Article Text
Abstract
OBJECTIVE To evaluate survival and complication free survival in patients with Marfan’s syndrome and to assess the possible influence of recently revised guidelines for prophylactic aortic root replacement in these patients.
METHODS 130 patients who had been attending one institution over 14 years were evaluated. Kaplan–Meier analysis was performed in 125 patients who did not present with aortic root dissection as the first sign of Marfan’s syndrome, with the end points: death, aortic root dissection, and prophylactic aortic root replacement after diagnosis. In the patients developing aortic root dissection, current guidelines for prophylactic aortic root replacement were retrospectively applied to investigate the number of dissections that could theoretically have been prevented. The guidelines were: (1) aortic root diameter ⩾ 55 mm, (2) positive family history of aortic dissections and aortic root diameter ⩾ 50 mm, and (3) aortic root growth ⩾ 2 mm/year. Outcomes following emergency surgery (15 patients) and prophylactic surgery of the aortic root (30 patients) were compared.
RESULTS Five and 10 year survival after diagnosis was 95% and 88%, and the five and 10 year complication free survival was 78% and 66%, respectively. Thirteen patients developed dissection, 30 underwent prophylactic repair, and 82 had an uncomplicated course. Eleven dissections could theoretically have been prevented by application of the current guidelines. Five year survival following emergency and prophylactic repair of the aortic root was 51%, and 97%, respectively.
CONCLUSIONS Survival in the Marfan’s syndrome in the past 14 years seems satisfactory; with application of current guidelines, it has probably even improved. However, because of the high fatality rate in Marfan patients developing aortic root dissection, more extensive screening for Marfan’s syndrome and a search for additional risk factors are desirable.
- Marfan’s syndrome
- aortic root dissection
- survival
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Prognosis in patients with Marfan’s syndrome is mainly determined by aortic complications, especially of the aortic root.1-5 Clinical management is primarily aimed at the prevention of dissection of aortic root aneurysms, as these complications are associated with a high mortality.6-8 Improvements in surgical techniques during recent decades have facilitated the prophylactic replacement of the aortic root with a composite graft (the Bentall procedure).7-10 Application of this technique was probably the main reason for the increase in survival from 40 years in 1970 to approximately 60 years in 1990.3 ,5 Prophylactic replacement of the aortic root was originally performed when it had reached a diameter of 60 mm (previous guidelines).11-13Recently, new guidelines have been developed and prophylactic surgery is now recommended at an aortic root diameter of ⩾ 55 mm in adults, at an aortic root diameter ⩾ 50 mm in children, and in adults with a family history of aortic dissection, and when excessive aortic root growth occurs (current guidelines).13-17 In only one study has excessive aortic root growth been quantitatively defined as an annual increase in aortic root ratio of ⩾ 5%, representing approximately 2 mm/year in adults with Marfan’s syndrome.17 In children with Marfan’s syndrome, excessive aortic root growth is even more difficult to quantify because of concomitant physiological aortic root growth.18-23
The influence of revised guidelines on survival and complication free survival is still unknown. Accordingly, our aims in this study were first, to determine survival and complication free survival in the patients who were diagnosed as having Marfan’s syndrome in our institution between 1984 and 1998; second, to assess the possible influence of current guidelines for prophylactic repair, when applied retrospectively to the patients who developed aortic root dissection in the period from 1984 to 1998; third, to investigate possible differences in Marfan related features and aortic root growth between patients without complications, prophylactically operated patients, and patients who developed aortic root dissection; and finally, to determine differences in survival between patients who were operated prophylactically and patients who underwent emergency surgery for aortic root dissection.
Methods
PATIENT POPULATION
From 1984 until 1998, 130 patients were diagnosed as having Marfan’s syndrome by the multidisciplinary screening team of our institution. Diagnosis was performed according to the Berlin criteria during the period 1986–1996 and according to the revised Ghent criteria thereafter.24 ,25 Of the 130 patients, five presented with aortic root dissection as the first symptom of Marfan’s syndrome and they were subsequently excluded from follow up analysis. Survival and complication free survival of the remaining 125 patients were assessed with well defined end points—death, death or aortic root dissection, and death or aortic root dissection or prophylactic replacement of the aortic root.
