It is timely to consider the utility and practicability of screening for malignant hyperthermia susceptibility using genomic testing. Here the authors pose a simple, but bold question: what would it take to end deaths from malignant hyperthermia? The authors review recent advances and propose a scientific and clinical pathway toward this audacious goal to provoke discussion in the field.

Malignant hyperthermia (MH) is a syndrome of acutely disordered skeletal muscle excitation–contraction coupling leading to fever, acidosis, hypercapnia, tachycardia, hyperkalemia, muscle rigidity, and rhabdomyolysis that can be triggered by potent inhalation anesthetics and depolarizing neuromuscular blocking agents (e.g., succinylcholine).1  An MH reaction is challenging to manage, requiring rapid interventions to halt the procedure, discontinue the triggering agents, administer dantrolene, correct dysrhythmias, and apply other crucial supportive measures.2,3  Even though early intervention using these measures is effective in aborting or ameliorating the reaction, the mortality for a malignant hyperthermia reaction is still 4 to 10%.4,5  Morbidity is more common, can be severe, and in some cases long lasting (e.g., renal failure). MH susceptibility can be a component of some congenital myopathies but it is most commonly the only manifestation in an affected individual and it is this latter manifestation we are focused on here. MH is a heritable trait, primarily associated with variants in either the type 1 ryanodine receptor (RYR1) intracellular calcium channel or the alpha 1S subunit (CACNA1S) of the voltage-dependent L-type Ca2+ channel. The disorder is heritable, but it is not always inherited: rare cases have been shown to be due to de novo mutation events. Another gene associated with MH reactions is STAC3, although all the reported occurrences involve individuals with biallelic variants who have an apparent myopathy: here we are focused on individuals who are asymptomatic until exposed to a triggering agent. A recent report6  suggested that TRPV1 is also associated with MH, but this has not been confirmed. Estimates of the prevalence of malignant hyperthermia susceptibility vary widely, from 1/200 to 1/3,000,7–9  although the clinical incidence of MH reactions is much lower—between 1:10,000 and 1:150,000 general anesthetics.10,11  Of those who have experienced an MHreaction, 50% to greater than 70% are found to have at least 1 of more than 200 variants in either RYR1 or CACNA1S, indicating that there is both locus and allelic heterogeneity.1,12 

Research into MH susceptibility over the past decades has provided important insights into the epidemiology, pathophysiology, clinical management, and genetics of this disorder. At the same time, it is recognized that the mortality associated with MH has declined little since the widespread adoption of dantrolene. Given the advancement in scientific understanding and medical management that has occurred, we pose to the field a simple and direct question: what would it take to end deaths from MH?

We are posing this rhetorical question to organize our thinking and direct our clinical and scientific resources toward an ideal objective. The complete elimination of morbidity and mortality from MH is likely impossible since a complete understanding of the biology of this trait, identification of all at-risk individuals, and changing their anesthetic management to the degree needed to drive the mortality to zero is complex. We argue that it is conceivable that we can come close to eradicating all deaths from MH susceptibility or to sufficiently reduce the death rate that the efforts and expenses would be worthwhile. Going forward, MH susceptibility is an attractive target for a genomic screening effort for a number of reasons.

  • The primary disease manifestation is typically dramatic, severe, and quantifiable.

  • Most people have almost zero risk of MH, a few people have a high risk, and most of the latter group can be identified.

  • There is relatively little stigma associated with a diagnosis of MH susceptibility so presymptomatic diagnosis is not highly aversive.

  • An operating room MH reaction is completely avoidable in known susceptible individuals by avoiding exposure to the triggering agents, which involves decontamination of the anesthetic workstation and use of alternative anesthetics.

  • Genetic tools with the potential to identify individuals with MH susceptibility are increasingly powerful and costs are falling rapidly.

Here, we outline some ideas about what an organized program to substantially reduce deaths from MH ought to comprise:

  1. Develop a robust and practical physiologic diagnostic test.

  2. Research to identify all genetic loci that cause or contribute to MH susceptibility.

  3. Establish the pathogenicity of all variants in genes that cause or contribute to MH susceptibility.

  4. Develop and pilot genomic screening techniques.

  5. Consultation services to confirm MH susceptibility diagnoses and educate individuals with MH susceptibility.

  6. Healthcare information systems for real-time support and resources for the management of a MH reaction and management of at-risk individuals.

