The article by Schwartz and his colleagues (June 11 issue) (1) is the fifth such report by this group implicating
prolongation of the QT interval in the sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS). However,
independent confirmation of their conclusions is still lacking after 22 years. To the
contrary, four prospective studies in addition to that by Southall et al. (2) (which was criticized by Schwartz and
colleagues) have found no significant increase in the corrected QT interval (QTc) in
infants who died of SIDS as compared with controls.
A major problem of the developmental long-QT interval theory of SIDS is that the
mechanism of death should logically be a ventricular arrhythmia (specifically, torsade de
pointes), if these infants are similar to patients with the genetic long-QT syndrome.
Schwartz and colleagues present no evidence of ventricular arrhythmias in the 24 infants
with a prolonged QTc who later died of SIDS, nor has anyone else recorded ventricular
arrhythmias in otherwise normal infants. Yet, thousands of infants have been monitored
electronically in the hospital and at home. In contrast, patients with clinically
established long-QT syndrome have multiple episodes of ventricular arrhythmias, and death
without prior arrhythmia was reported in only 9 percent in a study by Garson et al. (3)
These objections, plus the subjective nature of determining the QT interval and the
lack of reproducibility of the results, (4)
would make screening electrocardiography of all normal infants an extraordinary waste of
medical resources, not to mention the fact that it would cruelly alarm thousands of
parents about cardiac arrhythmias. Even if the screening were somehow successful,
prevention could not be ensured, since Moss and Robinson, (5) in a study of the largest registry of patients with the
long-QT syndrome in the world, found no statistically beneficial effect of any treatment
for this condition.
Warren G. Guntheroth, M.D.
Philip S. Spiers, Ph.D.
University of Washington School of Medicine
Seattle, WA 98195
References
1. Schwartz
PJ, Stramba-Badiale M, Segantini A, et al. Prolongation of the QT interval and the sudden
infant death syndrome. N Engl J Med 1998;338:1709-14.
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2. Southall DP, Arrowsmith WA, Stebbens V, Alexander JR. QT
interval measurements before sudden infant death syndrome. Arch
Dis Child 1986;61:327-33.
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3. Garson A Jr, Dick M II, Fournier A, et al. The long QT
syndrome in children: an international study of 287 patients. Circulation
1993;87:1866-72.
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4. Towbin
JA, Friedman RA. Prolongation of the QT and the sudden infant death syndrome. N Engl J Med
1998;338:1760-1.
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5. Moss AJ, Robinson J. Clinical features of the idiopathic long
QT syndrome. Circulation 1992;85:Suppl I:I-140-I-144.
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To the Editor:
Schwartz et al. correlate electrocardiographic abnormalities with subsequent death in
infants. The main finding of their study is that infants who died of SIDS tended to have a
much longer average QTc than those who survived (435 vs. 400 msec, P<0.01). What the
authors neglect to discuss, however, is that those who died of SIDS also tended to have a
much larger standard deviation in the QTc than those who survived (45 vs. 20 msec,
P<0.001).
The greater observed variability in QTc in infants who died of SIDS merits further
analysis. In particular, does this represent greater variation within each individual
infant (QTc dispersion) or greater variation between infants (population diversity)?
Settling this question should be easy, since the 12-lead electrocardiograms that were
obtained for each infant are sufficient for identifying the degree of QTc dispersion in
each infant. (1)
The identification of QTc dispersion could have clinical implications. First, this
finding might represent a gain in sensitivity -- that is, it might be positive in some of
the 12 infants who had a normal QTc yet died of SIDS. Second, this finding might represent
a gain in specificity -- that is, it might not be mistakenly positive in 1 of 40 infants
who survived. Third, this finding might corroborate other research on QTc dispersion as a
means of predicting arrhythmias in adults. (2,3,4) These hypotheses could be tested
quite quickly with use of the available data.
David R. Dancey, M.D.
Donald A. Redelmeier, M.D.
University of Toronto
Toronto, ON M4N 3M5, Canada
References
1. Day CP, McComb JM, Campbell RW. QT dispersion: an
indication of arrhythmia risk in patients with long QT intervals. Br
Heart J 1990;63:342-4.
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2. Hii JT, Wyse DG, Gillis AM, Duff HJ, Solylo MA, Mitchell LB.
Precordial QT interval dispersion as a marker of torsade de pointes: disparate effects of
class IA antiarrhythmic drugs and amiodarone. Circulation
1992;86:1376-82.
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3. Manttari M, Oikarinen L, Manninen V, Viitasolo M. QT
dispersion as a risk factor for sudden cardiac death and fatal myocardial infarction in a
coronary risk population. Heart
1997;78:268-72.
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4. Goldner B, Brandspiegel HZ, Horwitz L, Jadonath R, Cohen TJ.
Utility of QT dispersion combined with the signal-averaged electrocardiogram in detecting
patients susceptible to ventricular tachyarrhythmia. Am
J Cardiol 1995;76:1192-4.
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To the Editor:
The study by Schwartz et al. raises important methodologic and editorial questions.
Although the study is described as prospective, it appears that the electrocardiograms
were analyzed on a retrospective basis. It is not stated when the retrospective
electrocardiographic analysis was performed and by whom, or whether all the observers were
unaware of the clinical data on the subjects -- an essential prerequisite to avoid bias.
Was the reproducibility of the measurements tested, given the subjective nature of
measuring the QT interval?
Eric Rosenthal, M.D., M.R.C.P.
Guy's Hospital
London SE1 9RT, United Kingdom
To the Editor:
The study by Schwartz et al. has clearly advanced our knowledge of cardiac culprits in
SIDS. However, the engineer in me is troubled each time the unit milliseconds is used with
the QTc. The teaching of Bazett's formula (QTc equals the QT interval in seconds divided
by the square root of the RR interval in seconds) to students and residents would be
enhanced by using the correct units (seconds1/2) and by not moving the decimal
point.
Thomas D. Scholz, M.D.
University of Iowa
Iowa City, IA 52242-1083
To the Editor:
Schwartz et al. report compelling evidence of the links between SIDS and the long-QT
syndrome. In their accompanying editorial, Towbin and Friedman (1) state that "half the infants who died of SIDS (12 of
24) and none of the survivors or the infants who died of other causes had a prolonged
QTc." The original article states that "the 97.5th percentile for the QTc among
the infants was 440 msec" and "the absolute risk of SIDS... of infants with a
prolonged QTc was 1.53 percent." Both results mean that the great majority of
neonates with a prolonged QTc will not be victims of SIDS.
Amaya Yoldi, M.D.
Francisca Sena, M.D.
Lluis Gutierrez, M.D.
Hospital Verge de la Cinta
Tortosa, Spain 43500
References
1. Towbin
JA, Friedman RA. Prolongation of the QT interval and the sudden infant death syndrome. N
Engl J Med 1998;338:1760-1.
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