June 2023
Early diagnosis of hereditary ATTR polyneuropathy (ATTRv-PN) is important since treatment options have become available, which are most effective early in the disease course. ATTRv-PN is likely underdiagnosed as patients might be misdiagnosed with idiopathic polyneuropathy. It is uncertain if it is useful to test for TTR gene mutations in patients with a typical presentation for chronic idiopathic axonal polyneuropathy (CIAP) and which are the distinguishing clinical features.
We carried out a retrospective cohort study to assess the yield of TTR gene sequencing in patients with polyneuropathy and assessed if the identified patients with ATTRv-PN had a clinical presentation typical of CIAP. Additionally, we assessed which clinical features, including previously defined red flag symptoms, can differentiate between patients with CIAP and ATTRv-PN and assessed the performance of the TTR suspicion index.
Out of 338 patients with polyneuropathy, 10 patients had a pathogenic TTR gene mutation (all p.Val50Met) and none had a clinical presentation typical of CIAP. Patients with ATTRv-PN more often had bilateral CTS, motor involvement of arms, cardiac involvement, family history suggestive of hATTRv, and autonomic symptoms than patients with CIAP. All patients with ATTRv-PN as well as 70% of patients with CIAP fulfilled the suspicion index.
Routine TTR gene sequencing in patients with a typical presentation for CIAP is not useful. However, red flag symptoms can differentiate patients with ATTRv-PN from patients with CIAP. We propose an adjusted version of the TTR suspicion index to increase diagnostic yield.
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