Identification of Prognostic Markers in Transthyretin and AL Cardiac Amyloidosis

Key Information
Source
Amyloid: The International Journal of Experimental and Clinical Investigation
Year
2016
summary/abstract

Background:

The prognosis of amyloidosis is known to depend heavily on cardiac function and may be improved by identifying patients at highest risk for adverse cardiac events.

Aims:

Identify predictors of mortality in patients with cardiac light-chain amyloidosis (AL), hereditary transthyretin amyloidosis (m-TTR), or wild-type transthyretin amyloidosis (WT-TTR) to prompt physician to refer these patients to dedicated centers.

Methods and Results:

Observational study. About 266 patients referred for suspected cardiac amyloidosis (CA) in two French university centers were included. About 198 patients had CA (AL = 118, m-TTR = 57, and WT-TTR = 23). Their median (25th-75th percentile) age, NT-proBNP left ventricular ejection fraction were, respectively, 68 years (59-76), 2339 pg mL-1 (424-5974), and 60% (48-66). About 31% were in NYHA class III-IV. Interventricular septal thickness was greater in the m-TTR and WT-TTR groups than in the AL group (p 0.0001). Median follow-up in survivor was 26 months (15-44) and 87 (44%) patients died. By multivariate analysis, independent predictors of mortality for AL amyloidosis were the following: age, cardiac output and NT-proBNP; for TTR amyloidosis was: NT-proBNP. When all amyloidosis were combined NT-proBNP, low cardiac output and pericardial effusion were independently associated with mortality.

Conclusion:

NT-proBNP is a strong prognosticator in the three types of cardiac amyloidosis. High NT-proBNP, low cardiac output, and pericardial effusion at the time of screening should prompt physician to refer the patients to amyloidosis referral center.

Abstract Source
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27647161
Full Text Source
https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/13506129.2016.1221815?journalCode=iamy20
DOI
10.1080/13506129.2016.1221815
Pubdate
2016
Authors
Damy T, Jaccard A, Guellich A, Lavergne D, Galat A, Deux JF, Hittinger L, Dupuis J, Frenkel V, Rigaud C, Plante-Bordeneuve V, Bodez D, Mohty D
Organisation
Henri Mondor Teaching Hospital, France; University Paris-East (UPEC) School of Medicine, France; GRC Amyloid Research Institute, France; Dupuytren Teaching Hospital, France; AL Amyloidosis Referral Center, France