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Size matters - redefining sex differences among patients with transthyretin amyloid cardiomyopathy – have we been wrong all along? Eur Heart J 2022. [DOI: 10.1093/eurheartj/ehac544.1760] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/14/2022] Open
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Transthyretin amyloid cardiomyopathy (ATTR-CM) is most often diagnosed in men (1–5). The few available studies suggest affected women have a more favourable cardiac phenotype (5–8), but remain unclear regarding differences in outcomes.
Objectives and methods
To characterise sex differences among consecutive patients with non-hereditary and two prevalent forms of hereditary ATTR-CM diagnosed over a 20-year period at our specialist centre through analysis of deep phenotyping at presentation, changes on serial echocardiography and overall prognosis.
Results
In total, 1732 patients were studied, comprising: 1095 with wild-type (wt)ATTR-CM; 206 with T60A-hATTR-CM; and 431 with V122I-hATTR-CM. Female prevalence was greater in T60A-hATTR-CM (29.6%) and V122I-hATTR-CM (27.8%) compared to wtATTR-CM (6%). At presentation, females were 3.3 years older than males (81.9 vs 77.8 years for wtATTR-CM; 68.7 vs 65.1 years for T60A-hATTR-CM; 77.1 vs 74.9 years for V122I-hATTR-CM). At diagnosis, non-indexed measures of wall thickness were significantly greater in males (interventricular septum in diastole (IVSd) of 17.13mm in males & 16.15mm in females; p<0.001). When indexed for body surface area (BSA), we observed that the mean indexed IVSd was fairly constant in males throughout the study period, but in females, had a tendency to decrease over the same study period. Furthermore, BSA significantly influenced measures of disease severity. When indexed for BSA, overall structural and functional phenotype was similar between sexes; the few observed significant differences including indexed IVSd (9.62mm/m2 in females & 8.88mm/m2 in males; p<0.001), indexed left ventricular (LV) end-diastolic volume (35.07ml/m2 in females & 41.05ml/m2 in males; p<0.001) and indexed LV end-systolic volume (17.95ml/m2 in females & 21.74ml/m2 in males; p<0.001) suggested a mildly worse phenotype in females. No significant differences were observed in disease progression on serial echocardiography and mortality across the overall population (p=0.459) and when divided by genotype (p=0.730 for wtATTR-CM; p=0.161 for T60A-hATTR-CM; p=0.056 for V122I-hATTR-CM).
Conclusion
This study of a well-characterized large cohort of ATTR-CM patients, contrary to previous dogmas, did not demonstrate overall differences between sexes in either clinical phenotype, when indexed, or with respect to disease progression and prognosis. The analysis highlighted the deficiencies in using non-indexed values which can not only lead to the inaccurate perception of a milder clinical phenotype in women compared to men, but has been shown to result in female patients presenting at an older age and with a worse phenotype compared to men. These findings indicate the need for revision of existing clinical guidelines regarding awareness and diagnosis of ATTR-CM in women, and modification of clinical trials which currently use single non-indexed threshold for wall thickness as key inclusion criterion.
Funding Acknowledgement
Type of funding sources: Foundation.
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Prognostic implications of clinical phenotype and severity of cardiac involvement in patients presenting with immunoglobulin light chain amyloidosis. Eur Heart J 2022. [DOI: 10.1093/eurheartj/ehac544.1791] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/12/2022] Open
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Patients with systemic immunoglobulin light chain (AL) amyloidosis may present with a wide array of signs and symptoms due to the multi-systemic organ involved. The presence of cardiac involvement is the key determinant of survival. Cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) has the unique ability to measure the continuum of cardiac amyloidosis (CA) infiltration providing a deep characterisation from early CA involvement to severe degree of CA burden.
Purpose
The aim of this study was to characterise the clinical profiles and the severity of organ involvement in patients presenting with AL amyloidosis and to investigate implications for long-term outcome.
Methods
Patients newly diagnosed with AL amyloidosis at the National Amyloidosis Centre underwent comprehensive clinical, laboratory and instrumental work up, including CMR imaging with left ventricular (LV) mass, late gadolinium enhancement (LGE) and extracellular volume (ECV). The clinical phenotypes were classified in cardiac, renal and other according to the symptoms at presentation. The degree of CA was investigated by CMR: 0= no features of CA (normal LV mass, no LGE and normal ECV); 1=early cardiac amyloid infiltration (normal LV mass, raised ECV no LGE); 2= characteristic of CA with normal mass (diffuse subendocardial or transmural LGE, altered gadolinium kinetics and raised ECV); 3= characteristic of CA with elevated mass (diffuse subendocardial or transmural LGE and raised ECV). The study outcome was all-cause mortality.
Results
The study population included 241 AL patients presenting with cardiac and renal (22.8%, n=55), cardiac (28.2%, n=68), renal (33.2%, n=80) and other (15.8% n=38) phenotypes. During a median follow up of 33 (IQR 7–52) months, cardiac phenotype either in isolation or in combination with renal phenotype was associated with a higher rate of all-cause mortality compared to the others (p<0.001) (Figure). On CMR imaging, 43.2% of patients without cardiac phenotype (49%, n=118/241) had characteristic scans of CA (CMR grade 2 and 3) whilst 13.8% of patients with cardiac phenotype (51%, n=123/241) had no features of CA on CMR images (CMR grade 0) in (p<0.001). With Kaplan Meier analysis, the risk of all-cause death increased in patients with characteristic features of CA on CMR scan (Figure 1) and in patients with cardiac phenotype and features of CA on CMR scans compared to the others (both p<0.001) (Figure). At multivariable analysis, age at diagnosis (hazard ratio [HR] 1.03, p=0.009), clinical phenotype at presentation (HR 1.35, p=0.014) and ECV measured by CMR (HR 56, p<0.001) emerged as independent prognostic parameters.
