Amyloidosis

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Overview

Historical Perspective

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Primary amyloidosis
Secondary amyloidosis
Familial amyloidosis
Wild-type (senile) amyloidosis
Cardiac amyloidosis
Beta-2 microglobulin related amyloidosis
Gelsolin related amyloidosis
Lysozyme amyloid related amyloidosis
Leucocyte cell-derived chemotaxin 2 related amyloidosis
Fibrinogen A alpha-chain associated amyloidosis

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Differentiating Amyloidosis from other Diseases

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Case #1

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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]; Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: Shaghayegh Habibi, M.D.[2]

Overview


Historical Perspective

PClassification

Amyloidosis may be classified based on precursor of amyloidogenic protein into different subtypes, include:

Type Amyloidogenic protein/ fibril Clinical syndrome
AL (primary amyloidosis) Light chains of immunoglobulines (most common type) Monoclonal gammopathy
AA (secondary amyloidosis) Serum amyloid A protein Chronic inflammatory diseases
AF Mutant transthyretin, A1-apolipoprotein, gelsolin, fibrinogen, etc. Familial polyneuropathy/cardiomyopathy/nephropathy
ATTRwt Wild-type transthyretin Senile restrictive cardiomyopathy _ Transthyretin-related amyloidosis wild-type
AH ß2-microglobulin Long-term hemodialysis

Amyloidosis also may classified by their extension of organ involvement as below:

Classification subtypes Causes Important clinical findings
Systemic amyloidosis Primary amyloidosis (AL)
Secondary amyloidosis (AA)
Hereditary amyloidosis
Organ-specific amyloidosis Renal amyloidosis
Cardiac amyloidosis
Hepatic amyloidosis
Amyloid neuropathy
Gastrointestinal amyloidosis

Natural History, Complications and Prognosis

  • In amyloidosis, insoluble fibrils of amyloid are deposited in body organs, causing organ dysfunction and eventually death.[2]
  • In AL amyloidosis untreated individuals have the worst prognosis. In this group of patients median survival is one to two years.[3]

In patients with amyloidosis the most frequent complications include:[4]

  • Heart failure
  • Nephrotic syndrome
  • Hepatomegaly
  • Peripheral neuropathy

In primary (AL) amyloidosis survival rate depends on:[5]

  • Type of organ involvement (amyloid heart disease is the main prognostic factor)
  • The severity of different organs involvement
  • Haematological response to treatment
  • The median survival of patients with AL amyloidosis is aproximately 3.8 years.[6]
  • In primary (AL) amyloidosis 27% of patients dying within 1 year from diagnosis.
  • The major determinant of outcome in amyloidosis is the extent of cardiac involvement.
    • Cardiac amyloidosis is the cause of death in 75% of the patients who died, including sudden death in 25%.

Case Studies

Case #1

  1. Kyle RA (June 2011). "Amyloidosis: a brief history". Amyloid. 18 Suppl 1: 6–7. doi:10.3109/13506129.2011.574354001. PMID 21838413.
  2. Baker KR, Rice L (2012). "The amyloidoses: clinical features, diagnosis and treatment". Methodist Debakey Cardiovasc J. 8 (3): 3–7. PMC 3487569. PMID 23227278.
  3. Khan MF, Falk RH (November 2001). "Amyloidosis". Postgrad Med J. 77 (913): 686–93. PMC 1742163. PMID 11677276.
  4. Jerzykowska S, Cymerys M, Gil LA, Balcerzak A, Pupek-Musialik D, Komarnicki MA (2014). "Primary systemic amyloidosis as a real diagnostic challenge - case study". Cent Eur J Immunol. 39 (1): 61–6. doi:10.5114/ceji.2014.42126. PMC 4439975. PMID 26155101.
  5. Desport E, Bridoux F, Sirac C, Delbes S, Bender S, Fernandez B, Quellard N, Lacombe C, Goujon JM, Lavergne D, Abraham J, Touchard G, Fermand JP, Jaccard A (August 2012). "Al amyloidosis". Orphanet J Rare Dis. 7: 54. doi:10.1186/1750-1172-7-54. PMC 3495844. PMID 22909024.
  6. Merlini G, Seldin DC, Gertz MA (May 2011). "Amyloidosis: pathogenesis and new therapeutic options". J. Clin. Oncol. 29 (14): 1924–33. doi:10.1200/JCO.2010.32.2271. PMC 3138545. PMID 21483018.