Frontiers in Cardiovascular Medicine (Jan 2023)

Cardiac transplantation in transthyretin amyloid cardiomyopathy: Outcomes from three decades of tertiary center experience

  • Yousuf Razvi,
  • Aldostefano Porcari,
  • Aldostefano Porcari,
  • Concetta Di Nora,
  • Rishi K. Patel,
  • Adam Ioannou,
  • Muhammad U. Rauf,
  • Ambra Masi,
  • Steven Law,
  • Liza Chacko,
  • Tamer Rezk,
  • Sriram Ravichandran,
  • Janet Gilbertson,
  • Dorota Rowczenio,
  • Iona J. Blakeney,
  • Nandita Kaza,
  • David F. Hutt,
  • Helen Lachmann,
  • Ashutosh Wechalekar,
  • William Moody,
  • Sern Lim,
  • Colin Chue,
  • Carol Whelan,
  • Lucia Venneri,
  • Ana Martinez-Naharro,
  • Marco Merlo,
  • Gianfranco Sinagra,
  • Ugolino Livi,
  • Philip Hawkins,
  • Marianna Fontana,
  • Julian D. Gillmore

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fcvm.2022.1075806
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9

Abstract

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AimsTransthyretin cardiac amyloidosis (ATTR-CM) is a progressive and fatal cardiomyopathy. Treatment options in patients with advanced ATTR-CM are limited to cardiac transplantation (CT). Despite case series demonstrating comparable outcomes with CT between patients with ATTR-CM and non-amyloid cardiomyopathies, ATTR-CM is considered to be a contraindication to CT in some centers, partly due to a perceived risk of amyloid recurrence in the allograft. We report long-term outcomes of CT in ATTR-CM at two tertiary centers.Materials and methods and ResultsWe retrospectively evaluated ATTR-CM patients across two tertiary centers who underwent transplantation between 1990 and 2020. Pre-transplantation characteristics were determined and outcomes were compared with a cohort of non-transplanted ATTR-CM patients. Fourteen (12 male, 2 female) patients with ATTR-CM underwent CT including 11 with wild-type ATTR-CM and 3 with variant ATTR-CM (ATTRv). Median age at CT was 62 years and median follow up post-CT was 66 months. One, three, and five-year survival was 100, 92, and 90%, respectively and the longest surviving patient was Censored > 19 years post CT. No patients had recurrence of amyloid in the cardiac allograft. Four patients died, including one with ATTRv-CM from complications of leptomeningeal amyloidosis. Survival among the cohort of patients who underwent CT was significantly prolonged compared to UK patients with ATTR-CM generally (p < 0.001) including those diagnosed under age 65 years (p = 0.008) or with early stage cardiomyopathy (p < 0.001).ConclusionCT is well-tolerated, restores functional capacity and improves prognosis in ATTR-CM. The risk of amyloid recurrence in the cardiac allograft appears to be low.

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