RISK ASSESSMENT
For risk assessment with respect to aortic root complications, the 125 patients were divided into three groups:
Group A: no aortic root dissection or aortic root surgery (n = 82, age range 0 to 68 years);
Group B: prophylactic replacement of the aortic root (n = 30, age range 3 to 49 years);
Group C: dissection of the aortic root (n = 13, age range 11 to 55 years).
Table 1 shows the clinical characteristics of the patients. All aortic root diameters were measured by M mode or cross sectional echocardiography, which can be used interchangeably as we have shown in an earlier study.26 The occurrence of Marfan related cardiovascular, ocular, skeletal, integumentary, and pulmonary features, the presence of affected family members with or without aortic dissection, and annual aortic root growth rate were compared in the three groups. Annual aortic root growth was assessed in 85 patients, who were older than 16 years of age, and in whom at least two sequential measurements of aortic root diameter were available. In the group without aortic complications (group A, n = 52), the most recent measurements were analysed, whereas in the prophylactically operated group (group B, n = 21) and in the group of patients who developed aortic root dissection (group C, n = 12) the final measurements before surgery or dissection were analysed. Aortic root growth was expressed as the slope of the linear correlation between aortic root size and age.
CURRENT GUIDELINES
The patients who developed aortic root dissection were retrospectively analysed in relation to the current guidelines for prophylactic replacement of the aortic root—that is, aortic root diameter ⩾ 55 mm; aortic root diameter ⩾ 50 mm and a family history of aortic dissection; or growth of the aortic root diameter of ⩾ 2 mm/year
We subsequently investigated how the current guidelines might hypothetically have prevented aortic root dissection in these patients.
COMPARISON OF SURVIVAL AFTER PROPHYLACTIC AND EMERGENCY SURGERY
Survival of the patients who underwent prophylactic replacement and emergency repair of the aortic root (by means of the button Bentall procedure27) was compared. The five patients who presented with aortic root dissection as the first symptom of Marfan’s syndrome were reincluded only for this analysis (n = 130).
STATISTICAL ANALYSIS
Survival and event free survival were calculated by Kaplan–Meier analysis. The occurrence of Marfan related features was compared in the three groups by the Fisher exact probability test. Differences in aortic root growth rates between the three groups were assessed using the Mann–Whitney U test. A probability (p) value of < 0.05 was considered significant.
Results
SURVIVAL AND EVENT FREE SURVIVAL
Mean (SD) follow up of the 125 patients was 8.9 (4.0) years. Eleven patients died, all as a result of cardiovascular complications, and nine (82%) as a direct result of aortic root dissection. Cumulative survival and complication free survival during 16 years were assessed by Kaplan–Meier analysis (fig 1). Five year and 10 year cumulative survival was 95% and 88%, respectively. After five and 10 years, the complication free survival was 78% and 66%, respectively.
RISK ASSESSMENT
For risk analysis, the patients were divided into three groups. Figure 2 shows the number of patients in the three groups schematically.
Of the 82 patients in whom no aortic root complication occurred (66%), one patient died of heart failure owing to severe mitral regurgitation at the age of 17 months and one patient developed type B dissection at 47 years.
Thirty patients (24%) underwent prophylactic aortic root surgery. One patient in this group died of cardiac arrest postoperatively at the age of 12 years, three patients developed aortic complications at other levels of the aorta, and in one patient reoperation on the aortic root was necessary.
Of the 13 patients who developed aortic root dissection (10%), three died before reaching hospital. Five of the remaining 10 patients died perioperatively and one patient died six years after emergency surgery from rupture of an abdominal aortic aneurysm. Two patients developed type B dissection before aortic root dissection occurred. Of the five patients who survived emergency surgery, four developed aneurysms in the aortic arch or the descending aorta, in two cases leading to further surgical intervention.
The occurrence of Marfan related clinical features was compared between the three groups. In patients without aortic root complications (group A) and in those with prophylactic repair (group B), lens subluxation was present in 45% (37/82) and 53% (16/30), respectively. In patients with aortic root dissection (group C), there was significantly less lens subluxation (1/13; p < 0.05 v group A; p < 0.01 v group B). No significant differences in other Marfan related phenotypic features or in familial involvement could be demonstrated between the three groups.