Conclusions
Patients with newly diagnosed AL amyloidosis present most frequently with renal and cardiac phenotypes. CMR detects CA in >40% of patients with non-cardiac phenotype. ECV is an independent predictor of all-cause mortality across the full clinical spectrum of AL amyloidosis.
Funding Acknowledgement
Type of funding sources: None.
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Myocardial ischaemia in cardiac amyloidosis: a change of perspective. Eur Heart J 2022. [DOI: 10.1093/eurheartj/ehac544.1761] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/14/2022] Open
Abstract
Abstract
Introduction
Cardiac involvement is the main driver of clinical outcomes in systemic amyloidosis; however many clinical observations are not explained by the concept of replacement of the interstitium by amyloid material. Preliminary studies support the hypothesis that myocardial ischaemia contributes to cellular damage.
Purpose
This study assesses the presence and mechanisms of myocardial ischaemia using cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) with multiparametric mapping and histopathological assessment.
Methods
Ninety-two patients with cardiac amyloidosis (CA) (AL = 41, ATTR = 51) and 97 without CA (3-vessel coronary disease (3VD) = 47, unobstructed coronary arteries = 26, healthy volunteers (HV) = 24) underwent quantitative stress perfusion CMR with myocardial blood flow (MBF) mapping. Twenty-six myocardial biopsies and 3 explanted hearts with CA were analysed histopathologically.
Results
Stress MBF was severely reduced in patients with CA with lower values than patients with 3VD, unobstructed coronary arteries and HV (CA = 1.03±0.51 ml/min/g, 3VD = 1.35±0.50 ml/min/g, Unobstructed coronaries = 2.92±0.52 ml/min/g, HV = 3.14±0.69 ml/min/g; CA vs 3VD p=0.008, CA vs Unobstructed coronaries p<0.001, CA vs HV p<0.001). After adjustment for intracellular volume the MBF in patients with CA remained significantly lower than in HV (stress MBF/ICV: AL = 2.24±1.12, ATTR = 2.22±0.93, HV = 4.38±1.06; AL vs. ATTR p=1.000, AL vs HV p<0.001, ATTR vs. HV p<0.001). Myocardial perfusion reserve (MPR) was severely reduced in CA patients, compared to HV and patients with unobstructed coronary arteries, with the degree of reduction being comparable only to patients with 3VD (CA = 1.55±0.60, 3VD = 1.54±0.51, unobstructed coronaries = 2.78±0.70, HV = 4.08±0.86; CA vs 3VD p=1.000, CA vs unobstructed coronary arteries p<0.001, CA vs. HV p<0.001). Myocardial perfusion abnormalities correlated with amyloid burden, systolic and diastolic function, structural parameters and blood biomarkers (p<0.05). Biopsies demonstrated diffuse hypoxia with abnormal VEGF staining in cardiomyocytes and endothelial cells. Amyloid infiltration in intramural arteries was associated with severe lumen reduction in 20% of vessels, and severe reduction in capillary density.
Conclusion
CA is associated with severe myocardial ischaemia demonstrable by histology and CMR stress perfusion mapping. Histological evaluation indicates a complex pathophysiology, where systolic and diastolic dysfunction, amyloid infiltration of the epicardial arteries and disruption and rarefaction of the capillaries play a role in contributing to myocardial ischaemia.
Funding Acknowledgement
Type of funding sources: None.
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Changes in referral pathway and phenotypic status of patients diagnosed with ATTR cardiac amyloidosis during the past 20 years. Eur Heart J 2022. [DOI: 10.1093/eurheartj/ehac544.1763] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/14/2022] Open
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Diagnostic and therapeutic advances have led to much increased awareness of transthyretin (ATTR) cardiac amyloidosis (CA).
Purpose
We sought to characterise the impact of this on referral practice, cardiac phenotype at diagnosis and specifically to determine whether patients are now being diagnosed at an earlier stage in their disease process.
Methods
We studied 1845 patients diagnosed with ATTR-CA at the National Amyloidosis Centre (NAC) from 2002–2021, all of whom underwent deep clinical phenotyping and follow-up.
Results
Analysis by 5-year quartiles revealed a substantial incremental increase in patients diagnosed with ATTR-CA (35 vs 260 vs 704 vs 846), which was associated with greater proportions of patients referred following advanced cardiac imaging (referrals following cardiac magnetic resonance and bone scintigraphy: 3% vs 44% vs 67% vs 76%; P<0.001). Over time, median duration of symptoms prior to diagnosis diminished from 36-months between 2002–2006 to 12-months between 2017–2021 (P<0.001) and a greater proportion of patients presented with milder disease across the 5-yearly quartiles (NAC stage 1: 40% vs 43% vs 44% vs 57%; P<0.001). The latter was associated with more favourable echocardiographic parameters of structure and function, including an incremental reduction in maximal left ventricular wall thickness (18.26mm vs 17.41mm vs 17.09mm vs 16.68mm; P=0.017). This was associated with improved survival in the overall population (2007–2011 vs 2012–2016: HR=1.65, 95% CI [1.33–2.06]; P<0.001 and 2012–2016 vs 2017–2021: HR =1.83, 95% CI [1.45–2.31]; P<0.001) and in each genotype (wtATTR, T60A and V122I). Despite a significant increase in the proportion of patients enrolled into clinical trials (0.0% vs 0.0% vs 2.6% vs 23.9%; P<0.001) and prescribed disease modifying therapy (5.7% vs 0.4% vs 4.8% vs 13.5%; P<0.001); the improved survival remained significant even after adjusting for clinical trials and disease modifying therapy (2012–2016 vs. 2017–2021: HR=1.65 95% CI [1.29–2.11], P<0.001).
