Thrombotic and bleeding complications in patients with AL amyloidosis

Author:

Fotiou Despina1ORCID,Theodorakakou Foteini1ORCID,Spiliopoulou Sotiria1,Gavriatopoulou Maria1ORCID,Migkou Magdalini1ORCID,Kanellias Nikolaos1,Eleutherakis‐Papaiakovou Evangelos1,Malandrakis Panagiotis1,Dialoupi Ioanna1,Roussou Maria1,Ntanasis‐Stathopoulos Ioannis1ORCID,Terpos Evangelos1ORCID,Dimopoulos Meletios A.1ORCID,Kastritis Efstathios1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Clinical Therapeutics National and Kapodistrian University of Athens Athens Greece

Abstract

SummaryHaemostatic abnormalities and deregulated coagulation are common complications in AL amyloidosis. The relevant risks of thromboembolic and haemorrhagic events have not been thoroughly evaluated. To describe clinically significant thrombotic/haemorrhagic events in 450 consecutive patients with AL amyloidosis. Venous thromboembolic events (VTEs) were reported in 6% and arterial embolic events (AEEs) in 5% of patients, respectively, during a 55‐month median follow‐up. Lower albumin, lower eGFR, higher BM infiltration, soft tissue involvement, IMiD‐based therapy and prior thrombosis were associated with VTE risk. Prior thrombosis was the only independent prognostic variable (HR 9.3, p = 0.001). Coronary arterial disease, prior AEE, 24‐h proteinuria and higher platelet counts were associated with AEE risk. Significant bleeding events were reported in 9%, and associated mortality was 19%. Liver involvement, higher serum creatinine and higher baseline VWF:Ag levels were linked to bleeding risk. Using competing risk analysis, the cumulative probability of thrombosis/bleeding was higher during the first year following diagnosis, but a stable lower risk for both events remained for the duration of follow‐up. In AL amyloidosis patients, the risk of thrombotic/arterial embolic events is significant, but the bleeding risk is also high. A multiparametric assessment is required to initiate anti‐thrombotic or anti‐platelet therapy appropriately.

Publisher

Wiley

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