Table 2 shows the clinical characteristics of the 43 patients who underwent aortic root surgery. Prophylactic aortic root replacement was performed at a mean age of 28 years and at a mean aortic root diameter of 60 mm, whereas aortic dissection developed at a mean age of 35 years and at a mean aortic root diameter of 53 mm.
AORTIC ROOT GROWTH
Mean aortic root growth was 0.5 (0.6) mm/year in the “uncomplicated” group (group A), which was significantly different from aortic root growth in the prophylactically operated group (group B) (p < 0.0001) and in the dissected group (group C) (p < 0.01). The aortic root growth rates in groups B and C are shown in table 2.
CURRENT GUIDELINES
In the 13 patients who developed aortic root dissection, the current guidelines for prophylactic aortic root replacement were retrospectively applied in the period preceding dissection (fig 3). In five of the 13 patients, aortic root dissection occurred at a diameter ⩾ 55 mm (55 to 65 mm). Of the remaining eight patients, four developed aortic root dissection at a diameter of 50 to 55 mm with a family history of aortic dissection, and two showed excessive growth of the aortic root (⩾ 2 mm/year), presently an indication for prophylactic replacement of the aortic root in our institution. Consequently, only two patients remained in whom, theoretically, aortic root dissection could not have been prevented by the application of the current guidelines. In neither of these two patients was any known risk factor for aortic root dissection present (other than the diagnosis Marfan’s syndrome itself). The aortic root diameter of one patient had been 37 mm and of the other 52 mm for several years at the time dissection occurred. In both cases the family history was positive for Marfan’s syndrome but not for aortic dissection.
COMPARISON OF SURVIVAL AFTER PROPHYLACTIC AND EMERGENCY SURGERY
Figure 4 shows the differences in survival of patients with Marfan’s syndrome after prophylactic (n = 30) and emergency (n = 15) aortic root replacement, with a five year cumulative survival of 97% and 51%, respectively (p < 0.001). Mean age during prophylactic repair did not differ significantly from the mean age during aortic root dissection, at 28 (12) v34 (14) years; p = 0.14. Of the 30 patients who underwent prophylactic repair, one died of cardiac arrest postoperatively at the age of 12 years, one had a reoperation of the aortic root, and two underwent surgery on the descending aorta. Nine of the 15 patients (60%) who underwent emergency repair eventually died: six died perioperatively and three died several years after emergency surgery (two following complications in the aortic arch or descending aorta, and one following complications in the aortic root). Of the six remaining patients, three developed complications in the aortic arch and descending aorta, requiring surgery.
Discussion
SURVIVAL AND EVENT FREE SURVIVAL
Our aim in this study was to determine survival and event free survival in our Marfan patient population. Five and 10 year cumulative survival following diagnosis was 95% and 88%, respectively. Although long term prognosis seems reasonably good, it should be kept in mind that these figures relate to a rather young patient population (with a mean age of 21 years in our study), and that survival is far from uncomplicated in a considerable proportion of the patients. Our study showed that 34% of all diagnosed cases (43 of 125) will develop serious cardiovascular complications (varying from major cardiac surgery to death) in the following 10 years. All these findings are consistent with the results of other recent studies.4-5 ,10 ,16 Cardiovascular complications were the only cause of death, with aortic root dissection counting for 82% of overall mortality in our study. These numbers are in line with previous studies, reporting values between 71% and 100% for cardiovascular deaths, of which 80–100% are the result of aortic root dissection.3-5 ,16
COMPARISON OF SURVIVAL AFTER PROPHYLACTIC AND EMERGENCY SURGERY
Thirty of 125 patients (24%) underwent prophylactic surgery of the aortic root. Five year survival, which remained 97% after 10 years in these patients, was significantly better than in those undergoing emergency surgery for aortic root dissection (51% at five years and 31% at 10 years, respectively). These findings emphasise once again the clinical importance of early intervention in patients at risk for aortic root dissection.28
CURRENT GUIDELINES
Current recently revised clinical guidelines could in theory have prevented 11 of 13 aortic root dissections (85%) by prophylactic replacement of the aortic root, which seems to be a reasonable improvement over the clinical strategy of the past 14 years. Further lowering of the threshold—for example, from 55 to 50 mm, routinely—would have prevented only one more dissection, which does not seem to outweigh the disadvantages of prophylactic surgery in a considerable number of patients. Two patients developed aortic root dissection without any predisposing risk factors, even according to current guidelines. Aortic dissection with only moderate aortic dilatation has been observed in various Marfan studies.8 ,17 ,29-31 Therefore, investigation of other risk factors, such as aortic stiffness, remains important.32 ,33
RISK ASSESSMENT
Excessive aortic root growth has undoubtedly contributed to the decision to perform prophylactic surgery in the past 14 years. This is reflected by the high aortic root growth rates in this prophylactically operated patient group (mean 3.6 mm/year). In the group without any aortic complications, this growth was significantly less (mean 0.5 mm/year). In this population, mean aortic root growth augmented by two standard deviations was 1.7 mm/year, which seems reasonably in line with the threshold for excessive aortic root growth proposed by Leggetet al.17 Although significant differences in the prophylactically operated group were found, the group of patients developing aortic root dissection did not show excessive aortic growth (mean 1.8 mm/year). It is possible that these patients are not considered to be at risk for aortic dissection because of their only mildly accelerated aortic root growth.
