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Genome silencer therapy leading to ‘regression’ of cardiac amyloid load on cardiovascular magnetic resonance: a case report
Author(s) -
Anca Florian,
Michael Bietenbeck,
Anna HüsingKabar,
Matthias Schilling,
Hartmut Schmidt,
Ali Yılmaz
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
european heart journal - case reports
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.256
H-Index - 5
ISSN - 2514-2119
DOI - 10.1093/ehjcr/ytab415
Subject(s) - medicine , cardiology , cardiomyopathy , cardiac amyloidosis , amyloidosis , atrial fibrillation , amyloid (mycology) , magnetic resonance imaging , heart failure , transthyretin , amyloid disease , sudden cardiac death , disease , pathology , radiology , amyloid fibril , amyloid β
Background Hereditary or variant transthyretin amyloidosis (ATTRv) is a progressive disease manifesting with neuropathy and/or cardiomyopathy. An early and accurate diagnosis of cardiac amyloidosis is a pre-requisite for timely and appropriate patient management, including anti-amyloid therapies, as it is associated with heart failure, conduction disease, and arrhythmias, leading to reduced quality of life and early death. Case Summary We present the case of an ATTRv male patient presenting with a mixed amyloidosis phenotype (neuropathy and cardiomyopathy). Cardiac disease manifestation comprised tachyarrhythmias (atrial fibrillation) and conduction abnormalities (atrio-ventricular block) in addition to segmental left ventricular (LV) hypertrophy (septal wall) due to regionally pronounced amyloid deposits in the basal LV myocardium. Interestingly, by means of serial cardiovascular magnetic resonance (CMR) studies, we were able to demonstrate an impressive and unexpected improvement of cardiomyopathy findings within a relatively short period-of-time after the implementation of genome-silencer therapies. Discussion This is our second case report that showed ATTRv cardiomyopathy reversal under anti-amyloid therapy—documented by multi-parametric CMR. Our findings support the hypothesis that amyloid infiltration leading to cardiomyopathy is not an irreversible pathological process—but rather a dynamic one, that cannot only be stopped but even reversed (to a certain degree) by currently emerging anti-amyloid therapies. Moreover, the role of serial multi-parametric CMR imaging for surveillance of cardiomyopathy dynamics under these therapies is nicely illustrated.

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