Amyloid : the international journal of experimental and clinical investigation : the official journal of the International Society of Amyloidosis
-
Multicenter Study Observational Study
Arterial thrombo-embolic events in cardiac amyloidosis: a look beyond atrial fibrillation.
Intracardiac thrombosis is reported to occur frequently in cardiac amyloidosis (CA). However, data regarding arterial thrombo-embolic events (AEs) in CA are limited. We aimed at assessing prevalence, clinical characteristics and predictors of AEs in a large multicentric CA cohort. ⋯ In our large, multicentric, real-world cohort, prevalence and incidence rate of AEs was high. A consistent proportion of events occurred despite anticoagulation therapy or in patients in sinus rhythm. A higher CHA2DS2-VASc score might identify patients at risk of AEs also among those in sinus rhythm.
-
Retinal angiopathy is a known ocular manifestation of hereditary transthyretin amyloidosis (ATTRv). Optical coherence tomography angiography (OCT-A) is a recent noninvasive imaging technique, used in other retinal vascular diseases. Our purpose was to analyse subclinical changes in retinal vessels, with OCT-A, in patients with ATTRv amyloidosis. ⋯ Scalloped iris in ATTRv eyes are associated with a more advanced subclinical retinal angiopathy, than eyes without scalloped iris. Our results identify for the first time and in vivo, early changes in retinal vessels in ATTRv amyloidosis. Henceforward, OCT-A may play a role in the evaluation of ATTRv patients oculopathy and the effectiveness of future eye targeting treatments.
-
Accumulation of ubiquitin-positive, tau- and α-synuclein-negative intracellular inclusions of TDP-43 in the central nervous system represents the major hallmark correlated to amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and frontotemporal lobar degeneration with ubiquitin-positive inclusions (FTLD-U). Such inclusions have variably been described as amorphous aggregates or more structured deposits having amyloid properties. ⋯ AFM images indicate that both protein variants show a tendency to form filaments. Moreover, we show that both FL TDP-43 and Ct TDP-43 filaments possess a largely disordered secondary structure, as ascertained by far-UV circular dichroism and Fourier transform infra-red spectroscopy, do not bind Congo red and induce a very weak increase of thioflavin T fluorescence, indicating the absence of a clear amyloid-like signature.
-
Atrial fibrillation (AF) is common in patients with transthyretin cardiac amyloidosis (ATTR-CA). The optimal strategy to prevent strokes in patients with ATTR-CA and AF is unknown. ⋯ Patient with ATTR-CA and AF are at increased risk for stroke compared to patients with ATTR-CA and without AF. Thrombotic events and major bleeds did not differ between those who received warfarin and NOACs.
-
Blinded potency comparison of transthyretin kinetic stabilisers by subunit exchange in human plasma.
Transthyretin (TTR) tetramer dissociation is rate limiting for aggregation and subunit exchange. Slowing of TTR tetramer dissociation via kinetic stabiliser binding slows cardiomyopathy progression. Quadruplicate subunit exchange comparisons of the drug candidate AG10, and the drugs tolcapone, diflunisal, and tafamidis were carried out at 1, 5, 10, 20 and 30 µM concentrations in 4 distinct pooled wild type TTR (TTRwt) human plasma samples. ⋯ At a 10 µM plasma concentration, AG10 is slightly more potent as a kinetic stabiliser vs. tolcapone and tafamidis (which are similar), which are substantially more potent than diflunisal. Dissociation of TTR can be limited to 10% of its normal rate at concentrations of 5.7 µM AG10, 10.3 µM tolcapone, 12.0 µM tafamidis, and 188 µM diflunisal. The potency similarities revealed by our study suggest that differences in safety, adsorption and metabolism, pharmacokinetics, and tissue distribution become important for kinetic stabiliser clinical use decisions.