One can readily envision that accomplishing these objectives is feasible and if accomplished, we could reduce the risks of MH at each step of the process from operative planning to discharge. For example, if we can reduce the number of susceptible individuals with who are exposed to a triggering agent by 75% and reduce the mortality rate of an MH reaction by 75%, then deaths from MH would be reduced by more than 90%. This is an exciting and worthy aim, and we outline some important considerations for the unmet objectives below.

Accurate phenotyping is essential in the genetic investigation of any trait. Singly, none of the clinical signs of an MH reaction is specific, but a nascent reaction can be recognized by an astute clinician, and the management imperative is to abort a reaction as soon as it is suspected. It is now rare for a reaction to reach such a fulminant stage that the diagnosis is unequivocal. Even when the proband’s diagnosis could be made on the basis of their clinical reaction, clinical phenotyping for other family members is challenging. Scientific advances in the genetics of MH have substantially been founded on the use of the MH susceptibility phenotype determined using contracture testing. Indeed, the original identification of the RYR1 and CACNA1S susceptibility loci, and many other large genetic studies of MH have come from countries where contracture testing of affected families is quality-controlled and practicable.

While it might be ideal that contracture testing is universally available, there are numerous barriers to this goal that are beyond the scope of this commentary. Therefore, the development of a physiologic diagnostic confirmation test that is analytically robust, but which can use tissue that can be sampled locally (ideally less invasively) and transported to the testing center, would greatly improve accessibility to MH testing. The challenge here is daunting—although we would be eager to work toward an alternative clinical phenotyping test, there are no existing data to our knowledge that point to a ready path to such an assay.

Genomic technologies are rapidly advancing, primarily due to chip-based DNA testing platforms13  and next generation sequencing.14  Whereas Sanger sequencing of RYR1 and CACNA1S has been, and remains, expensive, next generation sequencing panel tests that include these genes are now available at costs well below that of Sanger sequencing. Next generation exome and genome sequencing are increasingly available in many countries and becoming an affordable part of research and health care. These rapid advances and falling costs enable both research and clinical genomic testing that were inconceivable just a few years ago. They enable rapid identification of sequence variants in individuals with putative inherited diseases. However, these variants may number several thousand in each sample and predicting which variant(s) is(are) implicated in the disease can be challenging. In MH susceptibility where a single missense variant may be all that is required, once variants in RYR1, CACNA1S, and STAC3 have been excluded, this approach has proved fruitless to date. So far, relatively few samples from MH-susceptible individuals have undergone exome or genome sequencing. If a larger number can be sequenced, we will more likely be able to identify rare recurrent variants or genes that have an increased burden of rare variants. We propose that there should be a coordinated program of clinical and research testing such that every individual with an MH reaction or positive contracture test is evaluated by next generation sequencing to increase the chances of identifying the causative variant(s). This should be a mix of both clinical testing and clinical research testing. Clinical sequencing of known MH susceptibility–associated genes is available from a number of laboratories (see the appendix). Deidentified data from all who are sequenced and found to harbor a pathogenic, or likely pathogenic variant (determined as per Richards et al. and Harrison et al.15,16 ), should be deposited in a public repository, such as ClinVar or a dedicated MH database so that all can benefit from this knowledge. Individuals who are not found to have an unambiguously pathogenic variant should be referred to a clinical research program to be further evaluated to better understand the genetic basis of this disease. The pooling and organization of these cases and data will add immeasurably to efforts to fully catalog genetic variation associated with MH susceptibility.

Escalation to next generation sequencing may also prove useful in cases where MH susceptibility is apparently more genetically complex,12,17  especially if combinations of rare variants are involved. However, if the genetic model involves combinations of several more common variants, sample sizes will need to be even larger and single nucleotide polymorphism chip genotyping is likely to be more cost-effective.

