| Literature DB >> 30544428 |
Michel Villatoro-Villar1,2, Michael S Bold3, Kenneth J Warrington2, Cynthia S Crowson2,4, Gaurav Goyal5, Mithun Shah5, Ronald S Go5, Matthew J Koster2.
Abstract
Erdheim-Chester disease (ECD) is a rare histiocytosis of the "L" (Langerhans) group with multisystem involvement that can affect the large and medium-sized arteries mimicking vasculitis. Aortic involvement is common but the frequency and outcome of aortic branch vessel abnormalities are less well described.Patients with ECD were retrospectively identified. Images containing information of arterial involvement within 6 months of diagnosis were considered baseline and compared to last follow-up studies. Two physicians independently reviewed the studies to evaluate for presence of abnormalities attributable to ECD. Age and sex-adjusted logistic regression models were used to examine associations between patient characteristics and vessel involvement at baseline.Among a cohort of 64 patients with ECD, 63 had baseline imaging of vascular structures. ECD involvement of at least 1 segment of the aorta was observed in 56%. Abnormalities were also observed in aortic arch branches (26%), visceral branch arteries (40%), iliofemoral arteries (31%), coronary (5%), and pulmonary (3%) arteries. Perinephric fibrosis was strongly associated with the identification of abnormalities in the thoracic aorta (OR 4.92 [1.54, 15.75]; P = .007), abdominal aorta (OR 7.57 [2.28, 25.07]; P = .001) and visceral branch arteries (OR 6.05 [1.52, 24.03]; P = .01) but not pelvic/lower extremity arteries. Complete normalization of arterial abnormalities at follow-up was only observed in 9% or less of arterial segments involved at baseline.Aortic and aortic branch vessel abnormalities are frequently observed in patients with ECD and are often asymptomatic. Partial and/or complete resolution of arterial findings is uncommon.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30544428 PMCID: PMC6310516 DOI: 10.1097/MD.0000000000013452
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Medicine (Baltimore) ISSN: 0025-7974 Impact factor: 1.817
Baseline characteristics and presentation features of patients with Erdheim–Chester disease.
Figure 1Cardiac and retroperitoneal involvement in Erdheim-Chester disease. Figure 1A: Circumferential pericardial thickening and effusion (contrast enhanced computed tomography, axial view). Figure 1B: Cardiac magnetic resonance imaging, 3 chamber triple inversion view, demonstrates pericardial thickening (arrowed brackets) and infiltration into the atrioventricular groove (dotted bracket) with circumferential encasement of the right coronary artery (arrow). Additionally, there is moderate myocardial thickening of the right ventricular free wall (bracket). Figure 1C: Right atrial pseudotumor [arrow] (cardiac magnetic resonance imaging, T1-weighted, sagittal view). Figure 1D: Bilateral perinephric fibrosis (“hairy kidney”) and circumferential abdominal periaortic thickening (contrast enhanced computed tomography, axial view).
Arterial abnormalities present at baseline imaging in patients with Erdheim–Chester disease.
Figure 2Arterial Map in Erdheim-Chester disease. Percentages show overall distribution of arterial involvement. Ao = Aorta; Ab = Abdominal.
Figure 3Arterial involvement in Erdheim-Chester Disease. Figure 3A: Asymmetric increased vascular hypermetabolism of the thoracic aorta (FDG PET/CT, axial fusion image). Figure 3B: Periadvential thickening of the left subclavian, left carotid and innominate arteries (contrast enhanced computed tomography angiography, axial view). Figure 3C: High grade stenosis with post-stenotic dilatation of the celiac artery and moderate stenosis of superior mesenteric artery (contrast enhanced computed tomography angiography, sagittal view). Figure 3D: Bilateral superficial femoral artery occlusion (arrows) with reconstitution at the level of the popliteal artery (3-dimensional maximum intensity projection, computed tomography angiography). Figure 3E: Dense atherosclerosis of the abdominal aorta (computed tomography angiography, sagittal view).
Outcome of arterial changes among patients with Erdheim–Chester disease with follow-up imaging.