RESUMO
The authors report the clinical and genetic investigation of a family with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM). The individuals described are three affected first-degree relatives (father, daughter and son), one affected niece and unaffected nephew and niece. Those affected all share a very similar phenotype consisting of asymmetric HCM, with hypertrophy particularly affecting the septum and the anterior wall, and similar electrocardiographic features, including a short PR interval. Case 1 (proband) presented with obstructive HCM and had undergone myectomy and mitral valve replacement. Case 2 (oldest offspring of Case 1) had non-obstructive HCM with exertional angina and NYHA II heart failure (HF) symptoms; she developed non-sustained ventricular tachycardia during follow-up and received a single-chamber ICD for primary prevention of sudden cardiac death. Case 3 (son of case 1) presented with asymptomatic non-obstructive HCM and developed NYHA II HF symptoms during follow-up. Case 4 had non-obstructive HCM, mainly with NYHA II HF symptoms. Testing of the proband for sarcomeric mutations and phenocopies was initially negative. After eight years of clinical follow-up, the suspicion of an undiscovered pathogenic gene mutation shared among the members of this family led us to enroll the proband in a whole-genome sequencing research project, which revealed a heterozygous pathogenic intronic MYBPC3 variant (c.1227-13G>A [rs397515893]), cosegregating with the phenotype.