaning don’t do it – the guidelines state that screening programs are at liberty to choose the 12-lead ECG as an additional tool, “provided that close physician involvement and sufficient quality control can be achieved. If undertaken, such initiatives should recognize the known and anticipated limitations of the 12-lead ECG as a population screening test, including the expected frequency of false-positive and false-negative test results, as well as the cost required to support these initiatives over time.”

Dr. Baggish considers the ACC/AHA guidelines to be one of the two most important developments in the field of SCD during sports in recent years. The other is the NCAA-sponsored multidisciplinary Interassociation Consensus Statement on Cardiovascular Care of College Student-Athletes, which he also coauthored (J Am Coll Cardiol. 2016 Jun 28;67[25]:2981-95).

The report lays out the case for a much broader than traditional view of the PPCVS, with “goals that extend beyond detection of occult high-risk pathology.”

“The NCAA has done something very interesting,” Dr. Baggish explained. “It has said that, if we’re going to be screening, we should be thinking about screening with a much broader rationale. It’s not just about finding the needle-in-a-haystack hypertrophic cardiomyopathy or anomalous coronary arteries, it’s about engaging student-athletes at an early point in their collegiate career and trying to improve their health overall – and not just while they’re in college, but over their lifespan.”

He reported having no financial conflicts regarding his presentation.

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– Myths and misconceptions abound regarding the merits of universal incorporation of the resting 12-lead ECG into preparticipation cardiovascular screening of young athletes, Aaron L. Baggish, MD, declared at the annual Cardiovascular Conference at Snowmass sponsored by the American College of Cardiology.

Bruce Jancin/MDedge News
Dr. Aaron L. Baggish

Dr. Baggish, director of the Cardiovascular Performance Program at Massachusetts General Hospital and a cardiologist at Harvard Medical School, Boston, set out to pop the balloons of a handful of these widely floating myths. These are commonly held fictions: In an electronic poll at the outset of his talk, only one in five members of his large audience recognized all of the following boldface statements as false.

“Preparticipation cardiovascular screening (PPCVS) has been shown to reduce the incidence of sudden cardiac death (SCD) among young competitive athletes.”

FALSE. Not for PPCVS by history and physical examination alone, or with the addition of a screening 12-lead ECG. In Italy, where a cluster of high-profile sudden cardiac deaths led to passage of a 1982 national law mandating 12-lead ECG screening as part of the PPCVS, investigators presented studies purporting to demonstrate a subsequent reduction in the risk of SCD. But those studies were subsequently shown to be fraught with problems. And a high-quality study capable of convincingly demonstrating such a benefit would need to be prohibitively large and expensive. “Don’t hold your breath waiting for that to happen anytime soon,” advised Dr. Baggish, who is medical director for the Boston Marathon, as well as team cardiologist for Harvard University Athletics, the New England Patriots, the Boston Bruins, USRowing, and U.S. Soccer.

“Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy is the leading cause of sudden death among young competitive athletes.”

FALSE. A study of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) comprehensive database, with 4.2 million athlete-years of follow-up, showed that the most common cause of SCD was autopsy-negative sudden unexplained death (SUD), accounting for 25% of cases. Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy was deemed the cause of 8% of the SCDs (Circulation. 2015 Jul 7;132[1]:10-9).

“The same thing has been shown in studies done in the United Kingdom and in Australia: The vast majority of people who drop dead at a young age have a totally normal-looking heart. Over the next 10 years, I suspect that one of the most important areas that we’ll be looking into will be this SUD area, perhaps using molecular autopsy to make some headway there,” according to the cardiologist.

SCD is rare. In the NCAA study, the incidence was 1 in 53,703 athlete-years. In sobering contrast, accidents, suicide, and homicide accounted for 50% of all deaths in the collegiate athletes.

“When you think about what’s important in terms of educating young people to be safe, the history and physical exam and 12-lead ECG are nowhere near as important as talking with them about minimizing accident risk and staying away from guns,” Dr. Baggish commented.

 

 


“Contemporary ECG interpretation criteria designed specifically for use in young athletes have eliminated the problem of false-positive testing.”

FALSE. The story of adding ECG screening to the PPCVS is one of dramatically improved sensitivity over history and physical exam alone, but always at the cost of reduced specificity. In the Harvard Athlete Initiative Study, Dr. Baggish and coworkers reported that adding the 12-lead ECG resulted in a 17% false-positive rate (Ann Intern Med. 2010 Mar 2;152[5]:269-75). Similar findings were reported in independent studies at two other large universities.

