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Valvular involvement in ANCA-associated systemic vasculitis: a case report and literature review.
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PMID:  21345235     Owner:  NLM     Status:  Publisher    
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ABSTRACT: BACKGROUND: Antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies (ANCA)-associated systemic vasculitides have a variety of presentations, but cardiac valvular involvement is rarely diagnosed and its management is not established. CASE PRESENTATION: We report the case of a 44 year old man who presented with an ANCA-associated systemic vasculitis and aortic regurgitation of unusual mechanism. Transthoracic and transesophageal echocardiography disclosed septal hypertrophy preventing a complete closure of the aortic valve and thus responsible for a massive aortic regurgitation. After 4 months of immunosuppressive therapy, the valve lesion did not subside and the patient had to undergo aortic valve replacement. This report also reviews the 20 cases of systemic ANCA-associated vasculitis with endocardial valvular involvement previously reported in the English language medical literature. CONCLUSIONS: Valvular involvement in ANCA-associated systemic vasculitides is rarely reported. Most of these lesions are due to Wegener's granulomatosis and half are present when the diagnosis of vasculitis is made. The valvular lesion is usually isolated, aortic regurgitation being the most frequent type, and often requires valve replacement in the months that follow it's discovery.
Authors:
Chloe Lacoste; Nicolas Mansencal; Mona Ben M'rad; Catherine Goulon-Goeau; Pascal Cohen; Loic Guillevin; Thomas Hanslik
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Publication Detail:
Type:  JOURNAL ARTICLE     Date:  2011-2-23
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Title:  BMC musculoskeletal disorders     Volume:  12     ISSN:  1471-2474     ISO Abbreviation:  -     Publication Date:  2011 Feb 
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Created Date:  2011-2-24     Completed Date:  -     Revised Date:  -    
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Nlm Unique ID:  100968565     Medline TA:  BMC Musculoskelet Disord     Country:  -    
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Languages:  ENG     Pagination:  50     Citation Subset:  -    
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Journal ID (nlm-ta): BMC Musculoskelet Disord
ISSN: 1471-2474
Publisher: BioMed Central
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Copyright ©2011 Lacoste et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
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Received Day: 25 Month: 8 Year: 2010
Accepted Day: 23 Month: 2 Year: 2011
collection publication date: Year: 2011
Electronic publication date: Day: 23 Month: 2 Year: 2011
Volume: 12First Page: 50 Last Page: 50
ID: 3050781
Publisher Id: 1471-2474-12-50
PubMed Id: 21345235
DOI: 10.1186/1471-2474-12-50

Valvular involvement in ANCA-associated systemic vasculitis: a case report and literature review
Chloé Lacoste12 Email: chloelacoste@yahoo.fr
Nicolas Mansencal12 Email: nicolas.mansencal@apr.aphp.fr
Mona Ben m'rad12 Email: mona.benmrad@gmail.com
Catherine Goulon-Goeau12 Email: catherine.goulon-goeau@apr.aphp.fr
Pascal Cohen34 Email: pascal.cohen@cch.aphp.fr
Loïc Guillevin34 Email: loic.guillevin@cch.aphp.fr
Thomas Hanslik12 Email: thomas.hanslik@apr.aphp.fr
1Assistance Publique Hôpitaux de Paris (AP-HP), departments of internal medicine and Cardiology, Ambroise Paré Hospital, 9, avenue Charles-de-Gaulle, 92100, Boulogne Billancourt, France
2Université Versailles Saint Quentin en Yvelines, UFR de Médecine "Paris Ile-de-France Ouest", 9 boulevard d'Alembert, 78280 Guyancourt, France
3Assistance Publique Hôpitaux de Paris (AP-HP), National Referral Center for Rare Systemic and Autoimmune Diseases, Necrotizing Vasculitides, and Systemic Sclerosis, Department of Internal Medicine, Cochin Hospital, 27, rue du Faubourg Saint-Jacques, 75014, Paris, France
4Université Paris Descartes, 12, rue de l'Ecole de médecine 75006 Paris, France

Background

Antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies (ANCA)-associated systemic vasculitides are a group of small vessel vasculitic syndromes including Wegener's granulomatosis, microscopic polyangiitis and Churg Strauss syndrome. These diseases share a common pathology with focal necrotizing lesions that affect different vessels and organs. Wegener's granulomatosis and Churg Strauss syndrome have additional granulomatous lesions. They have a variety of presentations, but cardiac valvular involvement is rarely reported.

