%0 Journal Article %T Effect of Tafamidis on Serum Transthyretin Levels in Non-Trial Patients With Transthyretin Amyloid Cardiomyopathy. %A Falk RH %A Haddad M %A Walker CR %A Dorbala S %A Cuddy SAM %J JACC CardioOncol %V 3 %N 4 %D Oct 2021 %M 34729530 %F 8.422 %R 10.1016/j.jaccao.2021.08.007 %X UNASSIGNED: Transthyretin amyloid (ATTR) cardiomyopathy is slowed by tafamidis, which stabilizes the TTR molecule and reduces the formation of amyloidogenic oligomers. Stabilizers in clinical doses raise serum TTR, which may be a surrogate for the degree of stabilization.
UNASSIGNED: This study aims to determine, in a non-trial, unselected population of patients with ATTR cardiomyopathy, the effect of tafamidis on serum levels of TTR, and to compare these with published data of changes in TTR.
UNASSIGNED: TTR levels were measured before therapy and 3 to 12 months following initiation of tafamidis therapy in all patients seen between May 20, 2019, and March 1, 2021, who had a follow-up visits within 12 months of therapy initiation.
UNASSIGNED: Among 72 patients with ATTR cardiomyopathy (67 patients with wild-type and 5 patients with variant TTR), administration of tafamidis increased serum TTR from 21.8 mg ± 0.7 mg/dL to 29.3 ± 0.86 mg/dL, an increase of 34.5%. In 5 patients with variant TTR, the increase was 70.9%, compared to 32.0% in the wild-type patients. Mean N-terminal pro-brain natriuretic peptide increased over a mean follow-up of 21 ± 1.2 weeks, but the change was not statistically significant. Over the same period there was a small increase in high-sensitivity troponin T that was of borderline statistical significance (P = 0.057).
UNASSIGNED: Tafamidis consistently increases serum TTR levels in patients with ATTR cardiomyopathy, consistent with its effect on stabilizing TTR. Measurement of TTR level change post-TTR stabilizing therapy might be a surrogate for stabilization and could be a more accurate measure of drug efficacy than an in vitro nonphysiologic test of stabilization.