转甲状腺素
医学
淀粉样变性
队列
淀粉样纤维
淀粉样蛋白(真菌学)
内科学
肿瘤科
病理
疾病
淀粉样β
作者
Pablo García‐Pavía,Arnt V. Kristen,Brian Drachman,Martin Carlsson,Leslie Amass,Franca S. Angeli,Mathew S. Maurer
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.cardfail.2024.06.003
摘要
Background In the pivotal Tafamidis in Transthyretin Cardiomyopathy Clinical Trial (ATTR-ACT), tafamidis significantly reduced mortality, leading to its approval in many countries for the treatment of transthyretin amyloid cardiomyopathy (ATTR-CM). Real-world evidence on survival in patients with ATTR-CM following tafamidis treatment has not been extensively reported. Methods and Results The Transthyretin Amyloidosis Outcomes Survey (THAOS) was a longitudinal, observational, phase 4 study of patients with transthyretin amyloidosis and asymptomatic participants carrying pathogenic transthyretin variants. Patients from THAOS with a predominantly cardiac phenotype at enrollment were included, and survival was analyzed according to tafamidis treatment status (treated or untreated). Results are based on the completed THAOS dataset. In tafamidis-treated (n=587) and tafamidis-untreated (n=854) patients, respectively, median age at enrollment was 77.7 and 76.4 years, 91.8% and 90.0% were male, and 91.8% and 83.8% had wild-type disease. Survival rates (95% CI) at 30 and 42 months, respectively, were 84.4% (80.5-87.7) and 76.8% (70.9-81.7) in tafamidis-treated patients, and 70.0% (66.4-73.2) and 59.3% (55.2-63.0) in tafamidis-untreated patients. Survival rates in genotype subgroups (wild-type and variant) were similar to the overall cohort. Survival rates were better in a contemporary cohort as reflected by a sensitivity analysis performed on patients enrolled after vs before 2019. No new safety signals were identified. Conclusions In this real-world cohort of patients with ATTR-CM, survival rates were higher than in ATTR-ACT and consistent with more recent reports, suggesting early diagnosis and treatment with tafamidis has improved life expectancy in ATTR-CM. These results provide further evidence supporting tafamidis' safety and effectiveness. Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT00628745
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