Conclusion
Increased awareness and advances in cardiac imaging have been associated with a substantial increase in the diagnosis of ATTR-CA and at a progressively earlier stage of the disease, which has contributed to improved survival in recent years. These changes may have important implications for initiation and outcome of therapy. Given that ATTR-CA is now being diagnosed earlier, more data are needed to guide decisions on in whom and when to initiate treatment, and which treatments should be used at each disease stage. Furthermore, the changes in ATTR-CA phenotype at diagnosis urgently need to be factored into clinical trial design, given that pre-determined end-points based on trials performed in the past may no longer be appropriate, or at least sufficiently powered, or of adequate duration to evaluate efficacy of novel agents.
Funding Acknowledgement
Type of funding sources: None.
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Cardiac transplantation in transthyretin amyloid cardiomyopathy: outcomes from three decades of tertiary centre experience. Eur Heart J 2022. [DOI: 10.1093/eurheartj/ehac544.1784] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/13/2022] Open
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Transthyretin cardiac amyloidosis (ATTR-CM) is a progressive and fatal cardiomyopathy. Treatment options in patients with advanced heart failure are limited to cardiac transplantation (CT). Despite small case series demonstrating comparable outcomes with CT between patients with ATTR-CM and non-amyloid cardiomyopathies, ATTR-CM is considered to be an absolute contraindication to CT in some centres. This is in part due to a perceived risk of amyloid recurrence in the cardiac allograft. We report outcomes of patients with ATTR-CM assessed at our centre whom underwent CT over the past thirty years.
Methods
We retrospectively evaluated all ATTR-CM patients assessed at the UK National Amyloidosis Centre between 1990 and 2020 who underwent CT. Pre-transplantation disease and patient characteristics were determined and outcomes were compared with our large cohort of non-transplanted ATTR-CM patients. Censor date was 11th January 2022.
Results
Eleven (9 male, 2 female) patients with ATTR-CM underwent CT including 8 with wild-type ATTR-CM and 3 with variant ATTR-CM (ATTRv). Median age at CT was 60.3 years and median follow up post-CT was 65.7 months. Median (range) NT-proBNP concentration pre-transplant was 4478ng/L (1057–8778ng/L), median (range) left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) was 39% (27–56%) and mean (IQR) interventricular septal (IVSD) was 18 mm (15.9–20.1 mm). 8 patients were NYHA functional class III, the 3 remaining patients were class II.
One, three, and five-year survival was 100%, 89% and 86%, respectively and the longest surviving patient was censored >19 years post CT. Survival is at least comparable to UK and US CT outcome registry data for all non-amyloid patients undergoing CT. No patients had recurrence of amyloid in the cardiac allograft as assessed by endomyocardial biopsy and/or Tc-DPD scintigraphy. Two patients were commenced on Patisiran for amyloid polyneuropathy at 211 and 5 months post-CT. Graft rejection requiring treatment was observed in 2 patients, and successfully treated with intravenous steroids. Renal impairment was common, with 6 patients being left with chronic kidney disease.
Three patients died, including one with ATTRv-CM from complications of leptomeningeal amyloidosis. Survival among the cohort of patients who underwent CT was significantly longer than UK patients with ATTR-CM generally (P≤0.006), regardless of NAC ATTR disease stage and including those diagnosed under 65 years of age (P=0.028). (Figure 1) All surviving patients were NYHA functional class I at time of censor.
Conclusion
Our data indicates that cardiac transplantation is well tolerated, restores functional capacity, and prolongs survival in ATTR-CM with little risk of recurrence of amyloid in the cardiac allograft. We believe that our data argues strongly for ATTR-CM to be routinely included in the list of indications for cardiac transplantation.
Funding Acknowledgement
Type of funding sources: None.
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A multi-modality, multi-parametric phenotyping study of transthyretin amyloid cardiomyopathy associated with the p.V142I TTR variant. Eur Heart J 2022. [DOI: 10.1093/eurheartj/ehac544.1793] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/13/2022] Open
Abstract
Abstract
Introduction
Transthyretin amyloid cardiomyopathy (ATTR-CM) is an increasingly recognised cause of heart failure. 3–4% of individuals of African descent carry a transthyretin gene mutation encoding the p.V142I variant, a powerful risk factor for development of variant ATTR-CM. This equates to 1.6 million potential carriers in the USA alone. We report findings from a multi-parametric, multi-modality phenotyping study of p.V142I ATTR-CM.
Hypothesis
The phenotype of p.V142I variant ATTR-CM is an aggressive form of ATTR CM.
Methods
A retrospective phenotyping study of 395 patients with p.V142I-ATTR-CM at our national referral centre was conducted. Patients underwent evaluation at the centre at time of diagnosis, including clinical and functional assessment, echocardiography, biomarker analysis; a subgroup had cardiac magnetic resonance imaging. 395 wild type ATTR-CM patients matched for independent predictors of prognosis (NAC Disease Stage, age, decade of first presentation) were used as a comparator group.
