Impact of the Noninvasive Diagnostic Algorithm on Clinical Presentation and Prognosis in Cardiac Amyloidosis

Key Information
Source
ScienceDirect
Year
2024
summary/abstract

Background

The introduction of a noninvasive diagnostic algorithm in 2016 led to increased awareness and recognition of cardiac amyloidosis (CA).

Objectives

The purpose of this study was to analyze the impact of the introduction of the noninvasive diagnostic algorithm on diagnosis and prognosis in a multicenter Italian CA cohort.

Methods

This was a retrospective analysis of 887 CA patients from 5 Italian Cardiomyopathies Referral Centers: 311 light-chain CA, 87 variant transthyretin (TTR)-related CA, 489 wild-type TTR-related CA. Clinical characteristics and outcomes (all-cause mortality and heart failure [HF] hospitalizations) were compared overall and for each CA subtype between patients diagnosed before versus after 2016. Outcomes were further compared by propensity score weighted Kaplan-Meier analysis and Cox regression analysis.

Results

CA diagnoses increased after 2016, in particular for wild-type TTR-related CA. Patients diagnosed after versus before 2016 were older, had less frequently a history of HF prior to diagnosis, and NYHA functional class III-IV at diagnosis. Over a median follow-up of 18 months, 172 (86%) patients diagnosed before 2016 died or had an HF hospitalization, versus 300 (44%) diagnosed after 2016. Propensity score weighted Kaplan-Meier analysis showed worse outcomes (P < 0.001) for patients diagnosed before 2016. At Cox regression analysis, CA diagnosis after 2016 was an independent protective factor for the composite outcome (HR: 0.69; P = 0.001), with interaction by CA subtype (significant in TTR-related CA and null in light-chain).

Conclusions

CA patients diagnosed after 2016 showed a less severe phenotype and a better prognosis. The impact of the noninvasive diagnostic algorithm on outcomes was particularly relevant in TTR-related CA.
Authors
Giacomo Tini MD a, Ernesto Cristiano MD b, Mattia Zampieri MD c d, Alberto Ponziani MD e f, Aldostefano Porcari MD g h i, Margherita Zanoletti MD j, Carlotta Mazzoni MD c d, Matteo Sclafani MD a, Giulia Saturi MD e f, Andrea Lalario MD g h, Marianna Eleonora Labate MD k, Camillo Autore MD a, Emanuele Barbato MD a, Federico Perfetto MD d, Elena Biagini MD e g, Gianfranco Sinagra MD g h, Marco Canepa MD j k, Marco Merlo MD g h, Simone Longhi MD e g, Francesco Cappelli MD c d, Beatrice Musumeci MD