Efforts are underway to comprehensively characterize the pathogenicity of reported variants in RYR1 and CACNA1S through the ClinGen Variant Curation Expert Panel process (https://www.clinicalgenome.org/affiliation/50038/, accessed August 25, 2020). This effort is initially focused on the variants proposed by the European Malignant Hyperthermia Group (https://www.emhg.org/, accessed August 25, 2020), with an adaptation of the American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics variant pathogenicity standards.15  These standards, which must be adapted to take into account knowledge of the biology of RYR1 and malignant hyperthermia susceptibility, comprise 27 criteria including observations of inheritance, case-control studies, functional studies, and in silico predictors, and conforms to the current international standard for variant pathogenicity assertions. A major deficit in being able to assign pathogenic status is the small number of variants that have been robustly functionally characterized in relevant model systems. Current testing is robust, but low throughput. A recent revolution in functional genomics heralds a realistic prospect of overcoming this bottleneck. Prime editing, an adaptation of CRISPR technology,18  coupled with strategies for high-throughput functional assays19  have the potential to support highly robust functional assessments of all variants, even before they are detected in a human. If these technologies can be adapted to RYR1 and other genes implicated in MH susceptibility, they have the potential to provide for high-throughput, low-cost, functional in vitro assays for every potential variant. This task is not trivial, but it should be feasible. Even achieving a goal of assessing the pathogenicity of variants that can account for 80% of known cases of MH susceptibility would create a set of pathogenic variants that could be employed for clinical research to test the practicality of preoperative screening.

A future is coming where large numbers of individuals undergo genome-wide screening that encompasses many disease and pharmacogenetic susceptibilities: it is essential to develop evidence to support this approach on a disease-by-disease basis. We propose that a trial of preoperative screening for MH susceptibility would serve as a proof of principle to test the applicability and utility of extracting MH-associated variants from genomic or exomic data. Once a suitable set of pathogenic variants is identified, genomic screening for MH susceptibility could be piloted on a population of individuals scheduled for elective surgery. The size and power analysis of such a study will require more accurate estimates of prevalence and the diagnostic yield of a given set of pathogenic variants. We propose that this could be fruitful, even without a clear understanding of penetrance of the variants, because one could eliminate MH reactions if every person with an at-risk genotype was administered a nontriggering agent. While general population screening for MH susceptibility will likely not be practical for some time, an ever-increasing number of individuals with variants in RYR1 and CACNA1S are being identified through secondary findings from exome and genome sequencing.20,21  These individuals provide opportunities to study and pilot approaches to presymptomatic diagnosis. When MH-susceptible individuals are identified through preoperative screening or secondary findings, and there is no personal or family history of suspected MH, the presence of the variant represents the only known risk factor for MH susceptibility in the family. Identifying an individual with MH susceptibility is an opportunity to classify all members within a family, where the risk of having MH (50% for first-degree relatives) is orders of magnitude greater than the general population. Prospective determination of risk of relatives can therefore be made by testing for the single variant, which is simpler to perform and interpret than is exome, panel, or even full gene testing as the laboratory does not need to interpret other variants.

A genetic test, even with physiologic confirmation is not enough: these individuals also need access to a knowledgeable provider (most likely anesthesiologist, neurologist specializing in myopathy, or a clinical geneticist) to engage with the affected individual to analyze the test results, make the clinical–molecular diagnosis, and educate the patient, their family, and care provider about their disorder. The affected individual is a key part of the puzzle—it will be critical that they accept and understand their diagnosis and its implications to maximize the likelihood that the information is used to their benefit. Support groups such as Malignant Hyperthermia Association of the United States (in North America) can be helpful to identify experts and provide information (see links in the appendix).

There must be support also for care providers unfamiliar with incorporating genomic test information into anesthetic management decisions. Taking the data from the advances we propose into account, professional bodies (such as the American Society of Anesthesiologists) will need to develop policies and practice standards that are based on the risk stratification of genomic predictive testing. An analogous approach has been adopted in obstetrics, where the highly complex noninvasive prenatal genomic screening test has been rapidly taken up, with clear guidelines and risk determinations. Such guidelines are no guarantee of good care, nor are they a perfect shield from liability, but they give providers clear guidance and substantially lessen risks.

In North America, the Malignant Hyperthermia Association of the United States provides 24/7 hotline support for clinicians managing patients with a known or suspected MH reaction (similar resources are available in other countries). These valuable resources should be universally recognized and readily used, but additional resources for the identification and management of MH should be developed. Artificial intelligence–driven22  patient monitoring and clinical decision support tools23  within the electronic health record could be developed to support preoperative decision-making regarding test results, facilitate real-time early recognition of an MH event, and other decisions. Finally, information on MH susceptibility should be readily portable so that patients can benefit from it no matter where they receive their care.

