Background:We aimed to describe the clinical characteristics, underlying causes and outcomes of syncope in patients with transthyretin amyloid cardiomyopathy (ATTR-CM).
Methods:The clinical profile and underlying causes of syncopal episodes were reviewed in a cohort of 128 patients with ATTR-CM enrolled from January 2018 to June 2020 in a prospective multicentre registry in 7 hospitals of Galicia (Spain). After enrollment, patients were followed during a median period of 520 days.The effect of syncope on all-cause mortality was assessed by means of multivariate Cox´s regression.Results: Thirty (23.4%) patients had a history of previous syncope as a clinical antecedent before being enrolled in the prospective phase of the registry, and 4 (3.1%) experienced a first episode of syncope thereafter. The estimated incidence density rate of syncope during the prospective follow-up period after registry enrollment was 71.9 episodes per 1000 patients-year (95% Confidence Interval (CI) 32.8-111.1).The estimated overall prevalence of syncope was 26.6% (95% CI 18.9%-34.2%). Cardiac arrhythmias (n = 11, 32.3%), structural diseases of the heart or great vessels (n = 5, 14.7%), a neurally mediated reflex (n = 6, 17.6%), and orthostatic hypotension (n = 4, 11.8%) were identified as probable underlying causes of syncope; in 8 (23.6%) patients, syncope remained unexplained. Patients with syncope had increased nonadjusted all-cause mortality than patients without it (univariate hazard-ratio 3.37; 95% CI 1.43-7.94). When other independent predictors of survival were added to the survival model, this association was no longer statistically significant (multivariate hazard-ratio 1.81, 95% CI 0.67-4.84).Conclusions: Syncope is frequent in patients with ATTR-CM. This study could not demonstrate an independent association between syncope and mortality in those individuals.