Volume 128, Issue 4 , Pages 552-561, October 2004
Clinical pulmonary autograft valves: Pathologic evidence of adaptive remodeling in the aortic site☆
Abstract
Objective
We studied the pathologic features, cellular phenotypes, and matrix remodeling of clinical pulmonary-to-aortic valve transplants functioning up to 6 years.
Methods
Nine autografts and associated vascular walls early (2-10 weeks) and late (3-6 years) postoperatively were examined by using routine morphologic methods and immunohistochemistry. In 4 cases autograft and homograft cusps were obtained from the same patients.
Results
Autografts had near-normal trilaminar cuspal structure and collagen architecture and viable valvular interstitial and endothelial cells throughout the time course. In contrast, cusps of homografts used to replace the pulmonary valves in the same patients were devitalized. In early autograft explants, 19.3% ± 2.4% of cuspal interstitial cells were myofibroblasts expressing α-actin. In contrast, myofibroblasts comprised only 6.0% ± 1.1% of cells in late explants and 2.5% ± 0.4% and 4.6% ± 0.8% of cells in normal pulmonary and aortic valves, respectively (P < .05). In early autografts only 12.0% ± 4.6% of endothelial cells expressed the systemic arterial endothelial cell marker EphrinB2, whereas later explants had 85.6% ± 5.4% of endothelial cells expressing EphrinB2 (P < .05). In early autografts 43.8% ± 8.8% of interstitial cells expressed metalloproteinase 13, whereas late autografts had 11.4% ± 2.7% of interstitial cells expressing matrix metalloproteinase 13 (P < .05). Collagen content in autografts was comparable with that of normal valves and was higher than that seen in homograft valves (P < .005). However, autograft walls were damaged, with granulation tissue (early) and scarring, with focal loss of normal smooth muscle cells, elastin, and collagen (late).
Conclusions
The structure of pulmonary valves transplanted to the systemic circulation evolved toward that of normal aortic valves. Key processes in this remodeling included onset of a systemic endothelial cell phenotype and reversible plasticity of fibroblast-like valvular interstitial cells to myofibroblasts.
Keywords: 35
☆ Supported in part by National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute grant PO1 HL-48743 (to Dr Peter Libby).
PII: S0022-5223(04)00641-5
doi:10.1016/j.jtcvs.2004.04.016
© 2004 The American Association for Thoracic Surgery. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Volume 128, Issue 4 , Pages 552-561, October 2004
