Abstract

Evidence that tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF-α) inhibitors may benefit patients with cardiac sarcoidosis (CS) is limited to small case series and both imaging and clinical outcomes in this population are not well known. This study aimed to evaluate the disease course of patients with CS treated with either infliximab or adalimumab therapy based on serial 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (FDG-PET) imaging and clinical outcomes. An institutional CS research database was queried for patients treated with TNF-α inhibitors between 2016 and 2021. Outcomes included (1) change in mean prednisone dose, (2) FDG-PET improvement, and (3) unplanned hospitalizations, advanced heart failure therapies, or death. Our query yielded 31 patients with CS. A total of 13 patients were on infliximab, 15 patients were on adalimumab, and 3 patients were on adalimumab before transitioning to infliximab. Mean prednisone dose decreased between FDG-PET immediately preceding TNF-α and second after TNF-α FDG-PET (18.6±15.7mg to 7.7±12.4mg, p=0.018). A significant decrease was seen in the mean number of segments demonstrating FDG uptake between most recent pre-TNF-α and first after TNF-α inhibitor FDG-PET (mean segments=4.2 vs 3.1, p=0.048). Between earliest pre-TNF-α and first after TNF-α FDG-PET there was a numerical decrease in average myocardial maximum standard uptake values (SUVmax) (4.4 vs 3.1, p=0.18), and the ratio of SUVmax myocardium:SUVmax blood pool (1.9 vs 1.5, p=0.26). Within 36months of initiating TNF-α inhibitor, 4 patients (13%) experienced unplanned cardiovascular hospitalization (median time to hospitalization=12.1months). In conclusion, in patients with CS, TNF-α inhibitor therapy is associated with decreased glucocorticoid use, numerical decrease in cardiac FDG uptake, and minimal cardiac morbidity.

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