Literature DB >> 32110029

Diagnosis and Treatment of Hereditary Transthyretin Amyloidosis (hATTR) Polyneuropathy: Current Perspectives on Improving Patient Care.

Marco Luigetti1,2, Angela Romano2, Andrea Di Paolantonio2, Giulia Bisogni3, Mario Sabatelli2,3.   

Abstract

Hereditary transthyretin amyloidosis (hATTR) with polyneuropathy (formerly known as Familial Amyloid Polyneuropathy) is a rare disease due to mutations in the gene encoding transthyretin (TTR) and characterized by multisystem extracellular deposition of amyloid, leading to dysfunction of different organs and tissues. hATTR amyloidosis represents a diagnostic challenge for neurologists considering the great variability in clinical presentation and multiorgan involvement. Generally, patients present with polyneuropathy, but clinicians should consider the frequent cardiac, ocular and renal impairment. Especially a hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, even if usually latent, is identifiable in at least 50% of the patients. Therapeutically, current available options act at different stages of TTR production, including synthesis inhibition (liver transplantation and/or gene-silencing drugs) or tetramer TTR stabilization (TTR stabilizers), increasing survival at different disease stages.
© 2020 Luigetti et al.

Entities:  

Keywords:  amyloid; clinical care; polyneuropathy; therapy; transthyretin

Year:  2020        PMID: 32110029      PMCID: PMC7041433          DOI: 10.2147/TCRM.S219979

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ther Clin Risk Manag        ISSN: 1176-6336            Impact factor:   2.423


Introduction

Hereditary transthyretin amyloidosis (hATTR) is a severe, heterogeneous multisystem condition with prevalent peripheral (both somatic and autonomic) nervous system impairment, due to mutations in the transthyretin (TTR) gene.1,2 The condition, presenting as an adult-onset, autosomal-dominant disease with variable penetrance, is characterized by extracellular deposition of amyloid fibrils in different organs. Besides the peripheral nerves, heart, kidney and ocular vitreous may also be involved (Figure 1), leading to a life-threatening, multisystem disease with a great variability in clinical presentation and course, and death within 10 years on average.1
Figure 1

Multisystem involvement in hATTR.

Multisystem involvement in hATTR. hATTR has traditionally been described according to the predominant clinical features, typically either a polyneuropathy (hATTR-PN), formerly referred to as Familial Amyloid Polyneuropathy (FAP),1 or a cardiomyopathy (hATTR-CM), termed Familial Amyloid Cardiomyopathy (FAC),3 although most patients show symptoms and signs of both nerve and heart involvement. A cardiomyopathy is also characteristic of a wild-type form of the disease (ATTRwt), previously known as senile cardiac amyloidosis.4 To date, over 120 TTR variants have been identified as a cause of hATTR, the most common being the p.Val30Met mutation.5 The majority of TTR mutations cause a “neuropathic” or a “mixed” phenotype; yet, some variants typically manifest with a predominant or isolated cardiomyopathy. The classical clinical presentation of the p.Val30Met mutation, causing the common “Portuguese phenotype”, is characterized by a length-dependent neuropathy mainly involving the small fibres. When fully developed, the disease generally discloses a sensory-motor polyneuropathy with autonomic involvement (postural hypotension, and gastrointestinal, bladder and erectile dysfunction). However, neurological manifestations may vary according to the geographic area. In endemic areas, such as Portugal, patients usually show an early-onset disease (usually in the third or fourth decade), presenting as a small-fibre predominant neuropathy, with frequent autonomic dysfunction. Conversely, in non-endemic areas, many patients present with a late-onset FAP (in the sixth to eighth decade) with a slowly progressive polyneuropathy, with more severe motor impairment than early-onset cases, often with cardiac involvement but with less degree of autonomic symptoms.1 In this review, we focus on hATTR amyloidosis: an increasing interest has been observed in this field over the last few years, especially due to a great advance in the therapeutic management of these patients with the possibility to change the natural course of the disease. Hence, with the availability of new therapeutic agents acting either as kinetic TTR stabilizers or gene-silencing drugs,6–9 liver transplantation10 is no longer the only treatment option.

Epidemiology

In the past, hATTR amyloidosis has classically been considered a rare disease with three major endemic clusters in Portugal (where it was first described),11 Sweden, and Japan;1,2 smaller endemic foci have been subsequently identified in Cyprus12 and Majorca.13 Within Europe, the incidence of hATTR amyloidosis is highly variable, and cases are mainly sporadic. Nowadays, given the increasing awareness of the disease among physicians and the current widespread availability of genetic testing, the incidence of hATTR amyloidosis is probably expected to rise, particularly in non-endemic regions.2 Consistently, hATTR has now been reported in at least 29 countries around the world.2

Genetics

The TTR gene, composed of four exons, is located on chromosome 18.14 Over 120 TTR variants have so far been identified, the great majority of which are pathogenic. The most common pathogenic variant consists of a point mutation leading to replacement of valine by methionine at position 30 of the mature protein.5 The Val30Met mutation is responsible for hATTR amyloidosis in the endemic regions,12,13,15,16 and is still the most frequent amyloidogenic mutation worldwide, accounting for about 50% of TTR variants all around the world.1 The disease is inherited as an autosomal dominant trait. However, patients carrying homozygous pathogenic mutations have also been reported, as well as compound heterozygous patients.2 Penetrance of hATTR may vary depending on the geographic region. A complete penetrance has often been described in multi-generation pedigrees from endemic areas.17 Conversely, outside endemic areas, incomplete penetrance that constantly increases with age is commonly seen, reaching nearly 100% in the ninth decade of life.17–19 Factors influencing the age at hATTR onset and phenotypic expression in families with Val30Met mutations remain unknown.1 Both genetic and non-genetic modifying factors,20 such as genotype, geographic origin and the gender of the parent from whom the mutation is inherited,17–19,21 can influence the variability in disease onset and in phenotypic presentation. Regarding the age at onset, anticipation seems to be more prominent in male offspring inheriting the mutation from the mother, as reported by three different studies conducted in Portugal, Japan and Sweden. Conversely, father-to-daughter inheritance appears to be a protective factor for this phenomenon.2

