Microcalcification and Thoracic Aortopathy: A Window Into Disease Severity

Author:

Fletcher Alexander J.12ORCID,Nash Jennifer1ORCID,Syed Maaz B.J.1ORCID,Macaskill Mark G.3ORCID,Tavares Adriana A.S.3,Walker Niki14ORCID,Salcudean Hannah5,Leipsic Jonathon A.5,Lim Kelvin H.H.6,Madine Jillian78,Wallace William9ORCID,Field Mark710,Newby David E.1ORCID,Bouchareb Rihab11,Seidman Michael A.12ORCID,Akhtar Riaz713,Sellers Stephanie L.5

Affiliation:

1. British Heart Foundation Centre for Cardiovascular Science (A.J.F., J.N., M.B.J.S., N.W., D.E.N.), University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom.

2. Department of Child Health, University of Glasgow, School of Medicine and Dentistry, United Kingdom (A.J.F.).

3. Edinburgh Imaging Facility, Queens Medical Research Institute (M.G.M., A.A.S.T.), University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom.

4. Scottish Adult Congenital Cardiology Service, Golden Jubilee National Hospital, Clydebank, Glasgow, United Kingdom (N.W.).

5. Department of Radiology, Division of Cardiology, Cardiovascular Translational Lab at the Centre for Heart Lung Innovation, St. Paul’s Hospital and University of British Columbia, Vancouver, Canada (H.S., J.A.L., S.L.S.).

6. Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery, Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh, United Kingdom (K.H.H.L.).

7. Institute of Systems, Molecular and Integrative Biology, Faculty of Health and Life Sciences (J.M., M.F., R.A.), University of Liverpool, United Kingdom.

8. Liverpool Centre for Cardiovascular Sciences (J.M.), University of Liverpool, United Kingdom.

9. Division of Pathology (W.W.), University of Edinburgh, United Kingdom.

10. Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery, Liverpool Heart and Chest Hospital (LCCS), United Kingdom (M.F.).

11. Department of Medicine, Cardiovascular Research Institute, Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, NY (R.B.).

12. Department of Laboratory Medicine and Pathobiology, Toronto General Hospital, Canada (M.A.S.).

13. Department of Mechanical, Materials and Aerospace Engineering, School of Engineering, University of Liverpool, United Kingdom (R.A.).

Abstract

Background: Patients with thoracic aortopathy are at increased risk of catastrophic aortic dissection, carrying with it substantial mortality and morbidity. Although granular medial calcinosis (medial microcalcification) has been associated with thoracic aortopathy, its relationship to disease severity has yet to be established. Methods: One hundred one thoracic aortic specimens were collected from 57 patients with thoracic aortopathy and 18 control subjects. Standardized histopathologic scores, immunohistochemistry, and nanoindentation (tissue elastic modulus) were compared with the extent of microcalcification on von Kossa histology and 18F-sodium fluoride autoradiography. Results: Microcalcification content was higher in thoracic aortopathy samples with mild (n=28; 6.17 [2.71–10.39]; P ≤0.00010) or moderate histopathologic degeneration (n=30; 3.74 [0.87–11.80]; P <0.042) compared with control samples (n=18; 0.79 [0.36–1.90]). Alkaline phosphatase (n=26; P =0.0019) and OPN (osteopontin; n=26; P =0.0045) staining were increased in tissue with early aortopathy. Increasingly severe histopathologic degeneration was related to reduced microcalcification (n=82; Spearman ρ, −0.51; P <0.0001)—a process closely linked with elastin loss (n=82; Spearman ρ, −0.43; P <0.0001) and lower tissue elastic modulus (n=28; Spearman ρ, 0.43; P =0.026). 18 F-sodium fluoride autoradiography demonstrated good correlation with histologically quantified microcalcification (n=66; r=0.76; P <0.001) and identified areas of focal weakness in vivo. Conclusions: Medial microcalcification is a marker of aortopathy, although progression to severe aortopathy is associated with loss of both elastin fibers and microcalcification. 18 F-sodium fluoride positron emission tomography quantifies medial microcalcification and is a feasible noninvasive imaging modality for identifying aortic wall disruption with major translational promise.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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