or transthyretin (ATTR) 2-4 types in the vast majority of cases. ATTR amyloidosis may be acquired, associated with wild-type Background-Cardiac transthyretin (ATTR) amyloidosis is a progressive and fatal cardiomyopathy for which several promising therapies are in development. The diagnosis is frequently delayed or missed because of the limited specificity of echocardiography and the traditional requirement for histological confirmation. It has long been recognized that technetium-labeled bone scintigraphy tracers can localize to myocardial amyloid deposits, and use of this imaging modality for the diagnosis of cardiac ATTR amyloidosis has lately been revisited. We conducted a multicenter study to ascertain the diagnostic value of bone scintigraphy in this disease. Methods and Results-Results of bone scintigraphy and biochemical investigations were analyzed from 1217 patients with suspected cardiac amyloidosis referred for evaluation in specialist centers. Of 857 patients with histologically proven amyloid (374 with endomyocardial biopsies) and 360 patients subsequently confirmed to have nonamyloid cardiomyopathies, myocardial radiotracer uptake on bone scintigraphy was >99% sensitive and 86% specific for cardiac ATTR amyloid, with false positives almost exclusively from uptake in patients with cardiac AL amyloidosis. Importantly, the combined findings of grade 2 or 3 myocardial radiotracer uptake on bone scintigraphy and the absence of a monoclonal protein in serum or urine had a specificity and positive predictive value for cardiac ATTR amyloidosis of 100% (positive predictive value confidence interval, 98.0-100). Conclusions-Bone scintigraphy enables the diagnosis of cardiac ATTR amyloidosis to be made reliably without the need for histology in patients who do not have a monoclonal gammopathy. We propose noninvasive diagnostic criteria for cardiac ATTR amyloidosis that are applicable to the majority of patients with this disease.
Clinical Perspective on p 2412Autopsy studies have shown the presence of cardiac ATTR amyloid deposits in up to 25% of individuals >80 years of age, although in many of these hearts the amount of amyloid was small.8 Nevertheless, among patients with heart failure and preserved ejection fraction, postmortem examination indicates that cardiac amyloid deposition is commoner than in an age-matched autopsy group without heart failure. The majority of patients with cardiac amyloid on postmortem in these studies had not had amyloidosis diagnosed during their lifetime.9 Echocardiography, although a valuable and widely accessible tool for investigating heart failure, is neither sensitive nor specific for cardiac amyloidosis.10 Typical findings on echocardiography include thickening of ventricular walls, restrictive filling, abnormal left and right ventricular longitudinal strain, and atrial septal thickening.11 Cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (CMR) has much greater diagnostic value in cardiac amyloidosis, but false-positive and false-negative CMRs are not infrequent.12 Typical findings ...
Purpose of reviewEarly and accurate diagnosis of transthyretin familial amyloid polyneuropathy (TTR-FAP) represents one of the major challenges faced by physicians when caring for patients with idiopathic progressive neuropathy. There is little consensus in diagnostic and management approaches across Europe.Recent findingsThe low prevalence of TTR-FAP across Europe and the high variation in both genotype and phenotypic expression of the disease means that recognizing symptoms can be difficult outside of a specialized diagnostic environment. The resulting delay in diagnosis and the possibility of misdiagnosis can misguide clinical decision-making and negatively impact subsequent treatment approaches and outcomes.SummaryThis review summarizes the findings from two meetings of the European Network for TTR-FAP (ATTReuNET). This is an emerging group comprising representatives from 10 European countries with expertise in the diagnosis and management of TTR-FAP, including nine National Reference Centres. The current review presents management strategies and a consensus on the gold standard for diagnosis of TTR-FAP as well as a structured approach to ongoing multidisciplinary care for the patient. Greater communication, not just between members of an individual patient's treatment team, but also between regional and national centres of expertise, is the key to the effective management of TTR-FAP.
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