In this report we describe the case of a patient with an ANCA associated systemic vasculitis who presented with aortic regurgitation of unusual mechanism requiring surgical replacement.


Case report

The patient was a 44-year-old man from Bangladesh who immigrated to France twenty years ago and worked in several dusty embroidery workshops. Eight months prior to his admission in our hospital, he developed right chronic headaches resisting usual painkillers with right hypoacusia and tinnitus. The right ear examination was consistent with chronic otitis media. A sinus CT scan showed pansinusitis predominating on the right side with right mastoiditis and otitis media. A cerebral MRI showed pachymeningitis of the cerebellopontine angle. Right myringotomy yielded culture-negative drainage. The patient underwent several unsuccessful antibiotic treatments.

Eight months after the onset of the disease, the patient was referred to our ward, complaining, in addition to the other symptoms, of signs of severe intracranial hypertension (persistant right headaches and vomiting), significant weight loss, and a change in his voice. Otorhinological examination showed an unchanged right ear, a paralysis of the left vocal cord responsible for the dysphonia, an abolition of the gag reflex, and a palatal paralysis. The blood pressure was 140/65 mmHg, the heart rate of 75 bpm and the general examination was normal aside from a three out of four diastolic murmur of aortic regurgitation, without any other cardiac signs and a normal electrocardiogram.

An abdominal CT-scan showed a focal thickening of the aortic arch and an identical thickening of the superior mesenteric vein, interpreted as focal aortic and mesenteric vasculitis. A mesenteric panniculitis was also apparent. Laboratory studies included the following values: C-reactive protein 35 mg/l, serum urea nitrogen 4.6 mM/l, creatinine 86 mcM/l, total leukocyte count 10.3 × 10^9/l, polyclonal hypergammaglobulinemia, negative antiphospholipid antibodies, positive antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies (ANCA) with positive antimyeloperoxidase antibodies and negative antiproteinase 3 antibodies. The cerebrospinal fluid contained 60 cells per mm3 with 28% lymphocytes and 1.11 g/l of protein; the bacterial, fungal and mycobacterial cultures were negative. The cerebral MRI performed on admission was unchanged. Inferior nasal concha biopsies showed nonspecific inflammation; temporal artery biopsies were normal. Transthoracic and transesophageal echocardiography revealed septal hypertrophy leading to a restriction of aortic valvular closure and thus to massive aortic regurgitation (Figure 1).

The presumptive diagnosis was ANCA-associated systemic vasculitis, most probably Wegener's granulomatosis, with aortic valvular involvement. Treatment with prednisone (1 mg/kg) and intravenous cyclophosphamide (700 mg/m2 every two weeks during one month then every four weeks) was started. With this immunosuppressive therapy the palatal paralysis subsided, the headaches lessened and the patient, slowly regaining weight and energy, was able to return home.

Four months after the beginning of treatment there was an absence of echocardiographic improvement of the septal hypertrophy and aortic regurgitation and the patient had developed congestive heart failure, so the decision was made to perform an aortic Bicarbon™valve replacement. Upon inspection, the aorta wall and the aortic valve leaflets appeared diffusely thickened. There was a focal thickening of the interventricular septum covered with fibrous tissue. Fibrous tissue was also found on the aortic ring and on the large mitral leaflet. No vegetations were seen. At the end of surgery the patient was in persistent complete heart block requiring a pacemaker implantation.

The microscopic examination of the septum showed chronic remodelling with fibrous and hyaline tissue, and an intense polymorphic inflammatory infiltrate. Fibrosis as well as a local fragmentation of the elastic fibers was found in the intima and media of the aortic wall. No inflammatory infiltrate nor granuloma were seen in the aortic specimens.

Two years after surgery, the patient is doing well on azathioprine (see Table 1).