Pathophysiology

TTR, originally known as prealbumin, is a 55-kDa transport protein for both thyroxine (T4) and retinol-binding protein, that circulates in soluble form in the serum and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) of healthy humans.22 The liver represents the main source of TTR synthesis, although a small amount of protein is produced by the choroid plexus and by the retinal and ciliary pigment epithelia. Under normal conditions, TTR circulates as a homotetramer with a central channel containing two T4-binding sites, only one of which is physiologically occupied.22 hATTR amyloidosis is a protein misfolding disease: most pathogenic mutations reduce the stability of TTR tetramers as compared with the wild-type protein and enhance their dissociation into monomers, resulting in misfolding, aggregation and subsequent extracellular deposition of TTR amyloid fibrils in different sites, leading to progressive multisystem dysfunction.1 Amyloid deposition begins years before clinical onset, as in other neurodegenerative conditions, such as Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s disease. TTR amyloid fibrils can also originate from deposition of wild-type transthyretin protein in ATTRwt amyloidosis: this condition is an age-related disease, thus called senile amyloidosis,4 in which the wild-type TTR protein gets structurally dissociated and misassembled into amyloid fibrils.

Clinical Features

The clinical picture of hATTR classically shows a great heterogeneity, varying from an almost exclusive neurologic phenotype within an endemic cohort to a strictly cardiologic presentation in sporadic cases (Table 1).23
Table 1

Clinical Manifestations and Epidemiology of the Most Common hATTR Mutations

MutationEpidemiologyPeripheral NeuropathyAutonomic NeuropathyCardiomyopathyOcular InvolvementGastrointestinal InvolvementRenal Involvement
Val30Met(early onset)Portugal, Brazil+++++±++++
Val30Met(late onset)Japan, Sweden, USA,Italy, France++++++++±
Val122IleUSA±±+++±±±
Thr60AlaUK, USA+++++±±±
Glu89GlnItaly, Bulgaria++++++±+±
Ser50ArgJapan, France, Italy, USA++++++±±+±
Phe64LeuUSA, Italy++++++±+±
Ile68LeuGermany, Italy±±+++±±±
Ser77TyrUSA, France, Israel++++++±++
Ile107ValUSA, France, Brazil++++++±±±
Asp38AlaJapan++++++±±±

Notes: The number of “+” provides an indication of the likelihood of presence of symptoms, with “±” indicating an unknown likelihood as the symptom is present in some patients and not in others.

Clinical Manifestations and Epidemiology of the Most Common hATTR Mutations Notes: The number of “+” provides an indication of the likelihood of presence of symptoms, with “±” indicating an unknown likelihood as the symptom is present in some patients and not in others. Firstly, clinical phenotype appears to be related to the specific TTR mutation: some variants (such as Val122Ile, Ile68Leu, Thr60Ala, and Leu111Met) induce a cardiomyopathy as the predominant feature,24,25 while others (such as Ala97Ser and Ser50Arg) cause a pure neurological phenotype.26,27 Also, age at onset has a great variability and seems to influence the phenotype and the clinical course, along with the geographic origin. Patients from endemic areas have traditionally been described as having an early-onset (age <50 years) or late-onset disease (age ≥50 years).15,28,29 These two groups, even if sharing the same genotype, differ in pathological and clinical features.30 Early-onset patients in endemic regions usually show a progressive sensory-motor and autonomic neuropathy, with an expected survival of approximately 10–20 years from onset.23 By contrast, late-onset Val30Met patients, as well as non-Val30Met cases, have usually a more rapid and severe progression, with common cardiac involvement, and are associated with a median survival of nearly 7 years since the disease onset.26,31,32 Prognosis is, by far, poorer for the exclusively cardiac phenotypes (FAC), with a life expectancy of 2–5 years from symptom onset.33,34

Symptoms

Some patients, especially those with an early-onset hATTR-Val30Met amyloidosis, can complain of systemic unspecific symptoms, such as fatigue or unintentional weight loss, as the initial manifestations of the disease. The specific clinical picture of the somatic neuropathy is influenced by the causal TTR mutation and the age of onset. Early-onset hATTR-Val30Met amyloidosis presents with “discomfort” (numbness and neuropathic pain) in the feet, which gradually extends proximally, associated with impaired pain and/or temperature sensation, related to the involvement of unmyelinated and small myelinated fibres; impairment of light touch and deep sensibility and of motor fibres usually occurs late in the course of the disease.1 Clinical presentation of late-onset hATTR-Val30Met amyloidosis and other non-Val30Met variants is, by far, more variable, as it may manifest with sensory or sensorimotor symptoms, starting either distally in lower or all four limbs or even exclusively in the upper limbs, mimicking a carpal tunnel syndrome.31,35 Autonomic impairment is frequently observed, especially in early-onset cases, and may present with gastrointestinal symptoms (including constipation, daily diarrhoea or alternating constipation/diarrhoea, early satiety, nausea, and vomiting), orthostatic hypotension, bladder and erectile dysfunction. Cardiac amyloidosis, remaining latent for a long time, results in progressive biventricular wall thickening, diastolic dysfunction deriving from loss of compliance, conduction disorders, and symptoms of congestive heart failure with a preserved ejection fraction. Cardiac arrhythmias and/or conduction blocks are frequent in early-onset Val30Met or in other non-Val30Met variants (ie, Glu89Gln).31,33 Kidney involvement, usually presenting as nephrotic syndrome and/or progressive renal failure, occurs in about one-third of Portuguese Val30Met patients, and in only 6% of sporadic hATTR cases.1,36 Ocular involvement is quite frequent, and its prevalence seems to increase with disease duration. Ocular disorders include dry eye syndrome (nearly 70%), amyloid deposition on the iris (38%) or on the anterior capsule of the lens (33%), pupillary disorders (as scalloped iris in about 28%), glaucoma (20%), vitreous opacity (17%), abnormal conjunctiva vessels (14%), and amyloidotic retinal angiopathy (4%).37,38 Finally, central nervous system (CNS) involvement, resulting from leptomeningeal amyloid angiopathy, has also been described, sometimes in combination with eye impairment (oculoleptomeningeal amyloidosis). Leptomeningeal and meningovascular amyloidosis are rare forms of amyloidosis caused by a limited spectrum of TTR variants, such as Ala25Thr39 or Tyr69His,40 but CNS impairment can also be found in advanced stages of hATTR-Val30Met amyloidosis, causing stroke, subarachnoid haemorrhage, hydrocephalus, cerebellar ataxia, spastic paresis, seizures, hearing loss, and dementia.40,41

