Reactive Vasodilation Predicts Mortality in Primary Systemic Light-Chain Amyloidosis

Stamatelopoulos, Kimon and Gatsiou, Aikaterini (2019) Reactive Vasodilation Predicts Mortality in Primary Systemic Light-Chain Amyloidosis. Circulation Research, 125 (8). pp. 744-758. ISSN 0009-7330

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Abstract

Rationale: Cardiac involvement and hypotension dominate the prognosis of light-chain amyloidosis (AL). Evidence suggests that there is also peripheral vascular involvement in AL but its prognostic significance is unknown. Objective: To evaluate vascular dysfunction in patients with AL as a potential future area of intervention, we assessed the prognostic utility of flow-mediated dilatation (FMD), a marker of vascular reactivity, which is augmented under conditions of hypotension and autonomic dysfunction. Methods and Results: We prospectively evaluated 115 newly diagnosed untreated AL patients in whom FMD was measured. FMD in AL patients was significantly higher than age-, sex- and risk factors–matched controls (4.0% versus 2.32%; P=0.006) and comparable with control groups at lower cardiovascular risk (P>0.1). Amyloidosis patients presented increased plasma and exhaled markers of the NO pathway while their FMD significantly correlated with augmented sustained vasodilatation after sympathetic stimulation. Increased FMD (≥4.5%) was associated with early mortality (hazard ratio, 4.36; 95% CI, 1.41–13.5; P=0.010) and worse survival (hazard ratio, 2.11; 95% CI, 1.17–3.82; P=0.013), even after adjustment for Mayo stage, nerve involvement and low systolic blood pressure. This finding was confirmed in a temporal validation AL cohort (n=55; hazard ratio, 4.2; 95% CI, 1.45–12.3; P=0.008). FMD provided significant reclassification value over the best prognostic model (continuous Net Reclassification Index, 0.61; P=0.001). Finally, better hematologic response was associated with lower posttreatment FMD. Conclusions: FMD is relatively increased in AL and independently associated with inferior survival with substantial reclassification value. Reactive vasodilation merits further investigation as a novel risk biomarker in AL.Visual Overview: An online visual overview is available for this article.

Item Type:
Journal Article
Journal or Publication Title:
Circulation Research
Uncontrolled Keywords:
Research Output Funding/yes_externally_funded
Subjects:
?? yes - externally fundedphysiologycardiology and cardiovascular medicine ??
ID Code:
222114
Deposited By:
Deposited On:
12 Jul 2024 14:10
Refereed?:
Yes
Published?:
Published
Last Modified:
04 Oct 2024 00:27