Discussion

In this patient, the diagnosis of ANCA-associated systemic vasculitis, most probably Wegener's granulomatosis, was based on the association of pansinusitis, otitis, mastoiditis, chronic lymphocytic meningitis, aortitis and positive ANCA. This diagnosis was assessed at the National Referral Center for Rare Systemic and Autoimmune Diseases, Necrotizing Vasculitides, and Systemic Sclerosis (Hôpital Cochin, Assistance Publique-Hôpitaux de Paris, Université Paris-Descartes, Paris). Although Pr3-ANCA, found in 70 to 90% of patients with Wegener's granulomatosis, is often considered to be a seromarker of this disease, MPO-ANCA has been reported to be predominant in Asian patients [1]. This could explain the positive p-ANCA and negative c-ANCA in this patient who is from Bangladesh. The very unusual and unique feature in this patient was the particular mechanism of aortic valve involvement that required a valve replacement.

Using a Pubmed search we looked for reported cases of ANCA-associated systemic vasculitis with a valvular involvement, using the keywords "valve", "cardiac", "heart", "endocarditis", "mitral", "aortic", "tricuspid", "pulmonary", "ANCA", "antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies", "Wegener's granulomatosis", "microscopic polyangiitis" and "Churg Strauss" in different combinations. We completed this search by cross-referencing published articles. We thus selected 19 articles in English reporting 20 cases consistent with a systemic ANCA-associated vasculitis with endocardial valvular involvement, i.e. valvular lesions for which infective endocarditis had been excluded and no other aetiology found [2-20].

The general characteristics of the patients and of their vasculitides are reviewed in Table 2. Their average age tends to be younger than that of the other patients presenting an ANCA-associated-vasculitis (40 versus 47 years old [21]) and the male predominance is greater (80% versus 53% [21]). One case excepted [19], all reported cases were diagnosed as Wegener's granulomatosis and presented with at least one of the three most common involvements, i.e. renal, pulmonary and otolaryngological. Eye, skin or joint involvement was present in about half the cases. Only 6 patients out of 20 experienced another cardiac lesion, such as pericardial effusion or adhesions [6,10,15], conduction disorders [4,9,10] and coronary artery stenosis [12].

Table 3 details the characteristics of the valvular lesions in the 20 different cases. The most commonly encountered disorder is aortic regurgitation [4-11,13,14,19,20]. Seven cases of mitral regurgitation [3,7,11-13,15,20], and one of aortic stenosis [2] were also reported along with two cases of valvular vegetations [16,17], two of a mass involving a mitral leaflet responsible for mild mitral stenosis and moderate mitral regurgitation [3,13], and one of multiple atrial masses without valvular insufficiency or stenosis [18]. Six patients had polyvalvular involvement [3,7,11,13,16,20]. Several mechanisms responsible for these valvular lesions have been reported: vegetations [2,8,16,17,19], leaflet thickening [4,6,9,13,20], valvular perforation [6,14] and unique or multiple endocardial masses [3,9,12,13,18].

Half the valvular lesions were present at initial presentation and when the diagnosis of vasculitis was made [2,6,7,9,12,14,16-18]. In six of the ten remaining cases, the valvular disease occurred while the patient was on immunosuppressant drugs [5,8,10,11,13,19]. In two of these five cases, the onset was less than a week after the treatment was initiated suggesting that the pathological process was already taking place when the drugs were started [8,19]. In only four cases valvular disease began more than a year after the first signs of the vasculitis [3,4,10,20].

A valve replacement was required in most cases [3,4,6,7,9,10,12,13,19,20]. In only two cases did immunosuppressive therapy allow a complete resolution of the valvular lesions [8,9]; and in one of these [9] the patient had nonetheless to undergo an aortic valve replacement because of secondary left ventricular dilatation and a shrunken leaflet.

The pathological findings were nonspecific in almost all cases; i.e. showing inflammation and/or scarring without abscess, giant cells, vasculitis, or granuloma. In two cases, granuloma, necrosis and/or micro abscess were described in the valvular tissue [4,12].

To conclude, although it might be underdiagnosed due to the lack of patent clinical signs and the absence of systematic screening, valvular involvement in ANCA-associated systemic vasculitides is rarely reported. Most of these valvular lesions are due to Wegener's granulomatosis and half are present when the diagnosis of vasculitis is made. The valvular lesion is usually unique, aortic regurgitation being the most frequent type, and often requires valve replacement in the months that follow its discovery.


Consent

written informed consent was obtained from the patient for publication of this case report and any accompanying images.


Competing interests

The authors declare that they have no competing interests.


