Severe Libman-Sacks endocarditis complicating antiphospholipid syndrome: a retrospective analysis of 23 operated cases

Autor: Nellie Bourse Chalvon, Nathalie Costedoat-Chalumeau, Jean-Loup Pennaforte, Amelie Servettaz, Camille Boulagnon Rombi, Pierre-Edouard Gavand, Maud Lekieffre, Veronique Le Guern, Nathalie Morel, Fleur Cohen Aubart, Julien Haroche, Alexis Mathian, Jean-Philippe Collet, Jean-Charles Piette, Zahir Amoura, Pauline Orquevaux
Rok vydání: 2022
Předmět:
Zdroj: Rheumatology (Oxford, England).
ISSN: 1462-0332
Popis: Objective Data on severe heart valve disease (HVD), including Libman–Sacks endocarditis, associated with SLE and/or APS requiring valvular surgery are scarce. We thus conducted a retrospective study, aimed at describing and clarifying clinical, laboratory, echocardiographic, histopathological and evolutional features of SLE and/or APS patients with severe associated-HVD. Methods An observational retrospective multicentric analysis of 23 adults with SLE and/or APS and HVD between 1996 and 2019 and available histopathological report evaluating long-term follow-up. Results Twenty-three individuals (20 females, median age 37 [range 17–76] years) were included. All had APS (thrombotic in 22, with an arterial phenotype in 15 and with catastrophic APS [CAPS] in six), and 11 (47%) had SLE. Systemic underlying disease had been diagnosed prior to HVD in 12 (52%). In 10 patients (43%), HVD was complicated by cerebral stroke prior to surgery. Twenty patients (87%) had only one pathological valve, the mitral valve in 18 patients (78%). Valvular thickening (n = 19) and valvular regurgitation (n = 19) were the most frequently reported lesions. Fifteen (62%) patients underwent mechanical valve replacement, six (26%) conservative valve repair (five were later re-operated after a median time of 1 [0–4] year), and two (9%) underwent biological valve replacement. Nine patients (39%) presented early-onset post-operative complications, including three CAPS immediately after surgery and one death. After surgery, 18 patients (78%) had normal postoperative valvular function, but almost half of the patients (43%) had post-operative neurological sequelae (median follow-up of 6 [2–20] years). Conclusion Severe HVD leading to surgery was strongly associated with thrombotic APS, especially arterial phenotypes. Half of the reported patients presented cerebral stroke complicating the HVD. Valvular surgery carried a significant risk of CAPS.
Databáze: OpenAIRE