First report from the European registry for anomalous aortic origin of coronary artery (EURO-AAOCA)

Christoph Grani,Anselm W. Stark,Mauro Lo Rito,Alessandro Frigiola, Matthias Siepe, Bertrand Tchana,Alberto Cipriani,Alessandro Zorzi, Valeria Pergola, Domenico Crea,George Sarris, Elephterios Protopapas,Domenico Sirico, Giovanni Di Salvo,Cinzia Pegoraro,Patrizio Sarto,Katrien Francois,Alessandra Frigiola, Alessandra Cristofaletti, Ryan E. Accord,Alvaro Gonzalez Rocafort, Geoffroy Debeco,Massimo Padalino

INTERDISCIPLINARY CARDIOVASCULAR AND THORACIC SURGERY(2024)

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Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Anomalous aortic origin of a coronary artery (AAOCA) is a group of rare congenital heart defects with various clinical presentations. The lifetime-risk of an individual living with AAOCA is unknown, and data from multicentre registries are urgently needed to adapt current recommendations and guide optimal patient management. The European AAOCA Registry (EURO-AAOCA) aims to assess differences with regard to AAOCA management between centres. METHODS: EURO-AAOCA is a prospective, multicentre registry including 13 European centres. Herein, we evaluated differences in clinical presentations and management, treatment decisions and surgical outcomes across centres from January 2019 to June 2023. RESULTS: A total of 262 AAOCA patients were included, with a median age of 33 years (12-53) with a bimodal distribution. One hundred thirty-nine (53.1%) were symptomatic, whereas chest pain (n = 74, 53.2%) was the most common complaint, followed by syncope (n = 21, 15.1%). Seven (5%) patients presented with a myocardial infarction, 2 (1.4%) with aborted sudden cardiac death. Right-AAOCA was most frequent (150, 57.5%), followed by left-AAOCA in 51 (19.5%), and circumflex AAOCA in 20 (7.7%). There were significant differences regarding diagnostics between age groups and across centres. Seventy-four (28.2%) patients underwent surgery with no operative deaths; minor postoperative complications occurred in 10 (3.8%) cases. CONCLUSIONS: Currently, no uniform agreement exists among European centres with regard to diagnostic protocols and clinical management for AAOCA variants. Although surgery is a safe procedure in AAOCA, future longitudinal outcome data will hopefully shed light on how to best decide towards optimal selection of patients undergoing revascularization versus conservative treatment.
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Key words
AAOCA,Europe,Multicentre,Prospective,Operative outcomes
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