We presented a woman with Carney’s syndrome. We documented recurrent left atrial myxoma in her daughter by examining her first-degree relatives. The importance of knowing the components of Carney’s syndrome, the need to examine patients with cardiac myxoma in this aspect, and investigation of the first-degree relatives of affected patients are emphasized.
The patient’s first-degree relatives were examined by history, physical examination, and echocardiography. The father and mother of the patient were the children of siblings. The mother who died at 32 years of age was known to have goitre and a cerebrovascular event at age 20. The mother had two sisters and four brothers. Of these, only one sister had an operation in the breast for myxoid mammary fibroadenoma. The other family members of the father and mother were found to have no findings of Carney’s syndrome.
The index patient had four daughters. The eldest one was 18 years old and had mucocutaneous brown spotty pigmentation in her face and body, and euthyroid goitre. Another was 17 years old and had mucocutaneous spotty pigmentation in her face and body and hyperthyroid goitre. Echocardiography revealed mitral valve prolapsus in both sisters. The youngest daughter who was eight years old had spotty mucocutaneous pigmentation in her face.
The third daughter was 13 years old and had spotty pigmentation in her face and body and euthyroid goitre. She was operated on for a left atrial myxoma four years before in our clinic (Fig. 2a). Extensive resection with a biatrial approach was performed and the atrial septal defect was repaired with a patch. However, she was found to have a recurrent left atrial myxoma at the time her mother was examined (Fig. 2b).
The mother and her third daughter were operated on for recurrent left atrial myxomas. The lesions were both very extensive in the left atrium, multicentric, and wide-based. One interesting point was that the recurrent myxoma in the mother originated from the endothelium over the patch placed in the first operation. Biopsy of specimens revealed no malignant pathology, but classic features of myxoma.
There are several case reports of complex or syndrome form, namely Carney’s syndrome, which comprises skin lesions (ephelides, blue nevi, lentigines), skin myxomas, myxoid mammary fibroadenomas, Cushing’s syndrome, adrenocortical hyperplasia, pituitary tumors, testicular, thyroid and uterine lesions.[6] Awareness to these findings is very important. Appreciation of mucocutaneous features seen in the majority of patients with Carney’s syndrome can help detect potentially serious cardiac and endocrine tumors. This mucocutaneous pigmentation was present in both the mother and her daughter.
Proposed explanations for myxoma recurrence include incomplete removal (either of the primary site and/or failure to recognize multiple tumors initially), malignant transformation, intracardiac seeding of tumor cells, or multiple foci of tumor development.[6] Recurrence can be seen in these patients because of multigrowth potential of the tumor even after a complete resection including the base of attachment, avoiding detachment of the tumor fragment, and exploration of all the heart cavities for possible multiple origins.[7] This was the case in both of our patients. This may be due to intracardiac seeding of tumor cells or multiple foci of tumor development besides being a component of Carney’s syndrome in our cases.
In our case, by examining the first-degree relatives of our patient, we detected recurrent left atrial myxoma in her daughter. This shows the importance of close follow-up of these patients.
In conclusion, Carney’s syndrome is much more than a cardiocutaneous disorder. Adding our experience with this family to that in the literature,[3,8] we make the following recommendations for the management of affected patients. (i) Patients with the diagnosis of myxoma should be investigated for the components of Carney’s syndrome. (ii) Medical evaluation of first-degree relatives is needed whenever a patient is recognized to have a myxoma, especially recurrent cases. (iii) Close postoperative follow-up is necessary to monitor recurrences of cardiac myxoma. (iv) In cases of young patients, multiple myxomas in one or two chambers, complex myxoma, localization outside the left atrium, and recurrent myxomas, the patient and his/her first-degree relatives should be examined for Carney’s syndrome.
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