Diagnosis

In endemic areas, where a positive family history is frequent, the diagnosis of hATTR is usually easy and often made within 1 year from disease onset. In these areas, once a mutation has been identified within a family, genetic counselling for asymptomatic carriers is fundamental. Regular follow-up of carriers is necessary to detect early symptoms or signs of the disease, allowing a prompt initiation of anti-amyloid therapy. Diagnosis is clearly more challenging in non-endemic regions, where it can be delayed by 4–5 years as a result of several factors, especially a common negative family history.42–44 Furthermore, clinical presentation, given its heterogeneity, may mimic various peripheral neuropathies, explaining the high frequency of misdiagnosis (Table 2).35,42,45–47 Common misdiagnoses include idiopathic axonal polyneuropathy, chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyradiculoneuropathy, lumbar spinal stenosis, diabetic neuropathies, Charcot-Marie-Tooth neuropathy or motor neuron disease. In patients with a peripheral neuropathy of otherwise undetermined aetiology, early search for associated clinical features, especially for cardiac involvement, can help reveal amyloidosis.
Table 2

Frequent Misdiagnosis in Patients with Transthyretin Amyloidosis

PhenotypesGenotypesMisdiagnosis
Length-dependent, small-fibre polyneuropathy and/or autonomic neuropathyTTR Val30Met mutation (early-onset disease)

Diabetic Polyneuropathy

Fibromyalgia

Immunoglobulin light-chain amyloidosis

Chronic digestive disease

All-fibre polyneuropathyTTR Val30Met mutation (late-onset disease) and other TTR variants

CIDP

Idiopathic axonal polyneuropathy

Lumbar spinal stenosis

Vasculitic peripheral neuropathy

Toxic peripheral neuropathy

Alcoholic neuropathy

Paraproteinemic neuropathy

Upper-limb-onset polyneuropathyTTR Val30Met mutation (43%) and other TTR variants (Phe64Leu, Ser77Tyr, Tyr78Phe and Ile107Val)

Carpal tunnel syndrome

Idiopathic polyneuropathy

CIDP

Paraneoplastic neuropathy

Cervical radiculopathy

Motor neuropathyTTR Val30Met, Phe64Leu, Ile68Leu, Tyr78Phe, Val39Met and Ile107Val

ALS

Motor CIDP

Motor neuropathy

Motor neuron disease

CardiomyopathyTTR variant (Thr60Ala, Leu111Met, Ile68Leu, Val122Ile) and wild-type ATTR

Sarcomeric hypertrophic cardiomyopathies

Anderson-Fabry disease

Mitochondrial disorders (ie, Kearns–Sayre syndrome)

Danon disease

Noonan syndrome

Abbreviations: ALS, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis; CIDP, chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyradiculoneuropathy.

Frequent Misdiagnosis in Patients with Transthyretin Amyloidosis Diabetic Polyneuropathy Fibromyalgia Immunoglobulin light-chain amyloidosis Chronic digestive disease CIDP Idiopathic axonal polyneuropathy Lumbar spinal stenosis Vasculitic peripheral neuropathy Toxic peripheral neuropathy Alcoholic neuropathy Paraproteinemic neuropathy Carpal tunnel syndrome Idiopathic polyneuropathy CIDP Paraneoplastic neuropathy Cervical radiculopathy ALS Motor CIDP Motor neuropathy Motor neuron disease Sarcomeric hypertrophic cardiomyopathies Anderson-Fabry disease Mitochondrial disorders (ie, Kearns–Sayre syndrome) Danon disease Noonan syndrome Abbreviations: ALS, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis; CIDP, chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyradiculoneuropathy. The diagnosis can be confirmed by demonstration of amyloid in a biopsy sample and/or detection of an amyloidogenic mutation by TTR gene sequencing.31,32 Characteristic amyloid deposits can be detected in different tissues, such as skin, nerve, myocardium, kidney, fat pad, labial salivary gland or gastrointestinal mucosa.42,48 Therefore, following a clinical suspicion, tissue biopsy, ideally of an affected organ, may be performed. Staining with Congo red, which typically gives an apple-green birefringence under polarized light, can reveal amyloid deposition.1,42 Once amyloid is demonstrated, the type of precursor protein should be identified: confirmation of TTR as precursor protein can be made by either immunohistochemistry or mass spectroscopy.42 However, the patchy and uneven distribution of amyloid fibrils in tissues may yield false-negative or false-positive results.23 Hence, a negative biopsy does not rule out the diagnosis of hATTR amyloidosis: the sensitivity (besides relying on the skill of the pathologist) varies depending on the biopsied tissue, the TTR mutation, and the patient’s age; multiple biopsies might be required for the diagnosis in some cases.44 In some European countries, biopsy of the labial salivary gland can be used to look for evidence of amyloidosis in unexplained progressive axonal neuropathy.49 Nerve biopsy (Figures 2–4), despite being usually considered a second-line investigation for diagnosis, has a sensitivity of nearly 80%.42,50,51 Amyloid can also be visualised in other specimens, such as muscle or abdominal fat, showing a variable sensitivity of 14–83%.42,44,50
Figure 2

Sural nerve biopsies from a patient with late-onset FAP. Semithin sections stained with toluidine blue showed a severe reduction of myelinated fibres (A). A second biopsy performed four years later revealed complete loss of myelinated fibres (B), while unmyelinated fibres were relatively preserved (C).

