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Clinical Significance of Angiographically Detectable Neovascularity in Patients with Cardiac Myxoma
Author(s) -
Xiaofan Peng,
Yichao Xiao,
Yanan Guo,
Zhaowei Zhu,
Liyan Liao,
XiaoBo Liao,
Xinqun Hu,
Zhenfei Fang,
Xuping Li,
Shenghua Zhou
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
cardiovascular innovations and applications
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2009-8782
pISSN - 2009-8618
DOI - 10.15212/cvia.2021.0025
Subject(s) - medicine , myxoma , cardiology , ejection fraction , coronary artery disease , clinical significance , pathological , artery , left atrial myxoma , circumflex , coronary arteries , heart failure , atrial fibrillation , left atrium
Background: Myxomas are the most common primary cardiac tumors. Angiographically detectable neovascularity (ADN) of myxoma is increasingly being reported as a result of the use of coronary angiography (CAG) to detect coronary artery disease. However, the clinical significance of these findings is not fully understood. Methods: We enrolled 59 patients with cardiac myxoma who also underwent CAG between January 2013 and October 2018. Patients were followed up for a mean of 28.9 months (range 1‐69 months). The clinical features, echocardiography measurements, pathological examination findings, CAG results, and outcomes during follow-up were compared between patients with ADN and patients without ADN. Results: ADN was found in 25 patients (42.4%). The arteries feeding the ADN included the right coronary artery ( n =15), the left circumflex coronary artery ( n =7), and both arteries ( n =3). The patients with ADN had a higher proportion of eosinophils (3.2% vs. 2.2%, P=0.03) and higher low-density lipoprotein cholesterol level (2.7 mmol/L vs. 2.2 mmol/L, P=0.02). Myxoma pedicles were more likely to be located in the interatrial septum in patients with ADN (96% vs. 73.5%, P=0.02). No significant correlation was observed between the groups in clinical manifestations, atrial arrhythmia, myxoma size, cardiac chamber size, left ventricular ejection fraction, and the prevalence of complication with coronary artery disease [16% in the ADN group ( n =4) vs. 20.6% in the non-ADN group ( n =7), P=0.66]. However, patients with ADN tended to have a lower incidence of major adverse cardiac and cerebrovascular events on long-term follow-up (0% vs. 14.7%, P=0.07). Conclusion: CAG-detected ADN in patients with cardiac myxoma is associated with a borderline lower rate of major adverse cardiac and cerebrovascular events.

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