In the group of patients who developed aortic root dissection, lens subluxation was less often present than in the uncomplicated and prophylactically operated patients. This phenomenon was also shown in the study by Legget et al,17and probably reflects the diagnostic importance attached to lens subluxation as a phenotypic feature in Marfan’s syndrome. Lack of this classical feature is therefore associated with delayed diagnosis and more severely affected aortas.34 Thus the age at diagnosis of dissected patients in our study population was apparently higher than in the other Marfan groups. Aortic root dilatation at the time of dissection, however, was less pronounced than in the group who underwent prophylactic repair (at the time of surgery). A possible explanation for this observation is that 12 of the 30 patients (40%) with prophylactic repair presented at the first visit with a severely dilated aortic root (52 to 100 mm) and underwent surgery soon afterwards. Hence, mean aortic root diameter in this group exceeded the mean diameter in the dissected patients. Absence of lens subluxation as a clinical feature, and high mutation frequencies (29% in our study, 44% in the study by Legget et al 17), may necessitate a more aggressive screening policy to prevent cardiovascular catastrophes in a relatively young patient population.
Relative longevity in prophylactically operated Marfan patients may unmask progressive degenerative disease of the remaining aorta, resulting in aneurysmal dilatation, dissection, and rupture of the aortic arch and descending aorta, which might influence survival.35 ,36 In our study, this was especially the case in the patients who underwent emergency surgery (four of five surviving patients), but also for the other patient groups. Evaluation of the entire aorta by computed tomography or magnetic resonance imaging has therefore become a crucial issue in the clinical follow up of Marfan patients, both before and after aortic root surgery.
STUDY LIMITATIONS
Our data relate only to clinically recognised Marfan patients. These patients occasionally withdrew from follow up, resulting in prophylactic surgery at a larger aortic root diameter than desired by the attending physician, or resulting in aortic root dissection.
The occurrence of lumbosacral dural ectasia, which was recently recognised as a major feature of Marfan’s syndrome,25 ,37was not evaluated, because these data were lacking in most patients.
Although it has been recommended that aortic root growth should be expressed in aortic ratios (relative to expected aortic root size from body surface area nomograms),13 ,17 ,19-21 only patients older than 16 years were used for aortic root growth analysis, and physiological growth is not expected to make an important contribution to increases in aortic root diameter after that age.20 ,21The normal average aortic root growth after the age of 20 years is approximately 0.85 mm/decade which seems unlikely to influence our measurements.38
The influence of β adrenergic blocking agents on aortic root growth, aortic complications, and survival was not analysed. Many of our patients were diagnosed before the beneficial effects of β adrenergic blocking agents were known and several received treatment for only a limited period of time, or were treated with several types or dosages.
CONCLUSIONS
Survival in Marfan’s syndrome seems satisfactory, although it is not complication free in many patients.
The recent revision of clinical guidelines will probably lead to a substantial reduction in aortic root dissections in patients with Marfan’s syndrome. However, a few patients will develop aortic root dissection in the absence of any known risk factor. Further improvement in prognosis of Marfan patients might be achieved by the earlier detection of Marfan patients, by the application of current clinical guidelines, by evaluation and follow up investigation of the entire aorta, and by investigation of other risk factors for aortic dissection.
Acknowledgments
MG is supported by a grant from the SORBO Heart Foundation.