Figure 4

Sural nerve biopsy from a patient with late-onset FAP. Semithin section stained with Toluidine blue (A) showed amyloid deposition, also confirmed by H&E (B) and Congo red (C) staining. However, immunofluorescence with anti-TTR (D), anti-kappa light chain (E), and anti-lambda light chain (F) resulted not specific for TTR amyloidosis.

Sural nerve biopsies from a patient with late-onset FAP. Semithin sections stained with toluidine blue showed a severe reduction of myelinated fibres (A). A second biopsy performed four years later revealed complete loss of myelinated fibres (B), while unmyelinated fibres were relatively preserved (C). Sural nerve biopsy from a patient with late-onset FAP. Congo red staining showed a small amyloid deposition (A). Ultrastructural analysis with electron microscope confirmed short and thin amyloid fibrils (B). Sural nerve biopsy from a patient with late-onset FAP. Semithin section stained with Toluidine blue (A) showed amyloid deposition, also confirmed by H&E (B) and Congo red (C) staining. However, immunofluorescence with anti-TTR (D), anti-kappa light chain (E), and anti-lambda light chain (F) resulted not specific for TTR amyloidosis. Flow-chart strategy for the diagnosis of FAP in endemic (left) and non-endemic (right) areas. However, if clinical suspicion is high, TTR gene sequencing should be performed in all patients, and Sanger sequencing represents now the gold standard (Figure 5).2
Figure 5

Flow-chart strategy for the diagnosis of FAP in endemic (left) and non-endemic (right) areas.

Once the diagnosis has been reached, additional extensive investigations are required to evaluate the extent and severity of organ involvement. Traditional nerve conduction studies are performed to detect the presence and severity of a peripheral neuropathy.32,52 Even if skin biopsy still remains the gold standard for the diagnosis of a small fibre neuropathy, evaluation of sudomotor function via electrochemical skin conductance,53–55 as well as measurement of heart rate variability,56 and testing for orthostatic hypotension can all be useful to investigate an autonomic neuropathy. Cardiac investigations in hATTR amyloidosis are mainly aimed at detecting a possible infiltrative (hypertrophic) cardiomyopathy and, above all, any potential serious conduction disorders that may require the implantation of a prophylactic pacemaker to decrease the risk of sudden death. For specific mutations causing a predominantly/exclusively cardiac phenotype, particularly common in USA (Val122Ile),57 UK (Thr60Ala),58 or Italy (Ile68Leu),24 a differential diagnosis with other cardiomyopathies may be necessary (Table 2). Useful investigations for cardiac assessment include echocardiogram, 24 hr Holter monitoring, and echocardiography with strain imaging; cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and intracardiac electrophysiological studies, even if not always available, are useful when necessary.2 Scintigraphy to detect cardiac uptake of bone tracers such as 99mTc-2,3-dicarboxypropane-1,1-diphosphonate (DPD), 99mTc-hydroxymethylene diphosphonate (HMDP) or 99mTc-pyrophosphate (PYP)2,3,59 is a non-invasive investigation that may facilitate early diagnosis, helping to recognize an amyloid origin of an hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. It can be used, although taking into account radioactivity exposure, as an equivalent for cardiac biopsy in this context, owing to its usually high sensitivity and specificity.59 On the other hand, the possibility of a low sensitivity for specific mutations, including Phe64Leu, should be considered.60 Cardiac serum biomarkers, specifically brain natriuretic peptide (BNP) or its N-terminal prohormone (NT-proBNP) and cardiac troponins (T or I), are useful and have a prognostic value in amyloid cardiomyopathy.3,61 NT-proBNP is a natriuretic peptide without biological activity whose plasma levels are increased in association with high intracardiac pressure, as observed in heart failure with preserved ejection fraction. NT-proBNP plasma levels are abnormal even in the early stages of cardiac amyloid infiltration, and correlate with left ventricular mass (evaluated on cardiac MRI) and with late gadolinium enhancement, suggesting their utility as a measure of cardiac amyloidosis severity.61 In addition, high levels of troponin are observed in the most severe forms or in advanced stages of the disease. Once the genetic diagnosis is confirmed, an ophthalmological assessment should be carried out as well. When ocular manifestations are present, the frequency of ophthalmological evaluations varies depending on severity of eye involvement, and should include measurement of visual acuity and of intraocular pressure, Schirmer test, ocular fundus and slit-lamp examination.38 Renal evaluation is also crucial, and usually based on measurement of serum creatinine, proteinuria and microalbuminuria, and on the estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR).2,36 Determination of serum cystatin C may represent another valid marker for non-invasive estimation of GFR: since serum cystatin C concentration seems to be independent of sex, age, and muscle mass, it has been suggested to be a more sensitive marker of renal dysfunction compared with serum creatinine level.62 Finally, a modified version of the body mass index (mBMI), that corrects for the effect of hypalbuminaemia, provides a marker of nutritional status, which is, to some extent, influenced by the duration and severity of gastrointestinal symptoms and malabsorption in hATTR patients.63