None of these approaches alone will accomplish our objective. Instead, we recognize that it will be essential that research, screening, education, and management are integrated into a functional whole systems–based approach to end deaths from MH. This proposal is centered on a genomics-centered approach to MH susceptibility. This is not to say that a major, disruptive advance in muscle physiologic testing could not occur that would change this assessment entirely—disruptive advances are by their nature unpredictable. We propose a model for organizing the necessary genetic and anesthetic activities needed to build an integrated system that will capture all events, maximize knowledge, and reduce death and disability from this disease. We propose a flow diagram that incorporates all of these activities and builds data and expertise into the future (fig. 1).

Fig. 1.

A model for the future management of malignant hyperthermia susceptibility risk through genomic screening. The blue boxes represent the current phenotypic ascertainment approach to malignant hyperthermia susceptibility, where neither contracture tests nor DNA testing is practical, and the purple boxes represent the proposed future approach, supplementing the present approach. “Abnormal testing” means the presence of a variant that is likely to cause malignant hyperthermia susceptibility. “Not abnormal testing” is the converse of that result. Boxes with an asterisk indicate steps that contracture testing should be considered to assess malignant hyperthermia risk. Note that contracture testing may be done before DNA testing or reserved for those who show no abnormality on sequencing. The phrase “history of malignant hyperthermia” should be considered as at least a reasonably strong history and “malignant hyperthermia reaction” should be considered as at least reasonably strong evidence of a malignant hyperthermia reaction.

Fig. 1.

A model for the future management of malignant hyperthermia susceptibility risk through genomic screening. The blue boxes represent the current phenotypic ascertainment approach to malignant hyperthermia susceptibility, where neither contracture tests nor DNA testing is practical, and the purple boxes represent the proposed future approach, supplementing the present approach. “Abnormal testing” means the presence of a variant that is likely to cause malignant hyperthermia susceptibility. “Not abnormal testing” is the converse of that result. Boxes with an asterisk indicate steps that contracture testing should be considered to assess malignant hyperthermia risk. Note that contracture testing may be done before DNA testing or reserved for those who show no abnormality on sequencing. The phrase “history of malignant hyperthermia” should be considered as at least a reasonably strong history and “malignant hyperthermia reaction” should be considered as at least reasonably strong evidence of a malignant hyperthermia reaction.

Close modal

Population screening for genetic disease is not risk-free. There will be false-positive and false-negative results. The risk of false positives would be that individuals would be offered nontriggering agents unnecessarily. False negatives could lead to very rare occurrences of MH. There is also a risk that by reducing the incidence of MH, anesthesiologists would be become less familiar with the recognition and management of a reaction. While the United States’ Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act should be protective in most cases, it is possible that some individuals who are diagnosed by screening (true or false positive) could be, for example, denied entry to the Armed Forces.

We recognize that these goals are grand and challenging. We also recognize, and indeed hope, that others will debate and help us to refine our proposals and weigh in with different approaches that could help us work toward the goal of ending deaths from MH.

Research Support

This work was supported by National Institutes of Health (Bethesda, Maryland) grant No. AR053349 (to Dr. Dirksen) and grant Nos. HG200359 and HG200387 (to Dr. Biesecker).

Competing Interests

Dr. Weber is the CEO and part owner of Prevention Genetics (Marshfield, Wisconsin). Dr. Biesecker reports research support from ArQule (now wholly owned by Merck, Inc., Kenilworth, New Jersey), Pfizer, Inc. (New York, New York), and honoraria from Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory (Cold Spring Harbor, New York). Dr. Riazi reports research support from Norgine Pharmaceuticals (Amsterdam, the Netherlands). The remaining authors declare no competing interests.

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Appendix: Online Resources

Genetic Test Registry for RYR1 testing: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/gtr/all/tests/?term=6261%5Bgeneid%5D. Accessed August 25, 2020.

Genetic Test Registry for CACNA1S testing: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/gtr/all/tests/?term=779%5Bgeneid%5D. Accessed August 25, 2020.

Malignant Hyperthermia Association of the United States (MHAUS): https://www.mhaus.org. Accessed August 25, 2020.

The North American Malignant Hyperthermia Registry of MHAUS: https://anest.ufl.edu/namhr. Accessed August 25, 2020.

European Malignant Hyperthermia Group (EMHG): https://www.emhg.org. Accessed August 25, 2020.