Abstract

Transthyretin cardiac amyloidosis (ATTR-CA) is a restrictive cardiomyopathy that has been associated with multiple orthopedic pathologies years before it manifests in the heart. There have been no studies on the prevalence of a wide range of shoulder pathologies in patients with cardiac amyloidosis (CA). Due to the preferential deposition of transthyretin in the soft tissues and joints, we predicted a greater prevalence of shoulder pathologies and other orthopedic manifestations in patients with ATTR-CA. This single-center, retrospective, case-control study, analyzed 1,310 patients with CA, 830 with ATTR-CA, and 480 with light-chain CA (AL-CA) from a dedicated CA REDcap database. Odds ratios comparing patients with CA to the age-matched published estimate of over 300 million patients in the general population were determined for shoulder, hip, and knee arthroplasty. Years between a patient's first shoulder pathology (i.e., shoulder arthroplasty) and the year of their diagnosis with CA were determined using data from patients with a known date of surgery. Overall, patients with ATTR-CA compared with patients with AL-CA presented more frequently with shoulder pathologies (p <0.001) and at least 1 orthopedic manifestation (p <0.001). The odds of patients with ATTR-CA and AL-CA aged 60years or older who underwent shoulder arthroplasty was 6.05 times greater (95% confidence interval 4.26 to 8.60) and 1.63 times greater (95% confidence interval 0.67 to 3.94), respectively, compared with age-matched controls. Shoulder pathologies and concomitant orthopedic pathologies are common in patients with ATTR-CA and may help identify patients with CA earlier in their disease progression for earlier intervention and treatment.

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