Abstract

Cardiac light-chain amyloidosis carries a high risk for death predominantly from progressive cardiomyopathy or sudden death (SCD). Independent risk factors for SCD are syncope and complex nonsustained ventricular arrhythmias. The purpose of this study was to test whether prophylactic placement of an implantable cardioverter-defibrillator (ICD) reduces SCD in patients with cardiac amyloidosis. Nineteen patients with histologically proven cardiac amyloidosis and a history of syncope and/or ventricular extra beats (Lown grade IVa or higher) received an ICD. During a mean follow-up of 811 +/- 151 days, two patients with sustained ventricular tachyarrhythmias were successfully treated by the ICD. Two patients underwent heart transplantation, and seven patients died due to electromechanical dissociation (n = 6) or glioblastoma (n = 1). Nonsurvivors more often showed progression of left ventricular wall thickness, low-voltage pattern, ventricular arrhythmias (Lown grade IVa or higher), and higher N-terminal pro-brain natriuretic peptide levels than did survivors. Bradycardias requiring ventricular pacing (VVI 40/min <1%, DDD 60/min 6% +/- 1%) occurred only rarely. Patients with cardiac amyloidosis predominantly die as a result of electromechanical dissociation and other diagnoses not amenable to ICD therapy. Selected patients with cardiac amyloidosis may benefit from ICD placement. Better predictors of arrhythmia-associated SCD and randomized trials are required to elucidate the impact of ICD placement in high-risk patients with cardiac amyloidosis.

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