Results
Average age of pV142I ATTR-CM patients was 75.8 years. There was significant functional impairment (38.2% of cases NHYA ≥ III, mean 6 minute walk test distance 272m). Significant impairment of echocardiographic parameters was seen; mean LVEF 43%, global longitudinal strain −9.1%, TAPSE 14.2mm, E/E prime 17.4, E/A ratio 2.47 with high frequency of at least moderate mitral (44%) and tricuspid regurgitation (51%). Median NT-proBNP was 3165 ng/L (IQR 4224). Arrhythmias were common with 17.4% of patients having a bradyarrhythmia, 26.1% having atrial fibrillation/flutter, and 5.6% having a pacemaker at presentation. Uni and multivariate cox regression analysis identified serum troponin, tricuspid regurgitation, LVEF, TAPSE and lower systolic blood pressure as independent predictors of prognosis. Prognostic parameters were statistically significantly worse and five year survival by Kaplan Meier analysis was significantly reduced when compared to matched WT ATTR-CM patients (p<0.05) (Figure 1).
Mean serum high sensitivity troponin T and extracellular volume (ECV) by cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) was higher in p.V142I ATTR-CM than WT ATTR-CM cases (94 ng/L vs 74.2 ng/L, p<0.05, 58% vs 55%, p<0.05). Interventricular wall thickness however was lower in p.V142I ATTR-CM than matched WT cases (17.2 mm vs 16.8 mm).
Conclusion
p.V142I ATTR-CM is an aggressive phenotype, with significant functional impairment, burden of regurgitant valvular disease and systolic impairment resulting in poor survival.
Patients with p.V142I ATTR-CM had a higher burden of amyloid infiltration as measured as shown by ECV measurements on CMR, higher serum troponin and lower wall thickness when compared to a matched cohort of WT ATTR-CM patients. This novel observation suggests a unique disease mechanism that is more cardiotoxic which results in myocyte loss and myocardial thinning as opposed to myocyte hypertrophy.
Funding Acknowledgement
Type of funding sources: None.
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Progression, regression and redefining the treatment response – cardiac magnetic resonance with T1 and extracellular volume mapping in cardiac light-chain amyloidosis. Eur Heart J 2022. [DOI: 10.1093/eurheartj/ehac544.297] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/13/2022] Open
Abstract
Abstract
Background
The presence and severity of cardiac involvement in AL amyloidosis is the main driver of prognosis [1]; patients with symptomatic heart failure frequently die within 6 months [1] but median survival has nearly doubled over the past decade, mainly due to significant improvements in chemotherapy. The haematological response to chemotherapy is principally evaluated with serial measurements of serum-free light-chains (FLC) [2]. The cardiac response to chemotherapy is assessed through changes in serum concentrations of brain natriuretic peptides (including NT-proBNP) and echocardiographic parameters [3–5]. Neither are able to directly measure cardiac amyloid burden. Cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) with extra-cellular volume (ECV) mapping can measure the extent cardiac amyloid infiltration [6].
Aims
We investigated the ability of CMR to: 1) measure changes in response to chemotherapy; 2) assess the correlation between haematological response (HMR) and changes in cardiac amyloid; 3) assess the association between changes in cardiac amyloid and prognosis over and above existing predictors.
Methods
In total, 176 patients with cardiac light-chain amyloidosis treated with chemotherapy were assessed with FLC, NT-proBNP and CMR with ECV mapping at baseline (before chemotherapy), 6-months, 12-months & 24-months after commencing chemotherapy. Haematological response was categorized by reductions in FLC as: complete response (CR), very good partial response (VGPR), partial response (PR) or no response (NR). CMR response was categorized by changes in ECV as: progression (≥0.05 increase), stable (<0.05 change) or regression (≥0.05 decrease).
Results
A progressive increase in patients achieving either CR or VGPR was observed at each time point (61% of patients at 6-months, 71% at 12-months and 80% at 24-months). At 6-months, CMR regression was observed in 3% (all had either CR or VGPR) and progression in 32% (61% had either PR or NR; 39% had either CR or VGPR). At 1-year, CMR regression was observed in 22% (all had either CR or VGPR); progression in 22% (63% had either PR or NR; 37% had either CR or VGPR). At 2-years, CMR regression was observed in 38% (all had CR/VGPR); progression in 14% (80% had either PR or NR; 20% had either CR or VGPR). During follow-up (40±15 months), 36 (25%) patients died. CMR response at 6-months predicted death (progression HR 3.821; 95% CI 1.950–7.487; p<0.001) and remained independently associated with prognosis after adjusting for haematological response, NT-proBNP and longitudinal strain on echocardiography (p<0.01).
Conclusions
CMR demonstrates that cardiac amyloid deposits frequently regress following chemotherapy, but only in patients who achieve CR or VGPR, highlighting the need for deep haematological response. Changes in amyloid burden (ECV) predict outcomes after adjusting for known predictors, showing the crucial role of CMR in redefining treatment response.
Funding Acknowledgement
Type of funding sources: Foundation.
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Multi-imaging characterisation of cardiac phenotype in different types of amyloidosis. Eur Heart J 2022. [DOI: 10.1093/eurheartj/ehac544.1762] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/13/2022] Open
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Bone scintigraphy is extremely valuable when assessing patients with suspected cardiac amyloidosis (CA), but the clinical significance and associated phenotype of different degrees of myocardial tracer uptake across different types of amyloidosis is yet to be defined.