Authors' contributions

CL wrote the paper; NM conducted the cardiological expertise; CGG, conducted the neurological expertise; MB,.PC and LG conducted the patient's evaluation at the National Referral Center for Rare Systemic and Autoimmune Diseases, Necrotizing Vasculitides, and Systemic Sclerosis (Hôpital Cochin, Assistance Publique-Hôpitaux de Paris, Université Paris-Descartes, Paris); TH is taking care of this patient and supervised the writing of this paper. All the authors have made substantial contributions to acquisition and analysis of data and have been involved in revising the manuscript critically for intellectual content.

All authors read and approved the final manuscript.


Pre-publication history

The pre-publication history for this paper can be accessed here:

http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2474/12/50/prepub


Acknowledgements

We are thankful to Dr Rebecca J. Spencer, MD-PhD, for editing the manuscript.


References
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Anthony DD,Askari AD,Wolpaw T,McComsey G,Wegener granulomatosis simulating bacterial endocarditisArch Intern MedYear: 19991591518071810
Attaran S,Desmond M,Ratnasingham J,Scawn N,Pullan DM,Mitral valve involvement in Wegener's granulomatosisAnn Thorac SurgYear: 2010903996997
Bruno P,Le Hello C,Massetti M,Babatasi G,Saloux E,Galateau F,Khayat A,Necrotizing granulomata of the aortic valve in Wegener's diseaseJ Heart Valve DisYear: 200095633635
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Figures

[Figure ID: F1]
Figure 1 

Transesophageal echocardiography showing septal hypertrophy (white arrows) and lack of central coaptation of aortic valve (yellow arrows), resulting in massive aortic regurgitation. Ao = aorta. LA = left atrium. LV = left ventricle.



Tables
[TableWrap ID: T1] Table 1 

Symptoms, severity score index and main lab and imagery results of the patient described in the case report.


November 2006 - Persisting facial pain, right chronic headaches resisting usual pain killers
- Cerebral CT-scan: pansinusitis
March 2007 - Same symptoms + right hypoacusia and tinnitus
- Cerebral CT-scan: pansinusitis predominating on the right side with right mastoiditis and otitis media
- Cerebral MRI: pachymeningitis of the cerebellopontine angle

June 2007 When hospitalized:
 - Violent headaches and vomiting: severe intracranial hypertension
 - Significant weight loss (- 10 kg)
 - Right otitis media
 - Paralysis of the left vocal cord (dysphonia), abolition of the gag reflex, and palatal paralysis
 - Cerebral MRI: unchanged
 - Spinal tap: Aseptic meningitis
 - Discovery of the aortic regurgitation
 - Abdominal CT-scan: focal aortic and mesenteric vasculitis and mesenteric panniculitis
 - Elevated C-reactive protein and leukocyte count
 - Polyclonal hypergammaglobulinemia
 - pANCA+; anti-MPO +; anti Pr3 -
 - BVAS = 23

June 2009 BVAS = 2

BVAS: Birmingham Vasculitis Activity Score


[TableWrap ID: T2] Table 2 

General characteristics of patients with systemic vasculitides and valvular involvement.


Reference Sex Age ANCA Vasculitis
Classification
Kidney ENT Organ
Lungs
Involvement
Eyes
Skin Joints Non-valvular
cardiac lesion
Stöllberger [19] M 56 ANCA -, anti-PR3 + Unknown Yes - - - Yes Yes -

Levine [15] M 28 - Wegener's granulomatosis Yes Yes Yes - - - Yes

Davenport [6] M 19 c-ANCA +, anti-PR3 + Wegener's granulomatosis Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes -

M 53 c-ANCA +, anti-PR3 + Wegener's granulomatosis Yes - - - - - Yes

Grant [10] M 32 c-ANCA + Wegener's granulomatosis - Yes - Yes Yes Yes Yes

Goodfield [9] M 25 c-ANCA + Wegener's granulomatosis - Yes Yes - - - Yes

Bruno [4] F 63 ANCA + Wegener's granulomatosis - Yes Yes - - - Yes

Herbst [12] F 56 ANCA - Wegener's granulomatosis - - Yes - - Yes Yes

Gerbracht [8] M 20 - Wegener's granulomatosis Yes Yes Yes - - - -

Greidinger [11] M 15 c-ANCA + Wegener's granulomatosis Yes Yes Yes - Yes Yes -

Leff [14] M 17 c-ANCA + Wegener's granulomatosis - Yes Yes - Yes Yes -

Yanda [20] F 77 - Wegener's granulomatosis Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes - -

