학술논문

Comparison between tafamidis and liver transplantation as first-line therapy for hereditary transthyretin amyloidosis.
Document Type
Article
Source
Amyloid. Sep2023, Vol. 30 Issue 3, p303-312. 10p.
Subject
*LIVER transplantation
*TRANSTHYRETIN
*AMYLOIDOSIS
*DISEASE risk factors
CARDIOVASCULAR disease related mortality
Language
ISSN
1350-6129
Abstract
By stabilizing transthyretin, tafamidis delays progression of amyloidosis due to transthyretin variant (ATTRv) and replaced liver transplantation (LT) as the first-line therapy. No study compared these two therapeutic strategies. In a monocentric retrospective cohort analysis, patients with ATTRv amyloidosis treated with either tafamidis or LT were compared using a propensity score and a competing risk analysis for three endpoints: all-cause mortality, cardiac worsening (heart failure or cardiovascular death) and neurological worsening (worsening in PolyNeuropathy Disability score). 345 patients treated with tafamidis (n = 129) or LT (n = 216) were analyzed, and 144 patients were matched (72 patients in each group, median age 54 years, 60% carrying the V30M mutation, 81% of stage I, 69% with cardiac involvement, median follow-up: 68 months). Patients treated with tafamidis had longer survival than LT patients (HR: 0.35; p =.032). Conversely, they also presented a 3.0-fold higher risk of cardiac worsening and a 7.1-fold higher risk of neurological worsening (p =.0071 and p <.0001 respectively). ATTRv amyloidosis patients treated with tafamidis would present a better survival but also a faster deterioration of their cardiac and neurological statuses as compared with LT. Further studies are needed to clarify the therapeutic strategy in ATTRv amyloidosis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]