Hereditary Transthyretin Cardiac Amyloidosis With the p.V142I Variant: Mechanistic Insights and Diagnostic Challenges
- PMID: 40084403
- PMCID: PMC12173776
- DOI: 10.1161/CIRCHEARTFAILURE.124.012469
Hereditary Transthyretin Cardiac Amyloidosis With the p.V142I Variant: Mechanistic Insights and Diagnostic Challenges
Abstract
The most common form of hereditary transthyretin cardiac amyloidosis (hATTR-CA) in the United States and the United Kingdom is the p.V142I variant. About 3% to 4% of patients with African ancestry carry this genetic predisposition to develop signs and symptoms of hATTR-CA. Nevertheless, clinical manifestations of hATTR-CA appear only late in the fifth and sixth decades of life, despite its clear genetic background. Imbalances in native protein-stabilizing and elementary breakdown cellular mechanisms are postulated as potential causes for affecting transthyretin structural integrity and myocardial fibril deposition. Noncoding variants, epigenetic and environmental factors, as well as gut microbiome derangements may serve as disease-modifying factors that feature detrimental amyloidogenic organ involvement and impact disease severity. Organ amyloid deposition varies widely among different carriers of a genetic transthyretin variant. The genotype-phenotype interdependence causes unpredictable phenotypic penetrance that results in a variety of signs and symptoms and patient outcomes. Cardiovascular biomarkers and multimodality imaging may identify initial amyloidogenic organ involvement. These early clinical clues through the course of hATTR-CA offer a window of opportunity for early treatment onset to cease disease progression and alter prognosis. Identifying at-risk patients requires information on the genetic background of probands and their relatives. Initiatives to reveal asymptomatic gene carriers early in the disease should be encouraged, as it necessitates stringent patient follow-up and immediate treatment onset to reduce the burden of heart failure hospitalization and mortality in hATTR-CA.
Keywords: biomarkers; genotype; heart failure; penetrance; prognosis.
Conflict of interest statement
Dr Grodin reports research funding from the Texas Health Resources Clinical Scholarship, Eidos/BridgeBio, and Pfizer and serves as a consultant for Pfizer, Eidos/BridgeBio, Alnylam, Lumanity, Novo Nordisk, Ultromics, AstraZeneca, Alexion, and Intellia. Dr Tang has served as a consultant for Sequana Medical, Cardiol Therapeutics, Genomics plc, Zehna Therapeutics, WhiteSwell, Boston Scientific, CardiaTec Biosciences, Bristol Myers Squibb, Alleviant Medical, Alexion Pharmaceuticals, Salubris Biotherapeutics, and BioCardia and has received honorarium from Springer, Belvoir Media Group, and the American Board of Internal Medicine. He has served as a site principal investigator for research studies sponsored by Alnylam Pharmaceuticals. The other authors report no conflicts.
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