Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12105/15408
Title
Clinical characteristics of wild-type transthyretin cardiac amyloidosis: disproving myths.
Author(s)
González-López, Esther | Gagliardi, Christian | Dominguez, Fernando CNIC | Quarta, Cristina Candida | de Haro-Del Moral, F Javier | Milandri, Agnese | Salas, Clara | Cinelli, Mario | Cobo-Marcos, Marta | Lorenzini, Massimiliano | Lara-Pezzi, Enrique CNIC | Foffi, Serena | Alonso-Pulpon, Luis | Rapezzi, Claudio | Garcia-Pavia, Pablo CNIC
Date issued
2017-06-21
Citation
Eur Heart J. 2017 Jun 21;38(24):1895-1904
Language
Inglés
Abstract
Wild-type transthyretin amyloidosis (ATTRwt) is mostly considered a disease predominantly of elderly male, characterized by concentric LV hypertrophy, preserved LVEF, and low QRS voltages. We sought to describe the characteristics of a large cohort of ATTRwt patients to better define the disease.
Clinical findings of consecutive ATTRwt patients diagnosed at 2 centres were reviewed. ATTRwt was diagnosed histologically or non-invasively (LV hypertrophy ≥12 mm, intense cardiac uptake at 99mTc-DPD scintigraphy and AL exclusion). Mutations in TTR were excluded in all cases. The study cohort comprised 108 patients (78.6 ± 8 years); 67 (62%) diagnosed invasively and 41 (38%) non-invasively. Twenty patients (19%) were females. An asymmetric hypertrophy pattern was observed in 25 (23%) patients. Mean LVEF was 52 ± 14%, with 39 patients (37%) showing a LVEF < 50%. Atrial fibrillation (56%) and a pseudo-infarct pattern (63%) were the commonest ECG findings. Only 22 patients fulfilled QRS low-voltage criteria while 10 showed LV hypertrophy on ECG. Although heart failure was the most frequent profile leading to diagnosis (68%), 7% of individuals presented with atrioventricular block and 11% were diagnosed incidentally. Almost one third (35; 32%) were previously misdiagnosed.
The clinical spectrum of ATTRwt is heterogeneous and differs from the classic phenotype: women are affected in a significant proportion; asymmetric LV hypertrophy and impaired LVEF are not rare and only a minority have low QRS voltages. Clinicians should be aware of the broad clinical spectrum of ATTRwt to correctly identify an entity for which a number of disease-modifying treatments are under investigation.
MESH
Aged | Amyloid Neuropathies, Familial | Cardiomyopathies | Diagnostic Errors | Diphosphonates | Echocardiography | Electrocardiography | Female | Genotyping Techniques | Humans | Hypertrophy, Left Ventricular | Male | Multimodal Imaging | Organotechnetium Compounds | Prospective Studies | Radiopharmaceuticals | Single Photon Emission Computed Tomography Computed Tomography
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DOI
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