(Other synonyms: Bicuspid aortic valve stenosis, aortic valve disease)
Bicuspid (or bicommissural) aortic valve (BAV) describes an aortic valve with two rather than three leaflets. It is frequently an antecedent to aortic valve stenosis or insufficiency and is often associated with other cardiovascular malformations, including aortic root dilation (1). This malformation may have normal valve function but due to associated secondary valve and aortic complications, such as calcific aortic valve disease and aortic dilation, valve decompensation may occur (2). The consequences of this condition may have serious long term health risks including progressive aortic valve disease (stenosis or regurgitation) and thoracic aortic aneurysm and dissection (3). Cystic medial necrosis plays an important role in the pathogenesis of BAV, and is associated with increased metalloproteinase activity and apoptosis of vascular smooth muscle cells (4).
A prevalence of 0.5% to 2.0% has been estimated, making BAV the most common cardiovascular malformation in humans (5, 6). In children, 70-85% of stenotic aortic valves are bicuspid, compared to at least 50% in adults (7, 8). If there are no associated congenital defects or secondary pathologies, BAV functions well, unlike other types of left heart obstruction (coarctation and interrupted aortic arch).
Late cardiac complications due to BAV were approximately 40% at a mean age of 52 years in the Olmsted County study (9). Clinical features of Turner syndrome (e.g. short stature in females with webbed neck and broad chest) or Williams syndrome (e.g. elfin facies, mild retardation) associated with other malformations suggest the possibility of BAV. The most common abnormal heart sound with BAV is a systolic ejection click (10).
Diagnosis is based on clinical assessment to identify symptoms, echocardiogram, electrocardiogram, chest radiogram, integration of septal and color Doppler with two-dimensional echocardiography, angiography by retrograde femoral arterial catheterization and angio-NMR (nuclear magnetic resonance), spin-echo MR imaging, CT, diagnostic catheterization and genetic testing.
Differential diagnosis should consider aortic coarctation, interruption of the aortic arch and hypoplastic left heart syndrome.
BAV has autosomal dominant inheritance with incomplete penetrance and variable expressivity (3).
Aortic valve disease 1 (AOVD1, OMIM disease 109730) -
Aortic valve disease 2 (AOVD2, OMIM disease 614823) -
Marfan syndrome (MFS, OMIM disease 154700) -
Loeys-Dietz syndrome 1,2 and 4 (LDS1, LDS2 and LDS4, OMIM diseases: 609192, 610168 and 614816) -
Andersen-Tawil syndrome (ATS, OMIM disease 170390) -
Aortic aneurysm, familial thoracic 6 (AAT6, OMIM disease 611788) -
Other research associates
Pathogenic variants may include missense, nonsense, splicing, small indels, small insertions and deletions, gross insertions and deletions, and complex rearrangements.
To determine the gene defect responsible for the disease;
To confirm clinical diagnosis;
To assess the recurrence risk and perform genetic counselling for at-risk/affected individuals.
The test is listed in the Orphanet database and is offered by 12 accredited medical genetic laboratories in the EU, and in the GTR database, offered by 1 accredited medical genetic laboratories in the US.
Guidelines for clinical use of the test are described in “Genetics Home Reference” (
Clinically distinguishable syndromes can be analyzed by sequencing only those genes known to be associated with that specific disease using Sanger or Next Generation Sequencing (NGS); if the results are negative, or more generally if clinical signs are ambiguous for diagnosis, a multi-gene NGS panel is used to detect nucleotide variations in coding exons and flanking introns of the above genes.
Potentially causative variants and region with low coverage are Sanger-sequenced. Sanger sequencing is also used for family segregation studies.
Multiplex Ligation Probe Amplification (MLPA) is used to detect duplications and deletions in
To perform molecular diagnosis, a single sample of biological material is normally sufficient. This may be 1 ml peripheral blood in a sterile tube with 0.5 ml K3EDTA or 1 ml saliva in a sterile tube with 0.5 ml ethanol 95%. Sampling rarely has to be repeated.
Gene-disease associations and the interpretation of genetic variants are rapidly developing fields. It is therefore possible that the genes mentioned in this note may change as new scientific data is acquired. It is also possible that genetic variants today defined as of “unknown or uncertain significance” may acquire clinical importance.
Identification of pathogenic variants in the above genes confirms the clinical diagnosis and is an indication for family studies.
A pathogenic variant is known to be causative for a given genetic disorder based on previous reports or predicted to be causative based on the loss of protein function or expected significant damage to protein or protein/protein interactions. In this way it is possible to obtain a molecular diagnosis in new/other subjects, establish the risk of recurrence in family members and plan preventive and/or therapeutic measures.
Detection of a variant of unknown or uncertain significance (
The absence of variations in the genomic regions investigated does not exclude a clinical diagnosis but suggests the possibility of:
alterations that cannot be identified by sequencing, such as large rearrangements that cause loss (deletion) or gain (duplication) of extended gene fragments;
sequence variations in gene regions not investigated by this test, such as regulatory regions (5’ and 3’ UTR) and deep intronic regions;
variations in other genes not investigated by the present test.
Unexpected results may emerge from the test, for example information regarding consanguinity, absence of family correlation or other genetically based diseases.
In autosomal dominant transmission, the probability that an affected carrier transmit the variant to his/her children is 50% in any pregnancy, irrespective of the sex of the child conceived.
Incomplete penetrance and/or variable expressivity may influence the manifestation of clinical symptoms in individuals harboring a disease-causing variation.
The test is limited by current scientific knowledge regarding the gene and disease.
NGS Analytical sensitivity >99.99%, with a minimum coverage of 10X; Analytical specificity 99.99%.
SANGER Analytical sensitivity >99.99%; Analytical specificity 99.99%.
MLPA Analytical sensitivity >99.99%; Analytical specificity 99.99%.
Clinical sensitivity: the variations in the aforementioned genes are associated with BAV, but in many cases, these are individual variations (identified in one or few families) and total epidemiological data is therefore not available. Clinical sensitivity will be estimated based on internal cases (20).
Clinical specificity: data not available.
The genetic test is appropriate when:
the patient meets the diagnostic criteria for BAV;
the sensitivity of the test is greater than or equal to that of tests described in the literature.
Clinical management | Utility |
---|---|
Confirmation of clinical diagnosis | Yes |
Differential diagnosis | Yes |
Couple risk assessment | Yes |
Availability of clinical trials can be checked on-line at |