Background: Acoramidis is a novel, potent, investigational, transthyretin (TTR) stabilizer under development for the treatment of TTR amyloidosis that results in near-complete (≥90%) TTR stabilization. In a phase 3 study, ATTRibute-CM, acoramidis demonstrated improved clinical outcomes in participants with transthyretin amyloid cardiomyopathy (ATTR-CM), including a 50% reduction in the risk of CVH compared to placebo over 30 months. The study also demonstrated that cardiovascular hospitalization (CVH) during the study predicted a higher subsequent mortality in participants with ATTR-CM.
Hypothesis: CVH portends a higher risk of mortality in participants with ATTR-CM. Since acoramidis reduces CVH, it can improve the prognosis of participants with ATTR-CM.
Aim: To evaluate the relationship between CVH and survival in the acoramidis group within ATTRibute-CM.
Methods: In this post-hoc analysis, the relationship between those with or without CVH and survival was analyzed within the acoramidis treatment group using the Kaplan-Meier (KM) estimator method.
Results: Demographics and baseline disease characteristics were mostly comparable between acoramidis-treated participants with and without CVH, although participants with CVH had a higher baseline NT-proBNP and lower eGFR. At Month 30, in acoramidis-treated participants, those without any CVH (n=300) had a higher survival [86.8% (95% CI = 82.2, 90.3)] versus 62.4% (95% CI = 52.6, 70.7) in those who had any CVH (n=109); p<0.0001 from log-rank test (Figure).
Conclusion: In the ATTRibute-CM study, pts without any CVH receiving acoramidis have a higher survival rate. CVHs remain a powerful predictor of mortality. This reinforces the importance of an effective therapy that reduces CVH and in turn may improve survival in patients with ATTR-CM.