Dabbagh [5] M 16 - Wegener's granulomatosis Yes Yes Yes Yes - - -

Fox [7] M 20 ANCA + Wegener's granulomatosis Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes -

Anthony [2] M 48 c-ANCA +, anti-PR3 + Wegener's granulomatosis - Yes Yes - Yes Yes -

Paik [17] M 48 c-ANCA + Wegener's granulomatosis - Yes Yes - - - -

Mishell [16] M 65 ANCA +, anti-PR3 + Wegener's granulomatosis Yes - Yes Yes Yes - -

Ramakrishnan [18] F 44 c-ANCA + Wegener's granulomatosis Yes - Yes - - - -

Attaran [3] M 52 - Wegener's granulomatosis - Yes - - - - -

Koyalakonda [13] M 52 - Wegener's granulomatosis - Yes - Yes - - -

Present report M 44 p-ANCA +, anti-PR3 - Wegener's granulomatosis - Yes - - - - -

ANCA: antineutrophil cytoplasmic antibodies; ENT: ear, nose and/or throat involvement; PR3: proteinase-3.


[TableWrap ID: T3] Table 3 

Valvular lesion characteristics in patients with systemic vasculitides.


Reference Valve lesion onset Valve lesion Mechanism of valvular disease Valvular treatment Outcome Valve histology
Stöllberger [19] After 3 days steroïds AR Vegetation - AVR Non specific
Levine [15] After 6 weeks of ENT signs no IST MR ? - Died of heart failure -
Davenport [6] At initial presentation AR Leaflet perforation and
tissue disruption
1 year IST AVR Non specific
At initial presentation AR Thickened leaflets IST Worse, awaiting AVR -
Grant [10] After 1 year of CYC AR Dilation of ascending aorta 20 Mo IST AVR Non specific
Goodfield [9] At initial presentation AR Thickened leaflets and mass obstructing the left ventricular outflow tract 6 weeks IST Thickening & mass disappeared. AVR because of LV dilatation & shrunken Ao leaflet Non specific
Bruno [4] 3 years after illness onset, no IST AR Thickened, rigid and retracted leaflets _ AVR Specific
Herbst [12] At initial presentation MR Mass involving a leaflet MVR & AVR Specific
Gerbracht [8] After 5 days CYC AR Vegetation IST Complete resolution -
Greidinger [11] After 3 weeks CYC AR ? IST Lesion unchanged -
MR ? IST Lesion unchanged -
Leff [14] At initial presentation AR Perforation of 2 leaflets 1 year IST Ao valve repair: homograft -
Yanda [20] 1 year after initial presentation,
no IST
AR Thickened leaflet - AVR Non specific
MR Thickened leaflet IST ? -
Dabbagh [5] After 3 weeks CYC AR ? IST ? -
Fox [7] At initial presentation AR Prolapsing Ao leaflets and discrete Ao leaflet deficiency 5 Mo IST AVR Non specific
MR ? IST ? -
Anthony [2] At initial presentation AS Vegetation 3 Mo IST Lesion unchanged -
Paik [17] At initial presentation Ao vegetations Vegetation IST ?
Mishell [16] At initial presentation Ao and M vegetations Vegetations IST Died Non specific
Ramakrishnan [18] At initial presentation M masses Multiple masses in atriums and on MP Few days IST Died -
Attaran [3] 30 years after illness onset, IST? Ao and M mass, MR, MS Mass involving an Ao and an M leaflet IST MVR & AVR Non specific
Koyalakonda [13] Not at initial presentation and under treatment MS & MR
AR
M mass involving leaflet
Thickened Ao valve
IST
IST
Mass unchanged: MVR
AR progressed: AVR
Non specific
Present report At initial presentation AR Septal thickening: incomplete closure of Ao valve, thickened leaflets 4 Mo IST AVR Non specific

?: Unknown; AR: aortic regurgitation; Ao: aortic; AS: aortic stenosis; AVR: aortic valve replacement; CYC: cyclophosphamide; IST: immunosuppressive therapy; LV: left ventricular; M: mitral; Mo: months; MP: mitral prothesis; MR: mitral regurgitation; MS: mitral stenosis; MVR: mitral valve replacement.



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