“An ECG false-positive rate of 16%-20%? That’s big trouble. Remember, the conditions we’re looking for are uncommon, with a prevalence of maybe 1 in 500 at most. So if you’re flagging one-fifth or one-sixth of your athletes, the ECG is really not an appropriate tool for screening,” he commented.



Recognition of this limitation has led to development of refined, improved ECG criteria: most notably, the 2012 Seattle criteria, with an associated false-positive rate of 4%-8%, followed by the 2017 International Consensus Criteria (J Am Coll Cardiol. 2017 Feb 28;69[8]:1057-75), with a false-positive rate of 1%-2%. That’s a great improvement. Still, when Dr. Baggish, a marathoner himself, thinks about the roughly 32,000 Boston Marathon runners at the starting line each year, that false-positive rate would translate into 320-640 of those individuals being needlessly subjected to the not-insignificant time and expense of further testing, along with considerable anxiety for the runners and their families, and perhaps even inappropriate disqualification.

“Current ACC/AHA guidelines recommend against the use of the 12-lead ECG during the PPCVS.”

FALSE. Dr. Baggish was a coauthor of the current guidelines, which he described as “an open-door invitation to local decisions, with some important caveats” (Circulation. 2015 Dec 1;132[22]:e267-72).

The guidelines state that the minimum requirement and legal standard for PPCVS of young competitive athletes is a focused history and physical examination, such as the American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association 14-point screen, which consists of 10 elements addressing personal and family history and 4 focused on the physical examination, or the American Academy of Pediatrics Preparticipation Physical Evaluation. Further, while mandatory universal inclusion of the 12-lead ECG is not recommended – it’s rated Class III, meaning don’t do it – the guidelines state that screening programs are at liberty to choose the 12-lead ECG as an additional tool, “provided that close physician involvement and sufficient quality control can be achieved. If undertaken, such initiatives should recognize the known and anticipated limitations of the 12-lead ECG as a population screening test, including the expected frequency of false-positive and false-negative test results, as well as the cost required to support these initiatives over time.”

Dr. Baggish considers the ACC/AHA guidelines to be one of the two most important developments in the field of SCD during sports in recent years. The other is the NCAA-sponsored multidisciplinary Interassociation Consensus Statement on Cardiovascular Care of College Student-Athletes, which he also coauthored (J Am Coll Cardiol. 2016 Jun 28;67[25]:2981-95).

The report lays out the case for a much broader than traditional view of the PPCVS, with “goals that extend beyond detection of occult high-risk pathology.”

“The NCAA has done something very interesting,” Dr. Baggish explained. “It has said that, if we’re going to be screening, we should be thinking about screening with a much broader rationale. It’s not just about finding the needle-in-a-haystack hypertrophic cardiomyopathy or anomalous coronary arteries, it’s about engaging student-athletes at an early point in their collegiate career and trying to improve their health overall – and not just while they’re in college, but over their lifespan.”

He reported having no financial conflicts regarding his presentation.

 

– Myths and misconceptions abound regarding the merits of universal incorporation of the resting 12-lead ECG into preparticipation cardiovascular screening of young athletes, Aaron L. Baggish, MD, declared at the annual Cardiovascular Conference at Snowmass sponsored by the American College of Cardiology.

Bruce Jancin/MDedge News
Dr. Aaron L. Baggish

Dr. Baggish, director of the Cardiovascular Performance Program at Massachusetts General Hospital and a cardiologist at Harvard Medical School, Boston, set out to pop the balloons of a handful of these widely floating myths. These are commonly held fictions: In an electronic poll at the outset of his talk, only one in five members of his large audience recognized all of the following boldface statements as false.

“Preparticipation cardiovascular screening (PPCVS) has been shown to reduce the incidence of sudden cardiac death (SCD) among young competitive athletes.”

FALSE. Not for PPCVS by history and physical examination alone, or with the addition of a screening 12-lead ECG. In Italy, where a cluster of high-profile sudden cardiac deaths led to passage of a 1982 national law mandating 12-lead ECG screening as part of the PPCVS, investigators presented studies purporting to demonstrate a subsequent reduction in the risk of SCD. But those studies were subsequently shown to be fraught with problems. And a high-quality study capable of convincingly demonstrating such a benefit would need to be prohibitively large and expensive. “Don’t hold your breath waiting for that to happen anytime soon,” advised Dr. Baggish, who is medical director for the Boston Marathon, as well as team cardiologist for Harvard University Athletics, the New England Patriots, the Boston Bruins, USRowing, and U.S. Soccer.

“Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy is the leading cause of sudden death among young competitive athletes.”

