Patients with congenital heart defects are more likely to suffer a heart attack at an earlier age

Despite the earlier age at onset, the researchers found no differences in either mortality or the risk of a further heart attack during the first year foll
Patients born with heart defects experience their first acute heart attack at a significantly earlier age than others. This is shown by a new national study from Skåne University Hospital and Lund University in Sweden. However, despite this earlier onset of illness, there is no difference in survival rates or the risk of further heart attacks between those with congenital heart defects and others.

This article was originally published by Lund University.

The study includes 214 patients with congenital heart defects who suffered their first acute myocardial infarction between 2000 and 2022. Each of the 214 patients has been matched with ten control subjects without congenital heart defects. The results have been adjusted for age, sex and key risk factors such as high blood pressure, diabetes and dyslipidaemia.

The study, published in the European Heart Journal, is based on data from the Swedish quality registries for cardiac care, SWEDCON and SWEDEHART. The most striking finding is the significantly lower age at which the first acute heart attack occurs: patients with congenital heart defects fell ill on average at the age of 58, compared with 70 in the control group.  

“To suffer a heart attack twelve years earlier suggests an increased vulnerability to acquired heart disease, even though the prognosis following a heart attack does not differ between the groups,” says Joanna Hlebowicz, associate professor of Cardiology and Adult Congenital Heart Disease at Lund University and associate consultant at the Cardiology Department at Skåne University Hospital.