Journal of the American Heart Association: Cardiovascular and Cerebrovascular Disease (Jul 2024)

Prevalence, Characteristics, and Impact on Prognosis of Aortic Stenosis in Patients With Cardiac Amyloidosis

  • Mohamed‐Salah Annabi,
  • Rasmus Carter‐Storch,
  • Amira Zaroui,
  • Arnault Galat,
  • Silvia Oghina,
  • Mounira Kharoubi,
  • Mélanie Bezard,
  • Geneviève Derumeaux,
  • Pascale Fanen,
  • François Lemonnier,
  • Elsa Poullot,
  • Emmanuel Itti,
  • Romain Gallet,
  • Emmanuel Teiger,
  • Philippe Pibarot,
  • Thibaud Damy,
  • Marie‐Annick Clavel

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1161/JAHA.124.034723
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 13

Abstract

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Background Cardiac amyloidosis (CA) is frequently found in older patients with aortic stenosis (AS). However, the prevalence of AS among patients with CA is unknown. The objective was to study the prevalence and prognostic impact of AS among patients with CA. Methods and Results We conducted a retrospective analysis of a prospective registry comprising 976 patients with native aortic valves who were confirmed with wild type transthyretin amyloid (ATTRwt), hereditary variant transthyretin amyloid (ATTRv), or immunoglobulin light‐chain (AL) CA. CA patients' echocardiograms were re‐analyzed focusing on the aortic valve. Multivariable Cox regression analysis was performed to assess the mortality risk associated with moderate or greater AS in ATTRwt CA. The crude prevalence of AS among patients with CA was 26% in ATTRwt, 8% in ATTRv, and 5% in AL. Compared with population‐based controls, all types of CA had higher age‐ and sex‐standardized rate ratios (SRRs) of having any degree of AS (AL: SRR, 2.62; 95% Confidence Interval (CI) [1.09–3.64]; ATTRv: SRR, 3.41; 95%CI [1.64–4.60]; ATTRwt: SRR, 10.8; 95%CI [5.25–14.53]). Compared with hospital controls, only ATTRwt had a higher SRR of having any degree of AS (AL: SRR, 0.97, 95%CI [0.56–1.14]; ATTRv: SRR, 1.27; 95%CI [0.85–1.44]; ATTRwt: SRR, 4.01; 95%CI [2.71–4.54]). Among patients with ATTRwt, moderate or greater AS was not associated with increased all‐cause death after multivariable adjustment (hazard ratio, 0.71; 95%CI [0.42–1.19]; P=0.19). Conclusions Among patients with CA, ATTRwt but not ATTRv or AL is associated with a higher prevalence of patients with AS compared with hospital controls without CA, even after adjusting for age and sex. In our population, having moderate or greater AS was not associated with a worse outcome in patients with ATTRwt.

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