Volume 68, Issue 2 Louisville Medicine | Page 25

RHEUMATIC HEART DISEASE: FORGOTTEN BUT NOT GONE AUTHOR Andrea Beaton, MD GETTING TO THE HEART OF MEDICINE ‘Cause it’s better to be gone but not forgotten, than to be forgotten but not gone.’ – Keith Palmer SCHOOL SCREENING IN UGANDA When I first met Michael, he was standing on the sidelines at his school in Kampala, Uganda, watching his friends in a pick-up soccer game. The ball was far from regulation – a wobbly sphere created from plastic bags, strips of fabric and string – and the field was merely a patch of red dirt worn from students walking back and forth between the open-air classrooms. Yet, it was obvious that he longed to play. His bright eyes watched the other children intently; when he raised his arms to cheer a goal, he caught my eye and flashed a brilliant wide smile, his “signature move.” Michael’s P3 (third grade) class showed up that afternoon for cardiac screening. About 100 boys were lined up in the dirt-floor classroom we had set up as our makeshift screening room. The orange extension cord to our echo machine, an ultrasound that takes images of the heart, ran across the road to a small grocery stand which was allowing us to borrow electricity. Screening was going fairly well except when the occasional chicken got snagged, unplugging the cord. As the boys removed their shirts, jostling each other and breaking into spontaneous dance (which seemed to happen as each class undressed), I noticed that Michael was exceedingly thin. His gangly limbs and his prominent ribs contrasted starkly with his friends’ healthy frames. When it was Michael’s turn, he jumped up on the table and laid down, flashing that signature smile. The echo machine showed the typical black and white images, the left-sided heart valves opening and closing. But the thick valves on the left side of Michael’s heart weren’t closing well. Turning on the echo machine’s color flow confirmed a severe leak at both valves. Michael had advanced rheumatic heart disease (RHD). UNANSWERED QUESTIONS ABOUT RHD Michael was hardly alone. Between one and two of every 100 children I scanned that fall showed signs of RHD. 1 RHD occurs when children have frequent exposure to Group A streptococcal infection, the common strep sore throat. However, when these infections occur at high rates and go untreated or undertreated, an immune system overreaction known as acute rheumatic fever can cause damage to the heart valves. More than 80% of the world’s children live in areas considered to be endemic for RHD. Current global estimates put the burden of RHD at 39 million prevalent cases with at least 230,000 annual deaths. 2 Because RHD is most common in areas of the world that lack well-developed health care systems, diagnosis is challenging. When I met Michael, I was a second-year cardiology fellow conducting research in Uganda. My goal was to validate a new study that had emerged, showing echo screening could uncover a high burden of RHD in an at-risk population. 3 The idea was revolutionary. It suggested we could find children with RHD at the earliest stages and perhaps prevent advanced RHD; which carried a nearly 20% risk of death within one year of diagnosis. 4 Indeed, our research and that of others contributed to echo screening for RHD being named a 2012 American Heart Association “Top 10 Advance in Cardiovascular Disease and Stroke.” 5 But learning that we could identify latent RHD in large numbers of children only raised more questions: Should we be screening for RHD in low-resource communities, and if so how can we make screening practical, affordable and sustainable? The answer to the second question proved to be easier to address. Over the next four years, our research team conducted several additional studies in Uganda that showed echo screening using abbreviated protocols, handheld echo equipment and short training sessions could effectively enable screening to be task-shared with non-physician providers. 6, 7 These findings were bolstered by complementary research in the French Caribbean and Fiji, and several studies touted echo screening as cost-effective. 8, 9 But what about the first question: should we be screening children for early RHD? This question really has two parts. First, “Did (continued on page 24) JULY 2020 23