Original Investigation
Prevalence and Outcomes of Concomitant Aortic Stenosis and Cardiac Amyloidosis

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jacc.2020.11.006Get rights and content
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Abstract

Background

Older patients with severe aortic stenosis (AS) are increasingly identified as having cardiac amyloidosis (CA). It is unknown whether concomitant AS-CA has worse outcomes or results in futility of transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR).

Objectives

This study identified clinical characteristics and outcomes of AS-CA compared with lone AS.

Methods

Patients who were referred for TAVR at 3 international sites underwent blinded research core laboratory 99mtechnetium-3,3-diphosphono-1,2-propanodicarboxylic acid (DPD) bone scintigraphy (Perugini grade 0: negative; grades 1 to 3: increasingly positive) before intervention. Transthyretin-CA (ATTR) was diagnosed by DPD and absence of a clonal immunoglobulin, and light-chain CA (AL) was diagnosed via tissue biopsy. National registries captured all-cause mortality.

Results

A total of 407 patients (age 83.4 ± 6.5 years; 49.8% men) were recruited. DPD was positive in 48 patients (11.8%; grade 1: 3.9% [n = 16]; grade 2/3: 7.9% [n = 32]). AL was diagnosed in 1 patient with grade 1. Patients with grade 2/3 had worse functional capacity, biomarkers (N-terminal pro-brain natriuretic peptide and/or high-sensitivity troponin T), and biventricular remodeling. A clinical score (RAISE) that used left ventricular remodeling (hypertrophy/diastolic dysfunction), age, injury (high-sensitivity troponin T), systemic involvement, and electrical abnormalities (right bundle branch block/low voltages) was developed to predict the presence of AS-CA (area under the curve: 0.86; 95% confidence interval: 0.78 to 0.94; p < 0.001). Decisions by the heart team (DPD-blinded) resulted in TAVR (333 [81.6%]), surgical AVR (10 [2.5%]), or medical management (65 [15.9%]). After a median of 1.7 years, 23% of patients died. One-year mortality was worse in all patients with AS-CA (grade: 1 to 3) than those with lone AS (24.5% vs. 13.9%; p = 0.05). TAVR improved survival versus medical management; AS-CA survival post-TAVR did not differ from lone AS (p = 0.36).

Conclusions

Concomitant pathology of AS-CA is common in older patients with AS and can be predicted clinically. AS-CA has worse clinical presentation and a trend toward worse prognosis, unless treated. Therefore, TAVR should not be withheld in AS-CA.

Key Words

aortic stenosis
cardiac amyloidosis
TAVR

Abbreviations and Acronyms

AL
immunoglobulin light-chain cardiac amyloidosis
AS
aortic stenosis
AS-CA
aortic stenosis and cardiac amyloid pathology
ATTR
transthyretin-related cardiac amyloidosis
AUC
area under the curve
CA
cardiac amyloidosis
CI
confidence interval
DPD
99mtechnetium-3,3-diphosphono-1,2-propanodicarboxylic acid
HR
hazard ratio
hsTnT
high-sensitivity troponin T
IQR
interquartile range
LS
longitudinal strain
LV
left ventricular
LVEF
left ventricular ejection fraction
NT-proBNP
N-terminal pro−brain natriuretic peptide
OR
odds ratio
RAISE
remodeling, age, injury, system, and electrical
SAVR
surgical aortic valve replacement
SV
stroke volume
TAVR
transcatheter aortic valve replacement

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