Profibrotic Biomarkers Correlate with Clinical Presentation and Outcome in Cardiac Transthyretin Amyloidosis
Selina J. Hein, Fabian aus dem Siepen, Arnt V. Kristen, Stefan Schönland, Ute Hegenbart, Katrin Rein, Hugo A. Katus, Norbert Frey, Jennifer Furkel, Mathias H. Konstandin, Maximilian Knoll

TL;DR
This study shows that profibrotic biomarkers are linked to clinical outcomes in cardiac transthyretin amyloidosis, offering new ways to assess risk and disease progression.
Contribution
The study identifies specific fibrosis-related biomarkers that correlate with clinical outcomes in ATTR-CA, providing new prognostic tools.
Findings
ATTR-CA patients have distinct fibrotic biomarker profiles compared to controls.
Biomarkers like MMP-7, RAGE-AGE, and FGF-23 are strongly associated with adverse outcomes.
Prediction models using IGFBP and TIMP markers effectively identify high-risk patients.
Abstract
In transthyretin cardiac amyloidosis (ATTR-CA), misfolded transthyretin accumulates in the myocardium, leading to wall thickening and interstitial fibrosis. Recently published in vitro studies revealed direct effects of transthyretin on the structure, function, and gene expression of cardiac fibroblasts. Therefore, we hypothesized that biomarkers known to modulate myocardial remodeling might be clinically valuable in ATTR-CA and may improve risk stratification in ATTR-CA. To analyze this hypothesis, we evaluated 14 fibrosis-related biomarkers (EN-RAGE, IGFBP-1, -2, -3, -4, -6, FGF-23, MMP-2, -7, -9, -13, TIMP-2, -4, and RAGE-AGE) in 125 patients using Luminex multiplex assays. The study cohort consists of 14 asymptomatic gene carriers (ATTRv-asymp), 47 symptomatic hereditary (ATTRv-CA), 43 wild-type Transthyretin amyloidosis (ATTRwt) patients, and 21 were healthy controls (ctrl).…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAmyloidosis: Diagnosis, Treatment, Outcomes · Parathyroid Disorders and Treatments · IgG4-Related and Inflammatory Diseases
