Journal of Clinical Medicine (Mar 2023)

Estimating the Prevalence of Cardiac Amyloidosis in Old Patients with Heart Failure—Barriers and Opportunities for Improvement: The PREVAMIC Study

  • Rocío Ruiz-Hueso,
  • Prado Salamanca-Bautista,
  • Maria Angustias Quesada-Simón,
  • Sergi Yun,
  • Alicia Conde-Martel,
  • José Luis Morales-Rull,
  • Roi Suárez-Gil,
  • José Ángel García-García,
  • Pau Llàcer,
  • Eva María Fonseca-Aizpuru,
  • Beatriz Amores-Arriaga,
  • Ángel Martínez-González,
  • Arola Armengou-Arxe,
  • José Luis Peña-Somovilla,
  • Manuel Lorenzo López-Reboiro,
  • Óscar Aramburu-Bodas

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm12062273
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 6
p. 2273

Abstract

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Background: Cardiac amyloidosis (CA) could be a common cause of heart failure (HF). The objective of the study was to estimate the prevalence of CA in patients with HF. Methods: Observational, prospective, and multicenter study involving 30 Spanish hospitals. A total of 453 patients ≥ 65 years with HF and an interventricular septum or posterior wall thickness > 12 mm were included. All patients underwent a 99mTc-DPD/PYP/HMDP scintigraphy and monoclonal bands were studied, following the current criteria for non-invasive diagnosis. In inconclusive cases, biopsies were performed. Results: The vast majority of CA were diagnosed non-invasively. The prevalence was 20.1%. Most of the CA were transthyretin (ATTR-CM, 84.6%), with a minority of cardiac light-chain amyloidosis (AL-CM, 2.2%). The remaining (13.2%) was untyped. The prevalence was significantly higher in men (60.1% vs 39.9%, p = 0.019). Of the patients with CA, 26.5% had a left ventricular ejection fraction less than 50%. Conclusions: CA was the cause of HF in one out of five patients and should be screened in the elderly with HF and myocardial thickening, regardless of sex and LVEF. Few transthyretin-gene-sequencing studies were performed in older patients. In many patients, it was not possible to determine the amyloid subtype.

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