Objectives: The study objectives were to describe the aortic histopathologic substrates in patients with type A surgically treated acute aortic syndromes, to provide clinico-pathological correlations, and to identify the possible prognostic role of histology. Methods: We assessed the aortic wall degenerative or inflammatory alterations of 158 patients according to the histopathologic consensus documents. Moreover, we correlated these histologic patterns with the patients' clinical data and long-term follow-up for mortality, major aorta-related events, and nonaorta-related events (including cardiovascular ones). Results: We identified 2 histopathologic patterns: 122 patients (77%) with degenerative alterations and 36 patients (23%) with mixed degenerative-atherosclerotic lesions. Patients with mixed alterations were older (mean 69.6 ± 8.7 years vs 62.2 ± 12.4 years, P = .001) and more hypercholesterolemic (33.3% vs 13.9%, P = .017). The degenerative subgroup showed more intralamellar-mucoid extracellular matrix accumulation (86% vs 66.7%, P = .017) and a lower prevalence of translamellar collagen increase (9.8% vs 50%, P < .001). Patients with mixed degenerative-atherosclerotic abnormalities more frequently had long-term nonaorta-related events compared with those with degenerative abnormalities alone (P = .046); no differences were found between the groups with respect to mortality, major aorta-related events, and cardiovascular nonaorta-related events. Conclusions: Although degenerative lesions of the medial layer were present in all specimens, substantial atherosclerosis coexisted in approximately one quarter of cases. Patients with mixed degenerative-atherosclerotic abnormalities had a coherent clinical risk profile, a clinical presentation frequently mimicking acute coronary syndrome, and a higher incidence of nonaorta-related events during follow-up. Histopathologic characterization may improve the long-term prognostic stratification of patients after surgical treatment. © 2018 The American Association for Thoracic Surgery

Redefining the histopathologic profile of acute aortic syndromes: Clinical and prognostic implications / Leone, O.;Pacini, D.;Foà, A.;Corsini, A.;Agostini, V.;Corti, B.;Di Marco, L.;Leone, A.;Lorenzini, M.;Reggiani, L.B.;Di Bartolomeo, R.;Rapezzi, C.. - In: THE JOURNAL OF THORACIC AND CARDIOVASCULAR SURGERY. - ISSN 1097-685X. - STAMPA. - 156:5(2018), pp. 1776-1785. [10.1016/j.jtcvs.2018.04.086]

Redefining the histopathologic profile of acute aortic syndromes: Clinical and prognostic implications

Leone, O.;Pacini, D.;Foà, A.;Corsini, A.;Agostini, V.;Corti, B.;Di Marco, L.;Leone, A.;Lorenzini, M.;Reggiani, L. B.;Di Bartolomeo, R.;Rapezzi, C.
2018

Abstract

Objectives: The study objectives were to describe the aortic histopathologic substrates in patients with type A surgically treated acute aortic syndromes, to provide clinico-pathological correlations, and to identify the possible prognostic role of histology. Methods: We assessed the aortic wall degenerative or inflammatory alterations of 158 patients according to the histopathologic consensus documents. Moreover, we correlated these histologic patterns with the patients' clinical data and long-term follow-up for mortality, major aorta-related events, and nonaorta-related events (including cardiovascular ones). Results: We identified 2 histopathologic patterns: 122 patients (77%) with degenerative alterations and 36 patients (23%) with mixed degenerative-atherosclerotic lesions. Patients with mixed alterations were older (mean 69.6 ± 8.7 years vs 62.2 ± 12.4 years, P = .001) and more hypercholesterolemic (33.3% vs 13.9%, P = .017). The degenerative subgroup showed more intralamellar-mucoid extracellular matrix accumulation (86% vs 66.7%, P = .017) and a lower prevalence of translamellar collagen increase (9.8% vs 50%, P < .001). Patients with mixed degenerative-atherosclerotic abnormalities more frequently had long-term nonaorta-related events compared with those with degenerative abnormalities alone (P = .046); no differences were found between the groups with respect to mortality, major aorta-related events, and cardiovascular nonaorta-related events. Conclusions: Although degenerative lesions of the medial layer were present in all specimens, substantial atherosclerosis coexisted in approximately one quarter of cases. Patients with mixed degenerative-atherosclerotic abnormalities had a coherent clinical risk profile, a clinical presentation frequently mimicking acute coronary syndrome, and a higher incidence of nonaorta-related events during follow-up. Histopathologic characterization may improve the long-term prognostic stratification of patients after surgical treatment. © 2018 The American Association for Thoracic Surgery
2018
Redefining the histopathologic profile of acute aortic syndromes: Clinical and prognostic implications / Leone, O.;Pacini, D.;Foà, A.;Corsini, A.;Agostini, V.;Corti, B.;Di Marco, L.;Leone, A.;Lorenzini, M.;Reggiani, L.B.;Di Bartolomeo, R.;Rapezzi, C.. - In: THE JOURNAL OF THORACIC AND CARDIOVASCULAR SURGERY. - ISSN 1097-685X. - STAMPA. - 156:5(2018), pp. 1776-1785. [10.1016/j.jtcvs.2018.04.086]
Leone, O.;Pacini, D.;Foà, A.;Corsini, A.;Agostini, V.;Corti, B.;Di Marco, L.;Leone, A.;Lorenzini, M.;Reggiani, L.B.;Di Bartolomeo, R.;Rapezzi, C.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11585/645408
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