| Literature DB >> 32623785 |
Jan M Griffin1, Leonard Chiu1, Kelly M Axsom1, Rachel Bijou1, Kevin J Clerkin1, Paolo Colombo1, Margaret O Cuomo1, Jeffeny De Los Santos1, Justin A Fried1, Jeff Goldsmith2, Marlena Habal1, Jennifer Haythe1, Stephen Helmke1, Evelyn M Horn1,3, Farhana Latif1, Sun Hi Lee1, Edward F Lin1, Yoshifumi Naka4, Jayant Raikhelkar1, Susan Restaino1, Gabriel T Sayer1, Hiroo Takayama4, Koji Takeda4, Sergio Teruya1, Veli Topkara1, Emily J Tsai1, Nir Uriel1, Melana Yuzefpolskaya1, Maryjane A Farr1, Mathew S Maurer1.
Abstract
Light-chain (AL) cardiac amyloidosis (CA) has a worse prognosis than transthyretin (ATTR) CA. In this single-center study, we compared post-heart transplant (OHT, orthotopic heart transplantation) survival for AL and ATTR amyloidosis, hypothesizing that these differences would persist post-OHT. Thirty-nine patients with CA (AL, n = 18; ATTR, n = 21) and 1023 non-amyloidosis subjects undergoing OHT were included. Cox proportional hazards modeling was used to evaluate the impact of amyloid subtype and era (early era: from 2001 to 2007; late era: from 2008 to 2018) on survival post-OHT. Survival for non-amyloid patients was greater than ATTR (P = .034) and AL (P < .001) patients in the early era. One, 3-, and 5-year survival rates were higher for ATTR patients than AL patients in the early era (100% vs 75%, 67% vs 50%, and 67% vs 33%, respectively, for ATTR and AL patients). Survival in the non-amyloid cohort was 87% at 1 year, 81% at 3 years, and 76% at 5 years post-OHT. In the late era, AL and ATTR patients had unadjusted 1-year, 3-year, and 5-year survival rates of 100%, which was comparable to non-amyloid patients (90% vs 84% vs 81%). Overall, these findings demonstrate that in the current era, differences in post-OHT survival for AL compared to ATTR are diminishing; OHT outcomes for selected patients with CA do not differ from non-amyloidosis patients.Entities:
Keywords: amyloid; cardiomyopathy; heart transplant; light-chain; transthyretin
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32623785 PMCID: PMC7744118 DOI: 10.1111/ctr.14028
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Transplant ISSN: 0902-0063 Impact factor: 2.863