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Evolving trends in epidemiology and natural history of cardiac amyloidosis: 30-year experience from a tertiary referral center for cardiomyopathies

Authors :
Aldostefano Porcari
Valentina Allegro
Riccardo Saro
Guerino Giuseppe Varrà
Linda Pagura
Maddalena Rossi
Andrea Lalario
Francesca Longo
Renata Korcova
Matteo Dal Ferro
Andrea Perkan
Franca Dore
Rossana Bussani
Giovanni Maria De Sabbata
Francesco Zaja
Marco Merlo
Gianfranco Sinagra
Porcari, Aldostefano
Allegro, Valentina
Saro, Riccardo
Varrà, Guerino Giuseppe
Pagura, Linda
Rossi, Maddalena
Lalario, Andrea
Longo, Francesca
Korcova, Renata
Dal Ferro, Matteo
Perkan, Andrea
Dore, Franca
Bussani, Rossana
De Sabbata, Giovanni Maria
Zaja, Francesco
Merlo, Marco
Sinagra, Gianfranco
Source :
Frontiers in cardiovascular medicine. 9
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

ObjectiveNatural history of cardiac amyloidosis (CA) is poorly understood. We aimed to examine the changing mortality of different types of CA over a 30-year period.Patients and methodsConsecutive patients included in the “Trieste CA Registry” from January 1, 1990 through December 31, 2021 were divided into a historical cohort (diagnosed before 2016) and a contemporary cohort (diagnosed after 2016). Light chain (AL), transthyretin (ATTR) and other forms of CA were defined according to international recommendations. The primary and secondary outcome measures were all-cause mortality and cardiac death, respectively.ResultsWe enrolled 182 patients: 47.3% AL-CA, 44.5% ATTR-CA, 8.2% other etiologies. The number of patients diagnosed with AL and ATTR-CA progressively increased over time, mostly ATTR-CA patients (from 21% before 2016 to 67% after 2016) diagnosed non-invasively. The more consistent increase in event-rate was observed in the long-term (after 50 months) in ATTR-CA compared to the early increase in mortality in AL-CA. In the contemporary cohort, during a median follow up of 16 [4–30] months, ATTR-CA was associated with improved overall and cardiac survival compared to AL-CA. At multivariable analysis, ATTR-CA (HR 0.42, p = 0.03), eGFR (HR 0.98, p = 0.033) and ACE-inhibitor therapy (HR 0.24, p < 0.001) predicted overall survival in the contemporary cohort.ConclusionIncidence and prevalence rates of ATTR-CA and, to a less extent, of AL-CA have been increasing over time, with significant improvements in 2-year survival of ATTR-CA patients from the contemporary cohort. Reaching an early diagnosis and starting disease-modifying treatments will improve long-term survival in CA.

Details

ISSN :
2297055X
Volume :
9
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Frontiers in cardiovascular medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2e6e978960b1897c8e9eec1993b88e89