Patients with AL cardiac amyloidosis had a significantly higher risk of all-cause mortality compared to those with ATTRwt (HR 2.28), though cardiovascular events were the predominant mode of death in both groups.
Cohort (n=114)
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Despite significant differences in clinical presentation and overall survival between AL and ATTRwt cardiac amyloidosis, cardiovascular events account for more than two-thirds of deaths in both subtypes.
Hazard Ratio: 2.28 (95% CI 1.27–4.1)
Tasa de eventos absoluta: 65% vs 44%
valor p: p=0.006
Cardiac amyloidosis (CA) is an underappreciated cause of morbidity and mortality. Light-chain (AL) and transthyretin (ATTR) amyloidosis have different disease trajectories. No data are available on subtype-specific modes of death (MOD) in patients with CA. We retrospectively investigated 66 with AL and 48 with wild-type ATTR amyloidosis (ATTRwt) from 2000 to 2018. ATTRwt differed from AL by age (74.6 ± 5.4 years vs. 63 ± 10.8 years), posterior wall thickness (16.8 ± 3.3 mm vs. 14.3 ± 2.2 mm), left ventricular mass index (180.7 ± 63.2 g/m2 vs. 133.5 ± 42.2 g/m2), and the proportions of male gender (91.7% vs. 59.1%), atrial enlargement (92% vs. 68.2%) and atrial fibrillation (50% vs. 12.1%). In AL NYHA Functional Class and proteinuria (72.7% vs. 39.6%) were greater; mean arterial pressure (84.4 ± 13.5 mmHg vs. 90.0 ± 11.3 mmHg) was lower. Unadjusted 5-year mortality rate was 65% in AL-CA vs. 44% in the ATTRwt group. Individuals with AL-CA were 2.28 times (95%CI 1.27–4.10; p = 0.006) more likely to die than were individuals with ATTRwt-CA. Information on MOD was available in 56 (94.9%) of 59 deceased patients. MOD was cardiovascular in 40 (66.8%) and non-cardiovascular in 16 (27.1%) patients. Cardiovascular 28 (68.3%) vs. 13 (80%) death events were distributed equally between AL and ATTRwt (p = 0.51). Our data indicate no differences in MOD between patients with AL and ATTRwt cardiac amyloidosis despite significant differences in clinical presentation and disease progression. Cardiovascular events account for more than two-thirds of fatal casualties in both groups.
Escher et al. (Mon,) conducted a cohort in Cardiac amyloidosis (AL and ATTRwt) (n=114). AL amyloidosis vs. ATTRwt amyloidosis was evaluated on All-cause mortality (HR 2.28, 95% CI 1.27-4.10, p=0.006). Patients with AL cardiac amyloidosis had a significantly higher risk of all-cause mortality compared to those with ATTRwt (HR 2.28), though cardiovascular events were the predominant mode of death in both groups.