FALSE. A study of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) comprehensive database, with 4.2 million athlete-years of follow-up, showed that the most common cause of SCD was autopsy-negative sudden unexplained death (SUD), accounting for 25% of cases. Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy was deemed the cause of 8% of the SCDs (Circulation. 2015 Jul 7;132[1]:10-9).

“The same thing has been shown in studies done in the United Kingdom and in Australia: The vast majority of people who drop dead at a young age have a totally normal-looking heart. Over the next 10 years, I suspect that one of the most important areas that we’ll be looking into will be this SUD area, perhaps using molecular autopsy to make some headway there,” according to the cardiologist.

SCD is rare. In the NCAA study, the incidence was 1 in 53,703 athlete-years. In sobering contrast, accidents, suicide, and homicide accounted for 50% of all deaths in the collegiate athletes.

“When you think about what’s important in terms of educating young people to be safe, the history and physical exam and 12-lead ECG are nowhere near as important as talking with them about minimizing accident risk and staying away from guns,” Dr. Baggish commented.

 

 


“Contemporary ECG interpretation criteria designed specifically for use in young athletes have eliminated the problem of false-positive testing.”

FALSE. The story of adding ECG screening to the PPCVS is one of dramatically improved sensitivity over history and physical exam alone, but always at the cost of reduced specificity. In the Harvard Athlete Initiative Study, Dr. Baggish and coworkers reported that adding the 12-lead ECG resulted in a 17% false-positive rate (Ann Intern Med. 2010 Mar 2;152[5]:269-75). Similar findings were reported in independent studies at two other large universities.

“An ECG false-positive rate of 16%-20%? That’s big trouble. Remember, the conditions we’re looking for are uncommon, with a prevalence of maybe 1 in 500 at most. So if you’re flagging one-fifth or one-sixth of your athletes, the ECG is really not an appropriate tool for screening,” he commented.



Recognition of this limitation has led to development of refined, improved ECG criteria: most notably, the 2012 Seattle criteria, with an associated false-positive rate of 4%-8%, followed by the 2017 International Consensus Criteria (J Am Coll Cardiol. 2017 Feb 28;69[8]:1057-75), with a false-positive rate of 1%-2%. That’s a great improvement. Still, when Dr. Baggish, a marathoner himself, thinks about the roughly 32,000 Boston Marathon runners at the starting line each year, that false-positive rate would translate into 320-640 of those individuals being needlessly subjected to the not-insignificant time and expense of further testing, along with considerable anxiety for the runners and their families, and perhaps even inappropriate disqualification.

“Current ACC/AHA guidelines recommend against the use of the 12-lead ECG during the PPCVS.”

FALSE. Dr. Baggish was a coauthor of the current guidelines, which he described as “an open-door invitation to local decisions, with some important caveats” (Circulation. 2015 Dec 1;132[22]:e267-72).

The guidelines state that the minimum requirement and legal standard for PPCVS of young competitive athletes is a focused history and physical examination, such as the American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association 14-point screen, which consists of 10 elements addressing personal and family history and 4 focused on the physical examination, or the American Academy of Pediatrics Preparticipation Physical Evaluation. Further, while mandatory universal inclusion of the 12-lead ECG is not recommended – it’s rated Class III, meaning don’t do it – the guidelines state that screening programs are at liberty to choose the 12-lead ECG as an additional tool, “provided that close physician involvement and sufficient quality control can be achieved. If undertaken, such initiatives should recognize the known and anticipated limitations of the 12-lead ECG as a population screening test, including the expected frequency of false-positive and false-negative test results, as well as the cost required to support these initiatives over time.”

Dr. Baggish considers the ACC/AHA guidelines to be one of the two most important developments in the field of SCD during sports in recent years. The other is the NCAA-sponsored multidisciplinary Interassociation Consensus Statement on Cardiovascular Care of College Student-Athletes, which he also coauthored (J Am Coll Cardiol. 2016 Jun 28;67[25]:2981-95).

The report lays out the case for a much broader than traditional view of the PPCVS, with “goals that extend beyond detection of occult high-risk pathology.”

“The NCAA has done something very interesting,” Dr. Baggish explained. “It has said that, if we’re going to be screening, we should be thinking about screening with a much broader rationale. It’s not just about finding the needle-in-a-haystack hypertrophic cardiomyopathy or anomalous coronary arteries, it’s about engaging student-athletes at an early point in their collegiate career and trying to improve their health overall – and not just while they’re in college, but over their lifespan.”

He reported having no financial conflicts regarding his presentation.

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