Pieter Martens , Lauren Ives , Christopher Nguyen , Deborah Kwon , Mazen Hanna , W. H. Wilson Tang
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background
Reduced cardiac energy is a hallmark feature of heart failure and is common in cardiac amyloidosis (CA) and can be aggravated by the presence of iron deficiency.
Methods
Retrospective analysis of a single tertiary care center CA registry. Prevalence of iron deficiency was determined based on two definitions: (1) Classic definition, ferritin < 100 µg/L irrespective of transferin saturation (TSAT) or ferritin between 100 and 300 µg/L with a TSAT < 20%, and (2) TSAT-based definition, TSAT < 20%.
Results
Out of a total of 393 CA patients who had a full set of iron indices (44% light chain [AL]-CA, 50% transthyretin [ATTR]-CA, remainder other or unspecified CA subtype), 56% had iron deficiency according to the classic definition and 58% according to the TSAT definition, with similar prevalence in AL-CA vs ATTR-CA (p = .135). Per both definitions 58% had anemia. Only the TSAT-based definition was associated with worse functional status (p = .039) and worse cardiac function. CA patients with a TSAT < 20% illustrated features of more pronounced right ventricular (RV) failure including lower TAPSE on echocardiography, lower RV ejection fraction and RV stroke volume index on CMR, increased right-sided filling pressures, lower pulmonary artery pulsatility index, and higher RAP/PCWP ratio by right heart catheterization. Neither the classic nor the TSAT-based definition was associated with a higher risk of all-cause mortality after covariate adjustment.
Conclusion
Iron deficiency is common in cardiac amyloidosis and, when identified with a TSAT < 20%, is associated with worse functional status and more pronounced RV disease, but not with a higher risk of all-cause mortality.