April 2022
Patients with transthyretin amyloid polyneuropathy (ATTR-PN) show decreased motor and sensory nerve amplitudes and conduction. Electrophysiological changes over time may be sensitive indicators of progression. This analysis from the Transthyretin Amyloidosis Outcomes Survey (THAOS) assessed longitudinal changes in nerve conduction as signals of neurologic disease progression in patients with hereditary ATTR (ATTRv) amyloidosis. Patients with ATTRv in THAOS with recorded nerve conduction values were included (data cut-off: January 6, 2020); changes in nerve amplitude and velocity over time were assessed. Patients (n = 1389) were 45.0% male; 80.4% were the Val30Met (p.Val50Met) genotype. Mean (SD) age at enrollment was 43.6 (14.5) years; duration of symptoms was 9.3 (6.4) years. Median (10th, 90th percentile) sural nerve amplitude and velocity was 18.0 (4.9, 35.0) μV and 50.7 (41.0, 57.9) m/s; peroneal conduction was 13.0 (4.4, 27.0) μV and 51.0 (41.7, 59.7) m/s, respectively. Median (10th, 90th percentile) percentage change from baseline in sural nerve amplitude was variable, but generally decreased over time from −7.4 (−43.2, 52.4) at year 1 to −14.4 (−76.9, 46.7) at year 8. Percent change from baseline in sural nerve velocity declined similarly: −0.1 (−14.5, 15.3) at year 1 and − 6.4 (−21.3, 10.5) at year 8. The decline was more pronounced in patients with greater disability at baseline. Similar patterns were observed for the peroneal nerve. These data show an association between nerve amplitudes and velocities and disease severity, suggesting progressive deterioration in nerve conduction may be an indicator of ATTRv amyloidosis disease progression.
Hereditary transthyretin amyloid (hATTR) is a type of heritable, autosomal dominant amyloidosis due to deposition of transthyretin- derived fibrils (transthyretin is a transport protein for, among other thing, thyroxine). Neuropathy is often the presenting symptom (bilateral carpal tunnel syndrome is common), but spinal stenosis, biceps tendon rupture, and involvement of other organs also occur. In patients with neuropathy in addition to unexplained cardiac, renal, or pulmonary disease, hATTR is an important diagnosis to consider, both because it is autosomal dominant and thus carries important genetic repercussions and because there is effective treatment.
From: The Only Neurology Book You Will Ever Need
Written by: Malcolm S. Thaler, Alison I. Thaler
February 3, 2022