Purpose
We sought to define the phenotypes of patients with varying degrees of cardiac uptake on bone scintigraphy, across multiple types of systemic amyloidosis using extensive characterisation comprising of biomarkers, echocardiographic and cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) imaging.
Methods
A total of 296 patients (117 immunoglobulin light-chain [AL] amyloidosis, 165 transthyretin [ATTR] amyloidosis, 7 apolipoprotein-A1-amyloidosis [AApoAI],and 7 apolipoprotein-A4-amyloidosis [AApoA4]) underwent deep characterisation of their cardiac phenotype.
Results
AL-amyloidosis patients with grade 0 myocardial radiotracer uptake spanned the spectrum of CMR findings from no evidence of CA to characteristic features of CA, while AL-amyloidosis patients with grade 1–3 always produced characteristic CMR features. In ATTR-amyloidosis the CA burden strongly correlated with myocardial tracer uptake (correlation between bone scintigraphy cardiac uptake and CMR derived extracellular volume: R=0.88, 95% CI [0.84–0.91], P<0.001), except in patients with the Ser77Tyr variant. AApoAI-amyloidosis presented with grade 0–1 myocardial tracer uptake, and unique features of disproportionate right sided involvement such as disproportionate right ventricular (RV) and right atrial uptake on bone scintigraphy, RV free wall thickening, and tricuspid valve thickening and dysfunction. Within our cohort, AApoAIV-amyloidosis always presented with grade 0 myocardial tracer uptake, and characteristic features of CA on CMR. All AL-amyloidosis patients with grade 1 myocardial tracer uptake had characteristic CMR features of CA (n=48, 100%), while only ATTR-amyloidosis grade 1 patients with the Ser77Tyr variant had characteristic features of CA on CMR (n=5, 11.4%). Following the exclusion of Ser77Tyr and AApoAI, a CMR showing characteristic features of CA or an extracellular volume >0.40 in a patient with grade 1 myocardial tracer uptake had a sensitivity and specificity of 100% for diagnosing AL-amyloidosis.
Conclusion
Deep characterisation of the cardiac phenotype in different types of amyloidosis, across a range of bone scintigraphy cardiac uptake grades has identified clear differences between each amyloidosis type. The distinctive characteristics in each cohort has allowed the development of a diagnostic pathway to help define the diagnostic differentials and the clinical phenotype in each individual patient, following comprehensive assessment with bone scintigraphy and CMR.
Funding Acknowledgement
Type of funding sources: None.
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P294 AN ECHOCARDIOGRAPHIC SCORE OF VALVE DISEASE IN PATIENTS WITH CARDIAC AMYLOIDOSIS. Eur Heart J Suppl 2022. [DOI: 10.1093/eurheartj/suac012.282] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/13/2022]
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Cardiac amyloidosis (CA) affects all cardiac structures, including the valves. We summarized the echocardiographic features of valve disease in a score.
Methods
From 423 patients undergoing a diagnostic workup for CA we selected 2 samples of 20 patients with amyloid transthyretin (ATTR–) or light–chain (AL–) CA, and selected age– and sex–matched controls. The Amyloid VAlve (AVA) score included 31 items related to the mitral, aortic and tricuspid valves (which can be properly assessed in standard echocardiograms), with a value of 1 for each abnormal item.
Results
Patients with ATTR–CA displayed more often a shortened/hidden and retracted posterior mitral valve leaflet (PMVL), thickened mitral chordae tendineae and aortic stenosis than those with AL–CA, and less frequent PMVL calcification than matched controls. Score values were 15.8 (interquartile interval 13.6–17.4) in ATTR–CA, 11.0 (9.3–14.9) in AL–CA, 12.8 (11.1–14.4) in ATTR–CA controls, and 11.0 (9.1–13.0) in AL–CA controls (p = 0.004 for ATTR– vs. AL–CA, 0.009 for ATTR–CA vs. their controls, and 0.461 for AL–CA vs. controls). We compared the AVA and two validated diagnostic scores (IWT and AMYLI). AUC values for the diagnosis of ATTR–CA were 0.782, 0.846 and 0.902, respectively, in patients with ATTR–CA or matched controls, and 0.773, 0.706 and 0.679 in patients with LV hypertrophy (n = 67, 84%) (all non–significant p values).
Conclusions
Patients with ATTR–CA have a prominent impairment of mitral valve structure and function, and higher score values. The AVA score is quite effective in identifying patients with ATTR–CA among patients with CA or with unexplained hypertrophy.
