Aortic and arterial manifestations and clinical features in TGFB3 -related heritable thoracic aortic disease: results from the Montalcino Aortic Consortium

Michelle Su Anne Lim, Dong Chuan Guo, Walter Velasco Torrez, Andrew Lai, Jonathan Schweber, Nikita Garg, Julie Fleischer, Catherine Boileau, Julie De Backer, Artur Evangelista, Guillaume Jondeau, Carine Le Goff, Olivier Milleron, Laura Muiño-Mosquera, Shaine Morris, Maral Ouzounian, Elena Cervi, Julien Marcadier, Anthony Caffarelli, Sherene ShalhubReed Pyeritz, Angela Yetman, Dianna Milewicz, Alan C. Braverman

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Background Pathogenic variants in TGFB3 may lead to a syndromic genetic aortopathy. Heritable thoracic aortic disease (HTAD) and arterial events may occur in TGFB3-related disease but there are limited outcomes data on vascular events in this condition. Methods Clinical data, phenotypical features and aortic outcomes in individuals with pathogenic/likely pathogenic (P/LP) TGFB3 variants enrolled in the Montalcino Aortic Consortium registry were reviewed. Results 34 individuals (56% male, median age 42 years, IQR 17-49, range 3-74 years) with P/LP TGFB3 variants were studied. Craniofacial, cutaneous and musculoskeletal features seen in Loeys-Dietz syndrome were variably present. Extra-aortic cardiovascular features included arterial tortuosity (25%), extra-aortic arterial aneurysms (6%) and mitral valve prolapse (21%). Aortic dilation (Z-Score>2) was present in 10 individuals (29%) and aortic dissection occurred in 2 (6%). Type A aortic dissection occurred in two patients (aged between 55 years and 60 years), and one of these patients experienced a type B aortic dissection 6 years later. Seven adults (median age 62 years, range 32-69 years) with aortic root dilation (41-49 mm) are being followed. No patients have undergone prophylactic aortic surgery. Twenty-five per cent of children have aortic dilation. Sixty-eight per cent of the entire cohort remains free of aortic disease. No deaths have occurred. Conclusions TGFB3-related HTAD is characterised by late-onset and less penetrant thoracic aortic and arterial disease compared with other transforming growth factor β HTAD. Based on our data, a larger aortic size threshold for prophylactic aortic surgery is appropriate in patients with TGFB3-related HTAD compared with HTAD due to TGFBR1 or TGFBR2 variants.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)82-88
Number of pages7
JournalJournal of Medical Genetics
Volume62
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 27 2025

Keywords

  • Aneurysm
  • Cardiovascular Diseases
  • Phenotype
  • Vascular Diseases

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