Outcome Measures

To evaluate the extent of disability in hATTR-PN patients, useful tools in clinical practice include the FAP staging system64 and the Polyneuropathy Disability (PND) score.63 However, these clinical scales provide only a generic indicator of overall disease status and are not sensitive to track disease progression in the short-term period. Hence, to better evaluate all the aspects of the polyneuropathy, clinical trials have tested different Neuropathy Impairment Score (NIS)-based measures, which provide a better chance to detect a treatment effect. Nevertheless, the NIS score,65 a clinical compound score based on examination of muscle weakness, sensory loss and stretch reflexes in the limbs, and its subset, the NIS-lower limbs (NIS-LL) score,6 have shown some limitations, requiring gradual modifications. In a trial published in 2013, the NIS+7,66 which combines clinical assessment with seven electrophysiological tests, was used to better characterize and quantify neuropathic impairment. In recent trials, run by Alnylam and by Ionis,8,9 two different variants of the modified NIS+7 (mNIS+7) were used. The mNIS+7Alnylam and the mNIS+7Ionis, specifically designed to assess disease impairment and progression in hATTR amyloidosis clinical trials, better quantify sensory abnormalities over the whole body, nerve conduction abnormalities, and autonomic function.67 Other useful clinical scales include: the Composite Autonomic Symptom Scale-31 (COMPASS-31) questionnaire68 and the Compound Autonomic Dysfunction Test (CADT) questionnaire69 for assessment of autonomic symptoms; the Rasch-built Overall Disability Scale (R-ODS) survey70 for evaluation of activities of daily living; the Norfolk Quality of Life-Diabetic Neuropathy (QoL-DN) questionnaire71 to estimate quality of life; the 6 min walking test, the 10-meter walking test, and handgrip strength test (dynamometer) to assess specific motor function.72 Instrumental examination, as Sudoscan, also proved to be a good tool for monitoring disease progression in late-onset hATTR.53–55 Considering the amount of available scales and/or questionnaires, it is difficult to imagine the actual application of all of them in clinical practice. In the Authors’ opinion, some of these, including FAP staging system, PND and NIS-LL scores, could be currently used in clinical daily activity, while others, including NIS+7 and its variants, should be limited to protocols. Regarding autonomic involvement, which is quite hard to quantify, CADT questionnaire could be the best questionnaire, and Sudoscan the best instrumental technique.

Therapy

Being a systemic disease, management of hATTR amyloidosis patients requires a multidisciplinary approach.42 Care should include anti-amyloid therapy to inhibit further production and/or deposition of amyloid aggregates, symptomatic therapy, and treatment of cardiac, renal and ocular involvement, considering also the eventuality of heart or kidney transplantation in advanced disease.42 After the diagnosis of hATTR, it is advisable to timely start treatment to delay disease progression.73 Systematic and regular monitoring of TTR asymptomatic carriers is essential to detect early signs of disease and to promptly initiate anti-amyloid therapy.74 In the last few years, many therapies have been developed for hATTR amyloidosis (Figure 6), especially for the early stages of the disease (stage 1 and 2), while currently patients with an advanced disease (stage 3 hATTR-PN) do not have any available treatment.
Figure 6

Overview of therapeutic strategies in hATTR with polyneuropathy.

Overview of therapeutic strategies in hATTR with polyneuropathy.

Liver Transplantation

Since TTR is mainly produced by the liver, the first therapeutic approach for these patients was liver transplantation (LT), introduced for treatment of hATTR amyloidosis in 1990 to prevent amyloid formation.10 The outcome of liver transplantation is influenced by various patients’ characteristics, including age, severity of disease at the time of surgery, and TTR mutation.75 In a retrospective analysis performed on 1940 patients from the FAP World Transplant Registry, the 20-year survival after LT was 55.3%, with cardiovascular complications representing the leading causes of death (22%).76 This procedure, that replaces the mutant TTR protein with the wild-type protein, can indeed fail to stop subsequent progressive cardiac deposition.77,78 Clinical observations post-liver transplantation suggest that preformed fibrils present in the organs of hATTR patients at the time of surgery could template and accelerate polymerization of soluble circulating TTR: it is hypothesized that this “seeding” may contribute to cardiomyopathy by cardiac deposition of wild-type TTR secreted by the new liver.77

TTR Stabilizers

TTR tetramer stabilizers are agents designed to stabilize the normal circulating form of TTR, and hence are hypothesized to prevent the protein from dissociating and undergoing the conformational changes that lead to its aggregation as amyloid.79 However, TTR stabilizers do not inhibit “seeding” of ATTR: this data may help to explain results of clinical trials.78 Two drugs that act as TTR stabilizers have been assessed in controlled trials in hATTR amyloidosis:

Tafamidis

Tafamidis is an oral, kinetic TTR stabilizer, approved in Europe and selected countries of Asia and South America for the treatment of hATTR in adults with stage 1 symptomatic polyneuropathy.80 Tafamidis treatment in hATTR-PN amyloidosis was assessed in a multicentre, placebo-controlled, Phase III clinical trial involving 128 patients, most of whom of Portuguese origin, with an early-onset ATTR-Val30Met amyloidosis and a mild neuropathy at baseline.6 Tafamidis treatment demonstrated TTR stabilization in 98% of the patients and lack of neuropathy progression in 60% of the patients (versus 38% in the placebo group), with maintained quality of life (QoL).6 The short-term and long-term efficacy and safety of tafamidis in late-onset hATTR (Val30Met and non-Val30Met mutations) have been evaluated in three open-label studies.81–83 Tafamidis was well tolerated in all the studies. However, it did not prevent progression of disability at 1 year after initiation of treatment.81,82 Neuropathy progression correlated with an older age and a poorer clinical status at baseline.83 More recently, based on the results of the ATTRACT trial, tafamidis has been approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) for the treatment of patients with hATTR-CM, and it has been presented to the European Medicines Agency (EMA) for the same indication. In the ATTRACT trial, two dosages of tafamidis were compared with placebo in symptomatic patients with hATTR-CM (25%) and ATTRwt amyloid cardiomyopathy (75%).84 The primary analysis disclosed that at 18 months of therapy all-cause mortality and rates of cardiovascular-related hospitalizations were lower in the tafamidis group than in the placebo group, as well as a reduced deterioration in functional capacity and in QoL in patients with either hATTR-CM or ATTRwt cardiomyopathy.84