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P6119Cancer and myocardial dysfunction: observations from myocardial strain imaging in a dedicated cardio-oncology clinic. Eur Heart J 2017. [DOI: 10.1093/eurheartj/ehx493.p6119] [Citation(s) in RCA: 0] [Impact Index Per Article: 0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/13/2022] Open
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Poster session 3The imaging examinationP646Simulator-based testing of skill in transthoracic echoP647Clinical and echocardiographic characteristics of isolated left ventricular non-compactionP648Appropriate use criteria of transthoracic echocardiography and its clinical impact in an aged populationAnatomy and physiology of the heart and great vesselsP649Prevalence and determinants of exercise oscillatory ventilation in the EUROEX trial populationAssessment of diameters, volumes and massP650Left atrial remodeling after percutaneous left atrial appendage closureP651Global atrial performance with tyrosine kinase inhibitors in metastatic renal cell carcinomaP652Early right ventricular response to cardiac resynchronization therapy: impact on clinical outcomesP653Parameters of speckle-tracking echocardiography and biomechanical values of a dilative ascending aortaAssessments of haemodynamicsP654Right atrial hemodynamics in infants and children: observations from 3-dimensional echocardiography derived right atrial volumesAssessment of systolic functionP655One-point carotid wave intensity predicts cardiac mortality in patients with congestive heart failure and reduced ejection fractionP656Persistence of cardiac remodeling in adolescents with previous fetal growth restrictionP6572D speckle tracking-derived left ventricle global longitudinal strain and left ventricular dysfunction stages: a useful discriminator in moderate-to-severe aortic regurgitationP658Global longitudinal strain and strain rate in type two diabetes patients with chronic heart failure: relevance to circulating osteoprotegerinP659Analysis of left ventricular function in patients before and after surgical and interventional mitral valve therapyP660Left ventricular end-diastolic volume is complementary with global longitudinal strain for the prediction of left ventricular ejection fraction in echocardiographic daily practiceP661Left ventricular assist device, right ventricle function, and selection bias: the light side of the moonP662Assessment of right ventricular function in patients with anterior ST elevation myocardial infarction; a 2-d speckle tracking studyP663Right ventricular systolic function assessment in sickle cell anaemia using echocardiographyAssessment of diastolic functionP664Prognostic value of transthoracic cardiopulmonary ultrasound in cardiac surgery intensive care unitP665Comparative efficacy of renin-angiotensin system modulators on prognosis, right heart and left atrial parameters in patients with chronic heart failure and preserved left ventricular systolic functionP666Left atrial volume index is the most significant diastolic functional parameter of hemodynamic burden as measured by NT-proBNP in acute myocardial infarctionP667Preventive echocardiographic screening. preliminary dataP668Assessment of the atrial electromechanical delay and the mechanical functions of the left atrium in patients with diabetes mellitus type IIschemic heart diseaseP669Coronary flow velocity reserve by echocardiography as a measure of microvascular function: feasibility, reproducibility and agreement with PET in overweight patients with coronary artery diseaseP670Influence of cardiovascular risk in the occurrence of events in patients with negative stress echocardiographyP671Prevalence of transmural myocardial infarction and viable myocardium in chronic total occlusion (CTO) patientsP672The impact of the interleukin 6 receptor antagonist tocilizumab on mircovascular dysfunction after non st elevation myocardial infarction assessed by coronary flow reserve from a randomized studyP673Impact of manual thrombus aspiration on left ventricular remodeling: the echocardiographic substudy of the randomized Physiologic Assessment of Thrombus Aspirtion in patients with ST-segment ElevatioP674Acute heart failure in STEMI patients treated with primary percutaneous coronary intervention is related to transmural circumferential myocardial strainP675Long-term prognostic value of infarct size as assessed by cardiac magnetic resonance imaging after a first st-segment elevation myocardial infarctionHeart valve DiseasesP676Prognostic value of LV global longitudinal strain in aortic stenosis with preserved LV ejection fractionP677Importance of longitudinal dyssynchrony in low flow low gradient severe aortic stenosis patients undergoing dobutamine stress echocardiography. a multicenter study (on behalf of the HAVEC group)P678Predictive value of left ventricular longitudinal strain by 2D Speckle Tracking echocardiography, in asymptomatic patients with severe aortic stenosis and preserved ejection fractionP679Clinical and echocardiographic characteristics of the flow-gradient patterns in patients with severe aortic stenosis and preserved left ventricular ejection fractionP6802D and 3D speckle tracking assessment of left ventricular function in severe aortic stenosis, a step further from biplane ejection fractionP681Functional evaluation in aortic stenosis: determinant of exercise capacityP682Left ventricular mechanics: novel tools to evaluate left ventricular function in patients with primary mitral regurgitationP683Plasma B-type natriuretic peptide level in patients with isolated rheumatic mitral stenosisP684Quantitative assessment of severity in aortic regurgitation and the influence of elastic proprieties of thoracic aortaP685Characterization of chronic aortic and mitral regurgitation using cardiovascular magnetic resonanceP686Functional mitral regurgitation: a warning sign of underlying left ventricular systolic dysfunction in heart failure with preserved ejection fraction.P687Secondary mitral valve tenting in primary degenerative prolapse quantified by three-dimensional echocardiography predicts regurgitation recurrence after mitral valve repairP688Advanced heart failure with reduced ejection fraction and severe mitral insufficiency compensate with a higher oxygen peripheral extraction to a reduced cardiac output vs oxygen uptake response to maxP689Predictors of acute procedural success after percutaneous mitraclip implantation in patients with moderate-to-severe or severe mitral regurgitation and reduced ejection fractionP690The value of transvalvular gradients obtained by transthoracic echocardiography in estimation of severe paravalvular leakage in patients with mitral prosthetic valvesP691Characteristics