Concomitant pathology of aortic stenosis (AS) and cardiac amyloidosis (CA) occurs frequently in older AS patients and has worse clinical presentation and prognosis unless treated, suggests a study. Hence, transcatheter aortic valve replacement (TAVR) must not be denied in AS-CA patients.
Four hundred seven patients (mean age, 83.4 years; 49.8 percent men) referred for TAVR at three 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) by tissue biopsy. National registries were used to assess all-cause mortality.
Forty-eight patients (11.8 percent) had positive DPD (grade 1: 3.9 percent; grade 2/3: 7.9 percent). One patient was diagnosed with AL grade 1. Those with grade 2/3 had worse functional capacity, biomarkers (N-terminal probrain natriuretic peptide and high-sensitivity troponin T), and biventricular remodeling.
The presence of AS-CA (area under the curve, 0.86, 95 percent confidence interval, 0.78–0.94; p<0.001) was predicted using a clinical score (RAISE) that utilized left ventricular remodeling, age, injury, systemic involvement, and electrical abnormalities. Decisions by the heart team (DPD-blinded) resulted in TAVR (81.6 percent), surgical AVR (2.5 percent), or medical management (15.9 percent).
Twenty-three percent of patients died after a median of 1.7 years. Patients with AS-CA (grade 1–3) had worse 1-year mortality than those with lone AS (24.5 percent vs 13.9 percent; p=0.05). Furthermore, TAVR prolonged survival compared with medical management. AS-CA survival post-TAVR was not different from lone AS (p=0.36).