Diflunisal

Diflunisal, a nonsteroidal anti–inflammatory drug (NSAID), acts as well as a TTR stabilizer.23 A randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind, multicentre, international phase III study, including patients with late-onset hATTR amyloidosis associated with different TTR mutations and high NIS at baseline, demonstrated that treatment with diflunisal for 2 years significantly reduces the rate of neuropathy progression and preserves QoL, compared to placebo.66 However, half of the study population discontinued the treatment because of disease progression and liver transplantation. Furthermore, long-term use of NSAID typically induces an increased risk of gastrointestinal, renal, and cardiac adverse events.79

Gene-Silencing Therapies

Lately, two new first-in-class drugs, patisiran (Onpattro, Alnylam Pharmaceuticals, Inc.), and inotersen (Tegsedi, Akcea Therapeutics, Inc.), have been approved in the United States for the treatment of hATTR amyloidosis and in Europe for the treatment of stage 1 or 2 polyneuropathy in adults with hATTR amyloidosis. These novel therapies aim to decrease both variant and wild-type TTR hepatic production by targeting its mRNA.2 However, long-term studies will be necessary to evaluate the effect of gene-silencing therapies on the functional role of TTR, especially regarding transport of vitamin A.

RNA Interference

RNA interference (RNAi) is a biological process in which non-coding, small interfering RNAs (siRNAs) inhibit the expression of specific genes by mediating the degradation of targeted mRNAs.85 siRNAs are encapsulated in lipid nanoparticles that, following intravenous administration, are opsonized by apolipoprotein and predominantly delivered to the liver.85,86 Use of RNAi therapy in hATTR amyloidosis has been tested in both preclinical models86 and clinical trials.72,84,87 In preclinical models, significant reduction of TTR deposits in peripheral tissues was observed following RNAi-mediated TTR suppression, with regression correlating to serum TTR concentration.86 A marked TTR knockdown was also seen in a Phase I study conducted on both healthy volunteers and hATTR patients, where patisiran leaded to a rapid, dose-dependent and persistent decrease of both mutant and non-mutant TTR.87 Patisiran was then assessed in a Phase II, open-label, multidose, dose-escalation study including 29 patients with stage 1 or 2 hATTR-PN amyloidosis. In patients treated with patisiran at a dose of 0.3 mg/kg body weight every 3 weeks, the maximum mean reduction in TTR level was 87%.84 Patients in the Phase II trial were eligible to continue treatment in an open-label extension study that showed stability of the measures of neuropathy impairment over 24 months of treatment. A large randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, phase III study (APOLLO) showed the efficacy and safety of patisiran over 18 months of treatment.72 The primary end point was the change from baseline to 18 months in the mNIS+7Alnylam score. Secondary end points included the effect of patisiran on QoL (assessed by the Norfolk QoL-DN), motor strength (NIS-weakness subset), disability (score on the R-ODS survey), gait speed (10-meter walk test), nutritional status (mBMI), and patient-reported autonomic symptoms (COMPASS-31 questionnaire).72 Two hundred and twenty-five patients with different severity of disease (NIS score of 5 to 130) underwent randomization in a 2:1 ratio (148 to the patisiran arm vs 77 to the placebo group). Randomization was stratified according to NIS, Val30Met variant associated with early-onset disease (age <50 years) versus late-onset Val30Met cases and all other pathogenic mutations, and previous use of a TTR stabilizer versus no known previous treatment. Compared to placebo, patisiran showed a statistically significant benefit both in the primary end point and in all the secondary end points in all subgroups, regardless of the disease stage, TTR variant and age at onset. Improvement from baseline in mNIS+7 scores occurred in 56% of participants who received patisiran versus only 4% in the placebo group.8 Adverse events more frequently observed in the patisiran group than in the placebo one included peripheral edema (30% versus 22%) and infusion-related reactions (19% versus 9%), but these events were mild or moderate. The frequency of severe adverse events (28% in the patisiran group and 36% in the placebo group) and serious adverse events (36% and 40%, respectively) was instead comparable in the two groups. Revusiran is another RNAi drug designed for the treatment of hATTR amyloidosis, administered subcutaneously, consisting of a TTR-targeting siRNA conjugated to a N-acetylgalactosamine (GalNAc) ligand.86,88 A randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, phase III trial (ENDEAVOUR) was designed to test its efficacy and safety in patients with hATTR-CM. However, this trial was stopped in 2016 owing to observation of a greater mortality in the treatment group than in the placebo arm.

