Journal of the American Heart Association: Cardiovascular and Cerebrovascular Disease (Apr 2023)

Design and Rationale the SCAN‐MP (Screening for Cardiac Amyloidosis With Nuclear Imaging in Minority Populations) Study

  • Frederick L. Ruberg,
  • William S. Blaner,
  • Codruta Chiuzan,
  • Lawreen H. Connors,
  • Andrew J. Einstein,
  • Denise Fine,
  • Stephen Helmke,
  • Damian Kurian,
  • Shivda Pandey,
  • Farbod Raiszadeh,
  • Carlos Rodriguez,
  • Natalia Sabogal,
  • Sergio Teruya,
  • Morgan Winburn,
  • Wendy K. Chung,
  • Elizabeth Cohn,
  • Edward J. Miller,
  • Jeffery W. Kelly,
  • Mathew S. Maurer

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1161/JAHA.122.028534
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 8

Abstract

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Background Transthyretin amyloid cardiomyopathy (ATTR‐CM) is an important cause of heart failure in older individuals. Misfolding and deposition of transthyretin or prealbumin protein causes ATTR‐CM in the context of a normal (wild‐type) or variant TTR sequence. Variant ATTR‐CM is most commonly caused by the substitution of valine for isoleucine at position 122 in transthyretin (Val122Ile or pV142I, almost exclusively observed in individuals of West African ancestry), demonstrated in 3.4% of self‐identified Black individuals in the United States with an estimated 1.5 million carriers. Despite the large number of known pV142I carriers, the proportion of older Black patients with heart failure attributable to ATTR‐CM remains unknown. Methods To address this knowledge gap, the SCAN‐MP (Screening for Cardiac Amyloidosis with Nuclear Imaging in Minority Populations) study was funded by the National Institutes of Health/National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (R01HL139671) to enroll a targeted population of self‐identified, community‐dwelling Black or Caribbean Hispanic patients (many of whom are of West African ancestry) >60 years of age with heart failure and identify ATTR‐CM by noninvasive nuclear imaging. The principal objective of SCAN‐MP is to determine the prevalence of ATTR‐CM in this population. Secondary objectives will explore TTR genotype, demographics, progression of variant versus wild‐type ATTR‐CM, and biochemical mechanisms of transthyretin amyloid fibril formation. Conclusions The SCAN‐MP study is the largest, prospective study of cardiac amyloidosis in Black and Hispanic individuals. Both wild‐type and variant ATTR‐CM are now treatable with the US Food and Drug–approved drug tafamidis. The insights gained from SCAN‐MP are likely to improve those at risk for or afflicted with ATTR‐CM. Registration URL: https://www.clinicaltrials.gov; Unique identifier: NCT03812172.

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