Losartan was able to decrease blood pressure in patients with MFS but not to limit aortic dilatation during a 3-year period in patients >10 years old. β-Blocker therapy alone should therefore remain the standard first line therapy in these patients.
Cardiovascular complications in Turner's syndrome are the most common cause of excess early mortality, with a life expectancy that may be reduced by more than 10 years. Congenital cardiac abnormalities are described in approximately one third of patients. These abnormalities are mostly left heart obstructions, the most common of which are bicuspid aortic valve (16%) and coarctation of the aorta (11%). Dilatations of the ascending aorta are often described and may occur in isolation from any heart disease, suggesting a vasculopathy specific to the syndrome, probably predisposed to by extracardiac risk factors such as oestrogen deficiency, diabetes, dysplidaemia and overweight. The most feared complication is aortic dissection with around a 100 cases, described at average age of approximately 35-years-old. This is believed to complicate 2% of induced pregnancies. Hypertension (HBP) usually essential, affects up to 50% of patients with Turner's syndrome. This is an important risk factor for cardiovascular complications and justifies aggressive treatment. On the other hand, retrospective studies have not demonstrated adverse cardiological effects due to growth hormone treatments. Patients with Turner's syndrome merit regular cardiology follow-up from childhood onwards, particularly if they have treated heart disease. The merits of preventative treatments for aortic dilatation have not been demonstrated in Turner's syndrome and justify prospective trials.
Thoracic aortic aneurysm and dissection (TAAD) is an autosomal-dominant disorder with major life-threatening complications. The disease displays great genetic heterogeneity with some forms allelic to Marfan and Loeys-Dietz syndrome, and an important number of cases still remain unexplained at the molecular level. Through whole-exome sequencing of affected members in a large TAAD-affected family, we identified the c.472C>T (p.Arg158(∗)) nonsense mutation in MFAP5 encoding the extracellular matrix component MAGP-2. This protein interacts with elastin fibers and the microfibrillar network. Mutation screening of 403 additional probands identified an additional missense mutation of MFAP5 (c.62G>T [p.Trp21Leu]) segregating with the disease in a second family. Functional analyses performed on both affected individual's cells and in vitro models showed that these two mutations caused pure or partial haploinsufficiency. Thus, alteration of MAGP-2, a component of microfibrils and elastic fibers, appears as an initiating mechanism of inherited TAAD.
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