of infective endocarditis in a non tertiary hospitalP692Infective endocarditis: predictors of severity in a 3-year retrospective analysisP693New echocardiographic predictors of early recurrent mitral functional regurgitation after mitraclip implantationP694Transesophageal echocardiography can be reliably used for the allocation of patients with severe aortic stenosis for tras-catheter aortic valve implantationP695Annular sizing for transcatheter aortic valve selection. A comparison between computed tomography and 3D echocardiographyP696Association between aortic dilatation, mitral valve prolapse and atrial septal aneurysm: first descriptive study.CardiomyopathiesP698Cardiac resynchronization therapy by multipoint pacing improves the acute response of left ventricular mechanics and fluid dynamics: a three-dimensional and particle image velocimetry echo studyP699Long-term natural history of right ventricular function in dilated cardiomyopathy: innocent bystander or leading actor?P700Right to left ventricular interdependence at rest and during exercise assessed by the ratio between pulmonary systolic to diastolic time in heart failure reduced ejection fractionP701Exercise strain imaging demonstrates impaired right ventricular contractile reserve in patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathyP702Prevalence of overt left ventricular dysfunction (burn-out phase) in a portuguese population of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, a multicentre studyP703Systolic and diastolic myocardial mechanics in hypertrophic cardiomyopathy and their link to the extent of hypertrophy, replacement fibrosis and interstitial fibrosisP704Multimodality imaging and genotype-phenotype associations in a cohort of patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy studied by next generation sequencing and cardiac magnetic resonanceP705Sudden cardiac death risk assessment in apical hypertrophic cardiomyopathy: do we need to add MRI to the equation?P706Prognostic value of left ventricular ejection fraction, proBNP, exercise capacity, and NYHA functional class in patients with left ventricular non-compaction cardiomyopathyP707The anti-hypertrophic microRNAs miR-1, miR-133a and miR-26b and their relationship to left ventricular hypertrophy in patients with essential hypertensionP708Prevalence of left ventricular systolic dysfunction in a portuguese population of left ventricular non-compaction cardiomyopathy, a multicentre studyP709Assessment of systolic and diastolic features in light chain amyloidosis: an echocardiographic and cardiac magnetic resonance studyP710Morbid obesity-associated hypertension identifies bariatric surgery best responders: Clinical and echocardiographic follow up studyP711Echocardiographic markera for overhydration in patients under haemodialysisP712Gender aspects of right ventricular size and function in clinically stable heart transplant patientsP713Evidence of cardiac stem cells from the left ventricular apical tip in patients undergone LVAD implant: a comparative strain-ultrastructural studySystemic diseases and other conditionsP714Speckle tracking assessment of right ventricular function is superior for differentiation of pressure versus volume overloaded right ventricleP715Prognostic value of pulmonary arterial pressure: analysis in a large dataset of timely matched non-invasive and invasive assessmentsP716Effect of the glucagon-like peptide-1 analogue liraglutide on left ventricular diastolic and systolic function in patients with type 2 diabetes: a randomised, single-blinded, crossover pilot studyP717Tissue doppler evaluation of left ventricular functions, left atrial mechanical functions and atrial electromechanical delay in juvenile idiopathic arthritisP718Echocardiographic detection of subclinical left ventricular dysfunction in patients with rheumatoid arthritisP719Left ventricular strain values are unaffected by intense training: a longitudinal, speckle-tracking studyP720Diastolic left ventricular function in autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease: a matched-cohort, speckle-tracking echocardiographic studyP721Relationship between adiponectin level and left ventricular mass and functionP722Left atrial function is impaired in patients with multiple sclerosisMasses, tumors and sources of embolismP723Paradoxical embolization to the brain in patients with acute pulmonary embolism and confirmed patent foramen ovale with bidirectional shunt, results of prospective monitoringP724Following the European Society of Cardiology proposed echocardiographic algorithm in elective patients with clinical suspicion of infective endocarditis: diagnostic yield and prognostic implicationsP725Metastatic cardiac18F-FDG uptake in patients with malignancy: comparison with echocardiographic findingsDiseases of the aortaP726Echocardiographic measurements of aortic pulse wave velocity correlate well with invasive methodP727Assessment of increase in aortic and carotid intimal medial thickness in adolescent type 1 diabetic patientsStress echocardiographyP728Determinants and prognostic significance of heart rate variability in renal transplant candidates undergoing dobutamine stress echocardiographyP729Pattern of cardiac output vs O2 uptake ratio during maximal exercise in heart failure with reduced ejection fraction: pathophysiological insightsP730Prognostic value and predictive factors of cardiac events in patients with normal exercise echocardiographyP731Right ventricular mechanics during exercise echocardiography: normal values, feasibility and reproducibility of conventional and new right ventricular function parametersP732The added value of exercise-echo in heart failure patients: assessing dynamic changes in extravascular lung waterP733Applicability of appropriate use criteria of exercise stress echocardiography in real-life practice: what have we improved with new documents?Transesophageal echocardiographyP7343D-TEE guidance in percutaneous mitral valve interventions correcting mitral regurgitationContrast echocardiographyP735Pulmonary transit time by contrast enhanced ultrasound as parameter for cardiac performance: a comparison with magnetic resonance imaging and NT-ProBNPReal-time three-dimensional TEEP736Optimal parameter selection for anisotropic diffusion denoising filters applied to aortic valve 4d echocardiographsP737Left ventricle systolic function in non-alcoholic cirrhotic candidates for liver transplantation: a three-dimensional speckle-tracking echocardiography studyTissue Doppler and speckle trackingP738Optimizing speckle tracking echocardiography strain measurements in infants: an in-vitro phantom studyP739Usefulness of vascular mechanics in aortic degenerative valve disease to estimate