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New clinical aspects of cardiac myxomas: A clinical and pathological reappraisal
Author(s) -
Álvaro D.B. Bordalo,
Irina Alves,
Ângelo Nobre,
Fernanda Silva,
Alberto dos Santos de Lemos,
Carlos Serpa,
Afonso Fernandes,
João Cravino
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
revista portuguesa de cardiologia (english edition)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2174-2049
DOI - 10.1016/j.repce.2012.07.003
Subject(s) - fossa ovalis , medicine , asymptomatic , myxoma , pathological , incidence (geometry) , population , retrospective cohort study , surgery , cardiology , radiology , left atrium , atrial fibrillation , optics , physics , environmental health
UNLABELLEDEasy access to echocardiography and its extensive and repeated use (as is the case in Portugal) now facilitates the early diagnosis of cardiac myxoma (CM).OBJECTIVETo re-evaluate the clinical and pathological profile of CM under current diagnostic conditions.METHODSWe performed a retrospective study of 40 patients consecutively referred for surgery (between January 2003 and January 2010) with a histologically-confirmed diagnosis of CM - 26 female (F) and 14 male (M), with a mean age of 64±12 years (range 12-81; 53% over 65, 43% over 70); 39 patients were operated (one was not operable due to major neurological deficit). Clinical characteristics, surgical protocols, follow-up records of survivors (range 1-76 months, with serial echocardiograms), and histological data were reviewed.RESULTSThe apparent incidence was 2.6 cases/million/year; the overall F/M ratio was 1.9:1 (1.3:1 in those aged over 65, similar to the general population). The CM was located in the left atrium (LA) in 92.5%, with insertion in the fossa ovalis of the interatrial septum (IAS) in 53% (only 57% of LA myxomas), and outside the IAS in 30%. The mean size was 4.6 x 3.7cm. Asymptomatic tumors occurred in 48% of the total population (sessile and/or atypically inserted in 74%; 63% of large size, over 3 x 3cm), 61% were in patients referred in the last 25 months of the study; 23% of patients showed constitutional symptoms (all with very large CMs - mean 6.7 x 5.1cm), 35% had hemodynamic/obstructive symptoms, and 15% presented with embolic events. There was evidence of CM-related mitral valve (MV) disease in 20% of patients, resulting in moderate to severe mitral regurgitation requiring associated MV surgery in 13%. Significant comorbidities were present in 69%. Surgical procedures included simple excision in 74%; septoplasty/atrioplasty associated with extensive resection of the insertion site in 26%; and combined surgery (CM excision plus other procedures) in 28%. There were significant postoperative complications in 38%. In-hospital mortality was 10%; postoperative mortality was 7.7%. Mean follow-up was 30 months (100% of survivors, 44% for >2 years); late mortality was 5.6% and no CM recurrences were observed.CONCLUSIONS(1) CM has a higher incidence than described in the literature and mainly affects patients aged over 65; the reported predominance of female patients disappears after the age of 65. (2) Most CM cases are now asymptomatic at presentation as a result of earlier diagnosis. (3) CM is the cause of MV disease requiring surgical correction in more than 10% of cases, and is associated with significant postoperative mortality, mainly due to the presence of comorbidities.

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