Abnormal global longitudinal strain and reduced serum inflammatory markers in cardiac AL amyloidosis patients without significant amyloid fibril deposition

Author:

Edwards Camille V.ORCID,Ferri Grace M.,Villegas-Galaviz Josue,Ghosh Sabrina,Bawa Pushpinder Singh,Wang Feiya,Klimtchuk Elena,Ajayi Tinuola B.,Morgan Gareth J.,Prokaeva Tatiana,Staron Andrew,Ruberg Frederick L.,Sanchorawala Vaishali,Giadone Richard M.,Murphy George J.

Abstract

BackgroundCardiac dysfunction in AL amyloidosis is thought to be partly related to the direct impact of AL LCs on cardiomyocyte function, with the degree of dysfunction at diagnosis as a major determinant of clinical outcomes. Nonetheless, mechanisms underlying LC-induced myocardial toxicity are not well understood.MethodsWe identified gene expression changes correlating with human cardiac cells exposed to a cardiomyopathy-associated κAL LC. We then sought to confirm these findings in a clinical dataset by focusing on clinical parameters associated with the pathways dysregulated at the gene expression level.ResultsUpon exposure to a cardiomyopathy-associated κAL LC, cardiac cells exhibited gene expression changes related to myocardial contractile function and inflammation, leading us to hypothesize that there could be clinically detectable changes in GLS on echocardiogram and serum inflammatory markers in patients. Thus, we identified 29 patients with normal IVSd but abnormal cardiac biomarkers suggestive of LC-induced cardiac dysfunction. These patients display early cardiac biomarker staging, abnormal GLS, and significantly reduced serum inflammatory markers compared to patients with clinically evident amyloid fibril deposition.ConclusionCollectively, our findings highlight early molecular and functional signatures of cardiac AL amyloidosis, with potential impact for developing improved patient biomarkers and novel therapeutics.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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1. Successes in translation;Amyloid;2024-07-02

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