Hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) is a common, inherited condition defined by abnormal thickening of the heart muscle. For many years, participation in competitive sports was discouraged for patients with HCM due to a concern for sudden cardiac arrest, and conventional practice was to recommend patients with HCM avoid exercise altogether. Recent data have challenged this paradigm. The RESET-HCM trial demonstrated that moderate-intensity exercise was safe and effective for patients with HCM. In 2020, the AHA/ACC guidelines (co-authored by two UT Southwestern faculty, Jose Joglar, M.D., and Mark Link, M.D.) liberalized the recommendations regarding exercise training in patients with HCM and emphasized a shared decision-making process about the risks and benefits of high-intensity training. Many patients with HCM, particularly those with minimal symptoms, may want to perform high-intensity interval exercise (HIIT) to maintain fitness, but little data are available to guide the decision-making process.
At #AHA22, we presented the results of the randomized, controlled HIIT-HCM trial, which I led in conjunction with Benjamin Levine, M.D., at the Institute for Exercise and Environmental Medicine (IEEM) and UT Southwestern. We evaluated the efficacy and safety of high-intensity exercise training (HIT) compared to moderate-intensity exercise training (MIT) in 15 patients with HCM. To assess safety, patients were continuously monitored for arrhythmias by an implantable loop recorder or pre-existing implantable cardiac defibrillator (ICD). We found that exercise, regardless of intensity, was safe and effective with an increase in fitness (measured by peak oxygen consumption), no adverse clinical events, and no increase in arrythmias, including ventricular tachycardia. Patients who did HIT had a 40% greater improvement in fitness compared to MIT, though the overall response was variable among patients. Importantly, we found no evidence that exercise led to progressive left ventricular hypertrophy in patients with HCM; indeed, the hearts showed positive signs of exercise-induced eccentric remodeling after training.