| Literature DB >> 29531659 |
Paolo Milani1, Giampaolo Merlini1, Giovanni Palladini1.
Abstract
Light chain (AL) amyloidosis is caused by a usually small plasma-cell clone that is able to produce the amyloidogenic light chains. They are able to misfold and aggregate, deposit in tissues in the form of amyloid fibrils and lead to irreversible organ dysfunction and eventually death if treatment is late or ineffective. Cardiac damage is the most important prognostic determinant. The risk of dialysis is predicted by the severity of renal involvement, defined by the baseline proteinuria and glomerular filtration rate, and by the response to therapy. The specific treatment is chemotherapy targeting the underlying plasma-cell clone. It needs to be risk-adapted, according to the severity of cardiac and/or multi-organ involvement. Autologous stem cell transplant (preceded by induction and/or followed by consolidation with bortezomib-based regimens) can be considered for low-risk patients (~20%). Bortezomib combined with alkylators is used in the majority of intermediate-risk patients, and with possible dose escalation in high-risk subjects. Novel, powerful anti-plasma cell agents were investigated in the relapsed/refractory setting, and are being moved to upfront therapy in clinical trials. In addition, the use of novel approaches based on antibodies targeting the amyloid deposits or small molecules interfering with the amyloidogenic process gave promising results in preliminary studies. Some of them are under evaluation in controlled trials. These molecules will probably add powerful complements to standard chemotherapy. The understanding of the specific molecular mechanisms of cardiac damage and the characteristics of the amyloidogenic clone are unveiling novel potential treatment approaches, moving towards a cure for this dreadful disease.Entities:
Keywords: amyloidosis; diagnosis; light chains; response; therapy
Year: 2018 PMID: 29531659 PMCID: PMC5841939 DOI: 10.4084/MJHID.2018.022
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mediterr J Hematol Infect Dis ISSN: 2035-3006 Impact factor: 2.576
Figure 1Organ involvement in 1065 patients with AL amyloidosis.
The patients were diagnosed between 2004 and 2015 at the Pavia Amyloidosis Research and Treatment Center. PNS, peripheral nervous system; ANS, autonomic nervous system.
Common types of systemic amyloidosis.
| Amyloid type | Precursor protein | Acquired / Hereditary | Organ involvement |
|---|---|---|---|
| Systemic AL | Monoclonal LCs | Acquired | All organs (except the brain) |
| Localized AL | Monoclonal LCs | Acquired | Skin, tracheobronchial tree, lungs, urinary bladder, (others) |
| ATTRwt | Wild type transthyretin | Acquired | Heart, soft tissue, lung |
| ATTRm | Mutated transthyretin | Hereditary | Hear, PNS/ANS |
| AA | Apolipoprotein serum amyloid A | Acquired | Kidney, heart, liver, lung |
| ApoAI | Apolipoprotein AI | Hereditary | Liver, testis, heart, PNS |
| ALECT2 | Leukocyte Chemotactic Factor-2 | Acquired | Kidney, primarily |
The amyloid types are identified by acronyms where the letter “A” for amyloidosis is followed by the abbreviation of the protein forming the amyloid fibrils. ANS, autonomic nervous system; LCs, immunoglobulin light chains; PNS, peripheral nervous system.
Assessment of clonal and organ disease in patients with AL amyloidosis.
|
Serum Bone marrow aspirate / biopsy (plus FISH) Imaging studies for bone disease | |
NT-proBNP (or BNP), cardiac troponins Echocardiography (plus strain imaging) ECG (plus Holter ECG) Cardiac MRI (if indicated) 99mTc-DPD or PYP scan (to rule out non-AL cardiac amyloidosis) 24h urinary protein Serum creatinine (and eGFR) Liver function tests Liver US / CT scan (if indicated) Liver elastography (if indicated) Physical examination Nerve conduction studies (if indicated) Autonomic testing (if indicated) |
FISH, fluorescence in situ hybridization; NT-proBNP, N-terminal natriuretic peptide type B; Cardiac MRI, cardiac magnetic resonance imaging; eGFR, estimated glomerular filtration rate; US, ultrasound-sonography; CT, computer tomography.
Staging of cardiac and renal damage in AL amyloidosis.
| Staging system | Markers and thresholds | Stages | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cardiac | NT-proBNP >332 ng/L cTnT >0.035 ng/mL (or cTnI > 0.01 ng/mL) |
I. no markers above the cutoff II. one marker above the cutoff IIIa. both markers above the cutoff and NT-proBNP <8500 ng/L IIIb. both markers above the cutoff and NT-proBNP ≥8500 ng/L |
I. median survival not reached, 60% surviving 10 years II. median survival 49 months IIIa. median survival 14 months IIIb. median survival 5 months |
| Revised Mayo Clinic | NT-proBNP >1800 ng/L cTnT >0.025 ng/mL dFLC >180 mg/L |
0 markers above the cutoff 1 marker above the cutoff 2 markers above the cutoff 3 markers above the cutoff |
median survival not reached, 55% surviving 10 years median survival 57 months median survival 18 months median survival 6 months |
| Renal | eGFR <50 mL/min per 1.73 m2 proteinuria >5 g/24h |
both eGFR above and proteinuria below the cutoffs either eGFR below or proteinuria above the cutoffs both eGFR below and proteinuria above the cutoffs |
1% risk of dialysis at 2 years 12% risk of dialysis at 2 years 48% risk of dialysis at 2 years |
cTn, cardiac troponin; dFLC, difference between involved (amyloidogenic) and uninvolved circulating free light chain; eGFR, estimated glomerular filtration rate; NT-proBNP, N-terminal pro-natriuretic peptide type-B.
Observed in 1065 patients with AL amyloidosis newly diagnosed at the Pavia Amyloidosis Research and treatment center.
Validated criteria for response assessment in AL amyloidosis. Response criteria are validated in independent patient populations for use at 3 and 6 months after treatment initiation.
| Hematologic response | Definition |
|---|---|
| Complete response (CR) | Negative serum and urine immunofixation and normal FLC ratio |
| Very good partial response (VGPR) | dFLC <40 mg/L |
| Partial response (PR) | dFLC decrease >50% compared to baseline |
| low-dFLC response | dFLC <10 mg/L |
| Decrease of NT-proBNP by >30% and 300 ng/L | |
| At least 2 points decrease of NYHA class | |
| At least 30% decrease in proteinuria or drop below 0.5 g/24 hour, in the absence of renal progression defined as a >25% decrease in eGFR |
in patients with baseline dFLC >20 mg/L and <50 mg/L.
FLC, free light chain; dFLC, difference between involved and uninvolved light chain; NT-proBNP, N-terminal pro natriuretic peptide type B; NYHA, New York Heart Association; eGFR, estimated glomerular filtration rate.