Cardiac amyloidosis: Evolving approach to diagnosis and management

被引:14
作者
Meier-Ewert H.K. [1 ]
Sanchorawala V. [2 ]
Berk J.L. [3 ]
Ruberg F.L. [1 ]
机构
[1] Section of Cardiovascular Medicine, Amyloid Treatment and Research Program, Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, MA 02118, C-8
[2] Section of Hematology and Oncology, Amyloid Treatment and Research Program, Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, MA 02118, FGH 1007
[3] Amyloid Treatment and Research Program, Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, MA 02118, K503
基金
美国国家卫生研究院;
关键词
Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance; Amyloidosis; Late Gadolinium Enhancement; Heart Failure Symptom; Cardiac Amyloidosis;
D O I
10.1007/s11936-011-0147-4
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Opinion statement: The systemic amyloidoses are a group of heterogeneous disorders characterized by extracellular deposition of misfolded fibrillar protein that results in organ dysfunction. Involvement of the heart (cardiac amyloidosis) is manifest by increased cardiac wall thickness and impairment of myocardial diastolic and systolic properties, changes that result in heart failure, dysrhythmia, and death. Amyloidosis is classified by precursor protein, with light-chain (AL) and transthyretin (TTR) disease being most common in the United States. TTR amyloid can result from misfolding of variant TTR, a genetically inherited disease, or wild-type TTR, an acquired form of disease (termed senile systemic amyloidosis). In recent years, advances in the diagnosis and treatment of cardiac amyloidosis include identification and validation of disease biomarkers, new imaging techniques, and consensus treatment guidelines. Elevations of B-type natriuretic peptide and cardiac troponins can identify cardiac amyloidosis with a high degree of precision and confer important prognostic information. Non-invasive cardiac imaging techniques, such as cardiac magnetic resonance imaging and echocardiography with strain quantification, afford the ability to diagnose cardiac amyloidosis most often without the need for a confirmatory heart biopsy. Treatment of heart failure resulting from cardiac amyloidosis differs in many respects from most other etiologies of cardiomyopathy. The mainstay of treatment involves volume control with diuretics, low dose β-adrenergic antagonists or amiodarone for dysrhythmia, and warfarin to prevent thromboembolism. Although widely held to have a dismal prognosis, modern treatments such as high-dose melphalan with stem cell transplantation (HDM/SCT) for AL disease achieve a complete hematologic response in nearly half of eligible patients and yield long-term survival. For patients with advanced AL cardiac amyloidosis, cardiac transplantation followed by HDM/SCT is also an option that has proven highly effective. For familial amyloid derived from variant TTR, liver transplantation is the one validated treatment; however, small molecule therapeutic agents now in clinical trials appear capable of slowing or halting TTR amyloid deposition. © 2011 Springer Science+Business Media, LLC.
引用
收藏
页码:528 / 542
页数:14
相关论文
共 51 条
[41]  
Sanchorawala V., Skinner M., Quillen K., Finn K.T., Doros G., Seldin D.C., Long-term outcome of patients with AL amyloidosis treated with high-dose melphalan and stem-cell transplantation, Blood, 110, 10, pp. 3561-3563, (2007)
[42]  
Jaccard A., Moreau P., Leblond V., Leleu X., Benboubker L., Hermine O., Recher C., Asli B., Lioure B., Royer B., Jardin F., Bridoux F., Grosbois B., Jaubert J., Piette J.-C., Ronco P., Quet F., Cogne M., Fermand J.-P., High-dose melphalan versus melphalan plus dexamethasone for AL amyloidosis, New England Journal of Medicine, 357, 11, pp. 1083-1093, (2007)
[43]  
Dispenzieri A., Lacy M.Q., Zeldenrust S.R., Hayman S.R., Kumar S.K., Geyer S.M., Lust J.A., Allred J.B., Witzig T.E., Rajkumar S.V., Greipp P.R., Russell S.J., Kabat B., Gertz M.A., The activity of lenalidomide with or without dexamethasone in patients with primary systemic amyloidosis, Blood, 109, 2, pp. 465-470, (2007)
[44]  
Reece D.E., Sanchorawala V., Hegenbart U., Et al., Weekly and twice-weekly bortezomib in patients with systemic AL amyloidosis: Results of a phase 1 dose-escalation study, Blood, 114, pp. 1489-1497, (2009)
[45]  
Skinner M., Sanchorawala V., Seldin D.C., Et al., High-dose melphalan and autologous stem-cell transplantation in patients with AL amyloidosis: An 8-year study, Ann Intern Med, 140, pp. 85-93, (2004)
[46]  
Kristen A.V., Perz J.B., Schonland S.O., Hansen A., Hegenbart U., Sack F.-U., Goldschmidt H., Katus H.A., Dengler T.J., Rapid Progression of Left Ventricular Wall Thickness Predicts Mortality in Cardiac Light-chain Amyloidosis, Journal of Heart and Lung Transplantation, 26, 12, pp. 1313-1319, (2007)
[47]  
Meier-Ewert H.K., Sanchorawala V., Berk J., Et al., Regression of cardiac wall thickness following chemotherapy and stem cell transplantation for light chain (AL) amyloidosis, Amyloid, 18, SUPPL. 1, pp. 125-126, (2011)
[48]  
Kristen A.V., Dengler T.J., Hegenbart U., Et al., Prophylactic implantation of cardioverter-defibrillator in patients with severe cardiac amyloidosis and high risk for sudden cardiac death, Heart Rhythm, 5, pp. 235-240, (2008)
[49]  
Dey B.R., Chung S.S., Spitzer T.R., Et al., Cardiac transplantation followed by dose-intensive melphalan and autologous stem-cell transplantation for light chain amyloidosis and heart failure, Transplantation, 90, pp. 905-911, (2010)
[50]  
Pilato E., Dell'Amore A., Botta L., Arpesella G., Combined heart and liver transplantation for familial amyloidotic neuropathy, European Journal of Cardio-thoracic Surgery, 32, 1, pp. 180-182, (2007)