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Ten-Year Clinical Observation of Immunoglobulin G4-Related Coronary Periarteritis with Aneurysms.

Kazuhiro NittaMasaki HamamotoTakashi FujiiTomoki ShokawaJunichi Zaitsu
Published in: International heart journal (2023)
Coronary periarteritis with aneurysms has been reported as a cardiovascular manifestation of immunoglobulin G4 (IgG4) -related disease. We report a 10-year clinical observation of a patient with IgG4-related coronary periarteritis (IgG4-rCP) characterized by multiple thickening of periarterial tissue and coronary artery aneurysms (CAAs).A 60-year-old man with a history of IgG4-related autoimmune pancreatitis had an incidental detection of a total of 5 tumor-like lesions surrounding the right and left coronary arteries on coronary computed tomography angiography (CCTA) in 2012. Among them, 3 lesions were located at the middle to the distal portions of the right coronary artery (RCA) and the most proximal lesion was accompanied by a CAA. Although corticosteroid therapy was continued, 4-year follow-up of CCTA in 2016 showed the most proximal lesion gradually increased from 33 to 45 mm and the CAA enlarged from 9 to 22 mm. In order to avoid aneurysmal rupture, the patient underwent resection of the most proximal lesion with an enlarged aneurysm concomitant with coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG). Histopathological findings were coincident with IgG4-rCP. CCTA in 2018, however, showed the remaining distal tumor-like lesion of RCA had slightly enlarged and a new CAA developed despite the corticosteroid therapy. Follow-up CCTA in 2022 revealed the CAA increased to 13 mm, which showed rapid enlargement by 4 mm/year. A second operation through a re-median sternotomy was planned. The residual lesions with the CAA were resected followed by CABG. The other lesions at the left coronary artery remained stable without aneurysmal change, but careful follow-up has been continued.
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