Advances in the Treatment of Cardiac Amyloidosis

被引:0
作者
Ariane Vieira Scarlatelli Macedo
Pedro Vellosa Schwartzmann
Breno Moreno de Gusmão
Marcelo Dantas Tavares de Melo
Otávio Rizzi Coelho-Filho
机构
[1] Irmandade da Santa Casa de São Paulo,Department of Cardiology
[2] Unimed Hospital,Cardiology Unit
[3] Beneficência Portuguesa Hospital,Department of Onco
[4] Federal University of Paraíba,Hematology
[5] State University of Campinas,Department of Internal Medicine
来源
Current Treatment Options in Oncology | 2020年 / 21卷
关键词
Amyloidosis; Restrictive cardiomyopathy; Transthyretin; Light chain; Amyloid; Heart failure;
D O I
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学科分类号
摘要
Cardiac amyloidosis is associated with a high mortality rate, a long delay between the first signs and the diagnosis but a short interval between diagnosis and death. This scenario has changed recently due to improved disease awareness among doctors and significant progress in diagnosis thanks to multimodal imaging and a multidisciplinary approach. Therefore, during the last few years, we have had access to specific therapies for those patients. Those therapies are quite different depending on the type of amyloidosis, but there has been real progress. Systemic light chain amyloidosis (AL) with cardiac involvement is the most common form of cardiac amyloidosis. The severity of heart disease dictates the prognosis in AL amyloidosis. Advances in chemotherapy and immunotherapy that suppress light chain production have improved the outcomes. These recent improvements in survival rates have enabled therapies such as implanted cardiac defibrillators and heart transplantation that were usually not indicated for patients with advanced light chain amyloid cardiomyopathy to now be applied in selected patients. For transthyretin amyloidosis (ATTR), the second most common form of amyloidosis with cardiac involvement, there is also significant progress in treatment. Until recently, we had no specific therapy for ATTR cardiomyopathy (ATTR-CM), though now disease-modifying therapies are available. Therapies that stabilize transthyretin, such as tafamidis, have been shown to improve outcomes for patients with ATTR-CM. Modern treatments that stop the synthesis of TTR through gene silencing, such as patisiran and inotersen, have shown positive results for patients with TTR amyloidosis. Significant progress has been made in the treatment of amyloid cardiomyopathy, and hopefully, we will see even more progress with the spread of those treatments. We now can be optimistic about patients with this disease.
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