Increased awareness of cardiac amyloidosis led to a diagnostic surge, but diagnostic time lag did not improve (8 ± 14 months) and 5-year mortality remains high (66% for ATTR and 52% for AL).
Cohort (n=139)
No
Despite increased awareness and non-invasive diagnosis of cardiac amyloidosis, significant diagnostic delays persist and mortality remains high, highlighting the need for better recognition of early red flags.
Background Cardiac amyloidosis (CA) is often overlooked or misdiagnosed. Effects of growing disease awareness, diagnostic ameliorations and novel treatment options on CA diagnosis and management are scarcely reported.Objective To report trends in diagnosis, referral routes, clinical presentation, early onset diagnostic red flags and outcome in de novo CA subjects.Methods An unselected cohort of 139 de novo CA patients over an 8-year period in a tertiary referral hospital was recruited.Results Transthyretin (ATTR, 82%, n = 114) was the most common CA form; Light-chain (AL, 15%, n = 21) and secondary (AA, 3%, n = 4) are less prevalent. Increased awareness over time led to a marked ATTR diagnostic surge, steep non-invasive diagnostic approach increment and increased nuclear medicine and external cardiologist referrals (all p 0.050). Multiple early red flag events preceded CA diagnose several years in ATTR: Left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH, 60%, 4.9 ± 4.3 y), heart failure (54%, 2.5 ± 3.5 y), atrial fibrillation (47%, 5.9 ± 6.7 y), bilateral carpal tunnel syndrome (43%, 9.5 ± 5.7 y) and spinal stenosis (40%, 7.4 ± 6.5 y). LVH ≥ 12 mm was absent in 11% ATTR (n = 13/114) and 5% AL (n = 1/21) patients. Hypertension was common in both ATTR (n = 70/114, 62%) and AL (n = 10/21, 48%). 56% (n = 78/139) of CA presented with heart failure. Cumulative 1 and 5-year mortality of 10%/66%, 40%/52% and 75%/75% for ATTR, AL, and AA, respectively, remains high.Conclusions Although CA diagnostic uptake and referral improve, specialist-specific disease and diagnostic red flag ignorance result in non-timely diagnosis and unfavourable outcome.
Debonnaire et al. (Mon,) conducted a cohort in Cardiac amyloidosis (n=139). Increased awareness of cardiac amyloidosis led to a diagnostic surge, but diagnostic time lag did not improve (8 ± 14 months) and 5-year mortality remains high (66% for ATTR and 52% for AL).