Dr Sarah Zaman |
Dr Sarah Zaman has been awarded a highly competitive Heart
Foundation Postdoctoral Fellowship to continue her research into the prevention
of sudden cardiac death.
An interventional consultant cardiologist at MonashHeart and
Post-doctoral Early Career Research Fellow in the School of Clinical Sciences
at Monash Health, Dr Zaman was awarded the fellowship (worth $75,000 per annum
for two years) from 376 applicants, all of extremely high standard.
Sudden cardiac death is the cause
of approximately 20,000 deaths in Australia every year and the majority of
deaths occur in heart attack survivors with impaired heart function.
Dr Zaman’s research is trying to
identify patients at risk of sudden death.
“I’m one of the lead researchers on
the PROTECT-ICD Trial, an Australian-led, international, multi-centre study
targeting prevention of sudden death in patients who have suffered a heart
attack,” Dr Zaman said.
The PROTECT-ICD Trial targets the
important issue of prevention of sudden death after a heart attack through the
use of an electrophysiology study, a type of electrical test of the heart.
“In particular, the trial is
focused on identifying patients early (within a month) after a heart attack, as
the risk of sudden death is much higher during this time period,” Dr Zaman
said.
Over 1,000 patients with impaired
heart function following a heart attack will be recruited and randomly assigned
to either early electrophysiology study with a defibrillator implanted if fast
abnormal heart rhythms are seen, or standard care.
“Standard care involves waiting
1-3 months for the heart to recover, with a defibrillator implanted only if
there is persistent severe heart function impairment,” Dr Zaman said.
Dr Zaman said this study has the
potential to change national and international guidelines for selection of
patients for a defibrillator for sudden death prevention.
“Importantly,
it has the potential to save lives both in Australia and globally through
prevention of sudden death in heart attack survivors.”
Dr Zaman is grateful for the support and mentorship of Associate
Professor Pramesh Kovoor, (University of Sydney) and Professor James Cameron
(Monash University). She also acknowledges
the School of Clinical Sciences at Monash Health (SCS) for the Early Career
Practitioner Fellowship that has supported her research until this time.
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