prognosis: a two dimensional speckle tracking studyP740Vascular mechanics in aortic degenerative valve disease: a two dimensional speckle-tracking echocardiography studyP741Statins and vascular load in aortic valve disease patients, a speckle tracking echocardiography studyP742Is Left Bundle Branch Block only an electrocardiographic abnormality? Study of LV function by 2D speckle tracking in patients with normal ejection fractionP743Dominant inheritance of global longitudinal strain in a population of healthy and hypertensive twinsP744Mechanical differences of left atria in paroxysmal atrial fibrillation: A speckle-tracking study.P745Different distribution of myocardial deformation between hypertrophic cardiomyopathy and aortic stenosisP746Left atrial mechanics in patients with chronic renal failure. Incremental value for atrial fibrillation predictionP747Subclinical myocardial dysfunction in cancer patients: is there a direct effect of tumour growth?P748The abnormal global longitudinal strain predicts significant circumflex artery disease in low risk acute coronary syndromeP7493D-Speckle tracking echocardiography for assessing ventricular funcion and infarct size in young patients after acute coronary syndromeP750Evaluation of left ventricular dyssynchrony by echocardiograhy in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus without clinically evident cardiac diseaseP751Differences in myocardial function between peritoneal dialysis and hemodialysis patients: insights from speckle tracking echoP752Appraisal of left atrium changes in hypertensive heart disease: insights from a speckle tracking studyP753Left ventricular rotational behavior in hypertensive patients: Two dimensional speckle tracking imaging studyComputed Tomography & Nuclear CardiologyP754Effectiveness of adaptive statistical iterative reconstruction of 64-slice dual-energy ct pulmonary angiography in the patients with reduced iodine load: comparison with standard ct pulmonary angiograP755Clinical prediction model to inconclusive result assessed by coronary computed tomography angiography. Eur Heart J Cardiovasc Imaging 2015. [DOI: 10.1093/ehjci/jev277] [Citation(s) in RCA: 2] [Impact Index Per Article: 0.2] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/14/2022] Open
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Abstract
Stress echocardiography is the combination of 2D echocardiography with a physical, pharmacological or electrical stress. The diagnostic end point for the detection of myocardial ischemia is the induction of a transient worsening in regional function during stress. Stress echocardiography provides similar diagnostic and prognostic accuracy as radionuclide stress perfusion imaging, but at a substantially lower cost, without environmental impact, and with no biohazards for the patient and the physician. Among different stresses of comparable diagnostic and prognostic accuracy, semisupine exercise is the most used, dobutamine the best test for viability, and dipyridamole the safest and simplest pharmacological stress and the most suitable for combined wall motion--coronary flow reserve assessment. The additional clinical benefit of myocardial contrast echocardiography, tissue Doppler imaging and real time 3-D echocardiography has been inconsistent and disappointing, whereas the potential of adding coronary flow reserve evaluation of left anterior descending coronary artery by transthoracic Doppler echocardiography adds another potentially important dimension to stress echocardiography. In spite of its dependence upon operator's training, stress echocardiography is today the best possible imaging choice to achieve the still elusive target of sustainable cardiac imaging in the field of noninvasive diagnosis of coronary artery disease.
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The value of ECG and echocardiography during stress testing for identifying systemic endothelial dysfunction and epicardial artery stenosis. Eur Heart J 2002; 23:1587-95. [PMID: 12323158 DOI: 10.1053/euhj.2002.3170] [Citation(s) in RCA: 44] [Impact Index Per Article: 2.0] [Reference Citation Analysis] [Abstract] [MESH Headings] [Track Full Text] [Journal Information] [Submit a Manuscript] [Subscribe] [Scholar Register] [Indexed: 11/11/2022] Open
Abstract
BACKGROUND In the stress imaging era, ECG positivity is regarded as a frequent source of false-positive responses. However, it is known that normal coronary arteries frequently coexist with abnormal endothelial function in patients with chest pain. AIM To evaluate the anatomical coronary epicardial, and functional systemic endothelial determinants of wall motion and electrocardiographic responses during stress testing. METHOD Sixty-eight in-hospital patients with chest pain syndrome, no previous myocardial infarction, and off nitrate therapy at the time of testing underwent, on different days, in random order and within 1 month: (1) stress ECG echo testing (with dipyridamole in 43, dobutamine in 3, and exercise in 22 patients); (2) coronary angiography; (3) endothelium-dependent, flow-mediated dilation of the brachial artery during reactive hyperaemia using high-resolution ultrasound. Criteria of positivity were: ST segment depression >0.1mm in the stress ECG; regional dysfunction >2 segments demonstrated by stress-echo; diameter reduction >50% on coronary angiography; and <5% flow-mediated dilation as revealed by endothelial function. RESULTS Significant coronary artery disease was present in 39 patients, and was predicted on multivariate analysis by stress-induced wall motion abnormalities (OR=108.8; 95% CI=8.5-1,389.4, P=0.0003), but not by either ST segment depression (P=0.13; OR=0.47; 95% CI=0.7-1.3) or reduced flow-mediated dilation (P=0.81; OR=0.87; 95% CI=0.27-2.8). Abnormal flow-mediated dilation was present in 53 patients (78%), and was predicted by stress-induced ST segment depression (P=0.023; OR=6.2; 95% CI=1.3-30.5), but not by either stress echo positivity (P=0.66; OR=0.77; 95% CI=0.23 to 2.5) or angiographically assessed coronary artery disease. There was no correlation between flow-mediated dilation and extent of coronary artery disease as assessed by the angiographic Duke score (from 0=normal to 100=most severe disease): r=-0.13, P=0.91. CONCLUSION Epicardial coronary artery anatomy affects wall motion abnormalities, and systemic endothelial dysfunction affects ST segment depression during stress. However, echocardiographic positivity is unrelated to endothelial dysfunction, and electrocardiographic positivity is an inaccurate predictor of coronary stenosis. An integration of ECG and functional markers is warranted in the stress testing lab.
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