Antisense Oligonucleotides

Inotersen (IONIS-TTRRx) is a second-generation 2′-O-methoxyethyl–modified antisense oligonucleotide (ASO) designed to inhibit the hepatic production of both mutant and wild-type TTR.9 Inotersen targets TTR mRNA, causing its degradation through a RNase H1 mechanism of action, thus preventing the translation of TTR mRNA into TTR protein.89 A robust (>80%), dose-dependent reduction in plasma TTR levels were observed both in animal models and in healthy human volunteers treated with IONIS-TTRRx.89 The safety and efficacy of inotersen in hATTR amyloidosis have been tested in an international, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, 15-months, pivotal phase III trial (NEURO-TTR).9 A total of 172 patients with a diagnosis of stage 1 or 2 hATTR-PN (NIS score of 10 to 130) was enrolled and randomized in a 2:1 ratio to receive inotersen 300 mg (112 patients) or placebo (60 patients). The drug was administered subcutaneously three times during the first week to obtain near steady-state drug levels, followed by a once-weekly subcutaneous injection for the next 64 weeks. Patients were stratified according to TTR mutations (Val30Met versus non-Val30Met), disease stage (stage 1 versus stage 2), and previous treatment with tafamidis or diflunisal. Primary end points were the change from baseline to week 66 in the mNIS+7Ionis score and in the total score on the Norfolk QoL-DN questionnaire. Both primary efficacy end points favoured inotersen, independently of TTR mutation, disease stage, or presence of a cardiomyopathy at baseline.9 36.6% of patients treated with inotersen remained stable or improved on mNIS+7 score at 15 months versus 19.2% in the placebo arm. Five deaths were observed in the inotersen group versus none in the placebo group. The most common serious adverse events in the treatment group were glomerulonephritis (3%) and thrombocytopenia (3%), with one death associated with grade 4 thrombocytopenia. Subsequently, all patients received enhanced monitoring for thrombocytopenia and renal dysfunction. The FDA and EMA approved inotersen for the treatment of patients with stage 1 or stage 2 hATTR-PN.

Emerging Therapeutic Approaches

Several agents that stabilize TTR, such as epigallocatechin-3-gallate (EGCG), have been studied. EGCG is a catechin in green tea that is likely to increase TTR tetramer stabilization and to reduce TTR deposition.90 Monoclonal antibodies directed against non-native forms of TTR protein represent another possible therapeutic option for hATTR amyloidosis. These antibodies selectively bound the target epitope on monomeric and non-native, misfolded forms of TTR, strongly inhibiting TTR fibril formation in vitro.91 A Phase I–II study to evaluate the safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics, and pharmacodynamics of AKCEA-TTR-LRx (ION-682884), an antisense inhibitor of transthyretin production, administered subcutaneously via a single subcutaneous injection once every 4 weeks to healthy volunteers and patients with hATTR amyloidosis, is ongoing (ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT03728634). A phase III study has been initiated and is currently recruiting patients to assess the efficacy and safety of vutrisiran (ALN-TTRSC02), a RNAi drug administered subcutaneously once every 3 months, in patients with hATTR amyloidosis. Participants will receive vutrisiran or the reference comparator patisiran during the treatment period. This study will use the placebo arm of the APOLLO study (NCT01960348) as an external comparator for the primary and most other efficacy end points (ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT03759379).

Conclusion

hATTR amyloidosis is a severe, clinically and genetically heterogeneous, multisystem disease, distributed worldwide. Recent results of clinical studies have widened the therapeutic arsenal to include TTR stabilizers and TTR gene silencers, with a global decline in the utilization of liver transplantation. Nowadays, an increasing interest is especially addressed to gene-silencing therapies that are likely to change the natural history of the condition, regardless of the stage, although long-term benefits or side effects are still to be proved, as a further progression of the disease could be explained by the persistent production of transthyretin in the brain and in the eye. The future challenges will be to find an effective therapy in patients with an advanced disease, and to assess the effects of amyloid deposit clearance with monoclonal antibodies, the potential of curative gene replacement therapy, and the potential benefit of combined therapies with different mechanism of action, as well as the effects of disease-modifying therapies in pre-symptomatic individuals.
  90 in total

1.  Amyloid seeding of transthyretin by ex vivo cardiac fibrils and its inhibition.

Authors:  Lorena Saelices; Kevin Chung; Ji H Lee; Whitaker Cohn; Julian P Whitelegge; Merrill D Benson; David S Eisenberg
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2018-06-28       Impact factor: 11.205

2.  Electrophysiological features of late-onset transthyretin Met30 familial amyloid polyneuropathy unrelated to endemic foci.

Authors:  Haruki Koike; Yuichi Kawagashira; Masahiro Iijima; Masahiko Yamamoto; Naoki Hattori; Fumiaki Tanaka; Masaaki Hirayama; Yukio Ando; Shu-ichi Ikeda; Gen Sobue
Journal:  J Neurol       Date:  2008-09-24       Impact factor: 4.849

Review 3.  Hereditary transthyretin amyloidosis: a model of medical progress for a fatal disease.

Authors:  David Adams; Haruki Koike; Michel Slama; Teresa Coelho
Journal:  Nat Rev Neurol       Date:  2019-06-17       Impact factor: 42.937

4.  Familial amyloidotic polyneuropathy in Sweden: geographical distribution, age of onset, and prevalence.

Authors:  A Sousa; R Andersson; U Drugge; G Holmgren; O Sandgren
Journal:  Hum Hered       Date:  1993 Sep-Oct       Impact factor: 0.444

5.  Targeted delivery of RNAi therapeutics with endogenous and exogenous ligand-based mechanisms.

Authors:  Akin Akinc; William Querbes; Soma De; June Qin; Maria Frank-Kamenetsky; K Narayanannair Jayaprakash; Muthusamy Jayaraman; Kallanthottathil G Rajeev; William L Cantley; J Robert Dorkin; James S Butler; Liuliang Qin; Timothy Racie; Andrew Sprague; Eugenio Fava; Anja Zeigerer; Michael J Hope; Marino Zerial; Dinah W Y Sah; Kevin Fitzgerald; Mark A Tracy; Muthiah Manoharan; Victor Koteliansky; Antonin de Fougerolles; Martin A Maier
Journal:  Mol Ther       Date:  2010-05-11       Impact factor: 11.454

6.  Malnutrition and gastrointestinal dysfunction as prognostic factors for survival in familial amyloidotic polyneuropathy.

