# Plantar Dermal Deposition of Wild-Type Transthyretin Amyloid (ATTR): A Case Report of a Unique and Challenging Histopathological Manifestation of Cutaneous ATTR Amyloidosis

**Authors:** Shojiro Ichimata, Akane Aikawa, Takayuki Ishii, Michiro Maruyama, Tsuneaki Yoshinaga, Mitsuto Sato, Nagaaki Katoh, Fuyuki Kametani, Masahide Yazaki, Yoshiki Sekijima, Shin Ishizawa

PMC · DOI: 10.7759/cureus.84518 · 2025-05-21

## TL;DR

A 74-year-old man had a skin lesion on his foot that was found to contain wild-type transthyretin amyloid, a rare and early sign of a systemic amyloidosis condition.

## Contribution

This case report highlights plantar dermal ATTRwt amyloidosis as a unique histopathological manifestation and potential early indicator of systemic disease.

## Key findings

- Wild-type transthyretin amyloid was identified in a plantar dermal lesion through Congo red staining and proteomic analysis.
- The absence of genetic mutations confirmed wild-type ATTR amyloidosis.
- The case suggests that amyloid may accumulate in mechanically stressed connective tissues, aiding early detection of ATTRwt.

## Abstract

A 74-year-old man presented with a cutaneous lesion on the plantar surface of his right foot. His medical history included spinal canal stenosis and bilateral carpal tunnel syndrome. The lesion was clinically suspected to be a fibroma and was subsequently resected. Histopathological examination revealed mild acanthosis and hyperkeratosis, along with eosinophilic changes and thickening of collagen bundles at the base of the specimen. Based on the patient’s medical history and the pathological findings, transthyretin amyloid (ATTR) deposition was suspected. Congo red staining confirmed the presence of amyloid deposits, which were further identified as ATTR through immunohistochemistry and proteomic analysis. Genetic testing of the transthyretin gene revealed no mutations, leading to a diagnosis of wild-type ATTR (ATTRwt) amyloidosis. Cardiac function tests showed no significant abnormalities. Given that ATTRwt deposition is frequently associated with musculoskeletal disorders, amyloid may preferentially accumulate in connective tissues subjected to repetitive mechanical stress. As observed in other musculoskeletal tissues, amyloid deposition in the plantar dermis may aid in the early detection of ATTRwt. Therefore, detailed histopathological evaluation of plantar cutaneous lesions is important, especially in older adults and/or individuals with symptoms suggestive of ATTRwt amyloidosis.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** carpal tunnel syndrome (MONDO:0007275)

## Full-text entities

- **Genes:** TTR (transthyretin) [NCBI Gene 7276] {aka AMYLD1, ATTR, CTS, CTS1, HEL111, HsT2651}
- **Diseases:** ATTR ( (MESH:C567782), fibroma (MESH:D005350), ATTRwt amyloidosis (MESH:D000686), hyperkeratosis (MESH:D017488), spinal canal stenosis (MESH:D013130), musculoskeletal disorders (MESH:D009140), carpal tunnel syndrome (MESH:D002349), amyloid (MESH:C000718787), cutaneous lesion (MESH:D009059), plantar cutaneous lesions (MESH:D020429), acanthosis (MESH:D000052)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

4 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12179678/full.md

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12179678