Microvascular dysfunction assessed by dynamic cardiac SPECT in subjects with cardiac transthyretin amyloidosis

ElsevierVolume 15, Issue 3, June 2023, Page 263Archives of Cardiovascular Diseases SupplementsAuthor links open overlay panel, , , , Method

Adult patients with confirmed ATTR cardiomyopathy were included before Tafamidis treatment in a multicentric, prospective, observational cohort study (AMYTRE study, NCT05103943). Dynamic cardiac SPECT data were acquired on CZT-based pinhole cardiac cameras in listmode using a stress (249 ± 13 MBq)/rest (506 ± 17 MBq) one-day 99mTc-tetrofosmin protocol. Kinetic analysis was done with Corridor4DMTM software using a 1-tissue-compartment model and converted to myocardial blood flow using a previously determined extraction fraction correction. Myocardial flow reserve (MFR) was defined as the ratio between stress and rest myocardial blood flow.

Results

Thirteen (9 male, 4 female) patients were prospectively included. Mean age was 77 ± 18; mean BMI was 28 ± 8.1. ATTR was diagnosed on 99mTc-HDP bone scintigraphy (8 grade 2 and 5 grade 3). LVEF was preserved, mean 57 ± 7.5%. Twelve patients had normal perfusion imaging, without ischemia; 1 patient had moderate infero-basal ischemia (5–10% extent). MFR was significantly reduced both globally (1.5 ± 0.35) and in all territories (1.5 ± 0.34 for left anterior descending, 1.6 ± 0.39 for left circumflex, and 1.6 ± 0.45 for right coronary).

Conclusion

In this preliminary report, MFR is significantly reduced in all territories in patients with ATTR cardiomyopathy, undergoing cardiac dynamic SPECT. This confirms potential coronary microvascular dysfunction.

Section snippetsDisclosure of interest

The authors have not supplied their declaration of competing interest.

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