Authors:  O Suhr; A Danielsson; G Holmgren; L Steen
Journal:  J Intern Med       Date:  1994-05       Impact factor: 8.989

7.  Epidemiological, clinical and genetic study of familial amyloidotic polyneuropathy in Cyprus.

Authors:  Eftymioe Dardiotis; Panoelitsa Koutsou; Eleni Zamba Papanicolaou; Ilia Vonta; Athina Kladi; Demetrios Vassilopoulos; Georgios Hadjigeorgiou; Kyproyla Christodoulou; Theodoros Kyriakides
Journal:  Amyloid       Date:  2009-03       Impact factor: 7.141

8.  Heterogeneity of penetrance in familial amyloid polyneuropathy, ATTR Val30Met, in the Swedish population.

Authors:  Urban Hellman; Flora Alarcon; Hans-Erik Lundgren; Ole B Suhr; Catherine Bonaiti-Pellié; Violaine Planté-Bordeneuve
Journal:  Amyloid       Date:  2008-09       Impact factor: 7.141

9.  Epigallocatechin-3-gallate as a potential therapeutic drug for TTR-related amyloidosis: "in vivo" evidence from FAP mice models.

Authors:  Nelson Ferreira; Maria João Saraiva; Maria Rosário Almeida
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2012-01-10       Impact factor: 3.240

10.  Novel conformation-specific monoclonal antibodies against amyloidogenic forms of transthyretin.

Authors:  Jeffrey N Higaki; Avi Chakrabartty; Natalie J Galant; Kevin C Hadley; Bradley Hammerson; Tarlochan Nijjar; Ronald Torres; Jose R Tapia; Joshua Salmans; Robin Barbour; Stephen J Tam; Ken Flanagan; Wagner Zago; Gene G Kinney
Journal:  Amyloid       Date:  2016-03-16       Impact factor: 7.141

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  16 in total

Review 1.  Antisense technology: an overview and prospectus.

Authors:  Stanley T Crooke; Brenda F Baker; Rosanne M Crooke; Xue-Hai Liang
Journal:  Nat Rev Drug Discov       Date:  2021-03-24       Impact factor: 84.694

2.  Cutaneous silent period in ATTRv carriers: a possible early marker of nerve damage?

Authors:  Marco Luigetti; Andrea Di Paolantonio; Valeria Guglielmino; Angela Romano
Journal:  Neurol Sci       Date:  2022-08-09       Impact factor: 3.830

3.  Prevalence and Outcomes of p.Val142Ile TTR Amyloidosis Cardiomyopathy: A Systematic Review.

Authors:  Pranav Chandrashekar; Laith Alhuneafat; Meghan Mannello; Lana Al-Rashdan; Morris M Kim; Jason Dungu; Kevin Alexander; Ahmad Masri
Journal:  Circ Genom Precis Med       Date:  2021-08-31

Review 4.  The genetics of cardiac amyloidosis.

Authors:  Scott Arno; Jennifer Cowger
Journal:  Heart Fail Rev       Date:  2021-09-13       Impact factor: 4.654

5.  Recommendations for pre-symptomatic genetic testing for hereditary transthyretin amyloidosis in the era of effective therapy: a multicenter Italian consensus.

Authors:  M Grandis; L Obici; M Luigetti; C Briani; F Benedicenti; G Bisogni; M Canepa; F Cappelli; C Danesino; G M Fabrizi; S Fenu; G Ferrandes; C Gemelli; F Manganelli; A Mazzeo; L Melchiorri; F Perfetto; L G Pradotto; P Rimessi; G Tini; S Tozza; L Trevisan; D Pareyson; P Mandich
Journal:  Orphanet J Rare Dis       Date:  2020-12-14       Impact factor: 4.123

6.  The patient journey toward a diagnosis of hereditary transthyretin (ATTRv) amyloidosis.

Authors:  Montserrat Vera-Llonch; Sheila R Reddy; Eunice Chang; Marian H Tarbox; Michael Pollock
Journal:  Orphanet J Rare Dis       Date:  2021-01-11       Impact factor: 4.123

7.  Diagnosis and Treatment of AL and ATTR Amyloidosis.

Authors:  Beth Faiman; Tiffany Richards
Journal:  J Adv Pract Oncol       Date:  2021-04-01

8.  Transscleral Cyclophotocoagulation in Familial Amyloidotic Polyneuropathy Secondary Glaucoma after Ahmed Valve Implantation: A Case Series Study.

Authors:  Rita Vieira; Ana Marta; Ana Figueiredo; Rita Reis; Isabel Sampaio; Maria J Menéres
Journal:  J Curr Glaucoma Pract       Date:  2021 Jan-Apr

9.  ATTRv in Lazio-Italy: A High-Prevalence Region in a Non-Endemic Country.

Authors:  Marco Luigetti; Valeria Guglielmino; Giovanni Antonini; Carlo Casali; Marco Ceccanti; Maria Grazia Chiappini; Laura De Giglio; Vincenzo Di Lazzaro; Antonio Di Muzio; Mariangela Goglia; Maurizio Inghilleri; Luca Leonardi; Roberto Massa; Elena Maria Pennisi; Antonio Petrucci; Emanuela Proietti; Marianna Rispoli; Mario Sabatelli; Marco Di Girolamo
Journal:  Genes (Basel)       Date:  2021-05-28       Impact factor: 4.096

10.  Epigenetic profiling of Italian patients identified methylation sites associated with hereditary transthyretin amyloidosis.

Authors:  Antonella De Lillo; Gita A Pathak; Flavio De Angelis; Marco Di Girolamo; Marco Luigetti; Mario Sabatelli; Federico Perfetto; Sabrina Frusconi; Dario Manfellotto; Maria Fuciarelli; Renato Polimanti
Journal:  Clin Epigenetics       Date:  2020-11-17       Impact factor: 6.551

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