Clinical Description
Clinical features of hereditary transthyretin amyloidosis (ATTRv amyloidosis) can include peripheral sensorimotor neuropathy and autonomic neuropathy, as well as non-neuropathic changes. Cardiac amyloidosis (e.g., restrictive cardiomyopathy, arrhythmia), leptomeningeal amyloidosis (e.g., transient focal neurologic episodes, intracerebral and/or subarachnoid hemorrhages), ophthalmopathy (e.g., vitreous opacities, glaucoma), and nephropathy are frequently seen in the advanced stage of the disease (see Table 2). Affected individuals can also present with non-neuropathic forms of ATTRv amyloidosis in which polyneuropathy is less evident.
Table 2.
Hereditary Transthyretin Amyloidosis: Frequency of Select Features
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Feature | % of Persons w/Feature |
---|
Persons w/early onset & p.Val50Met | Persons w/late onset & p.Val50Met | Persons w/other TTR pathogenic variants |
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Sensory neuropathy | 82% | 84% | 60% |
Motor neuropathy | 36% | 52% | 29% |
Autonomic dysfunction | 74% | 60% | 45% |
Gastrointestinal manifestations | 68% | 47% | 33% |
Cardiac manifestations | 22% | 39% | 59% |
Onset. The disease usually begins earlier in persons from endemic foci in Portugal and Japan. In Japanese individuals from two large endemic foci (Ogawa and Arao) heterozygous for TTR pathogenic variant p.Val50Met, the mean age at onset is 40.1 ± 12.8 years (range: age 22-74 years) [Nakazato 1998]. In persons of Portuguese ancestry with TTR pathogenic variant p.Val50Met, the mean age at onset is 33.5 ± 9.4 years (range: age 17-78 years). In persons of Japanese ancestry with p.Val50Met who are unrelated to the two large endemic foci, the mean age at onset is much later (62.7 ± 6.6 years; range: age 52-80 years) [Misu et al 1999, Ikeda et al 2002]. In persons of Swedish, French, or British ancestry, the mean age at onset is much later than that in individuals of Japanese or Portuguese ancestry [Planté-Bordeneuve et al 1998]. Individuals with pathogenic variant p.Val50Met and early-onset disease have type B amyloid fibrils composed of full-length transthyretin (TTR), whereas individuals with p.Val50Met and late-onset disease have type A amyloid fibrils composed of both full-length TTR and TTR fragments [Ihse et al 2008, Ihse et al 2013].
Neuropathy. The cardinal feature of ATTRv amyloidosis neuropathy is slowly progressive sensorimotor and autonomic neuropathy [Ando et al 2005]. Typically, sensory neuropathy starts in the lower extremities and is followed by motor neuropathy within a few years. The initial symptoms are paresthesia (sense of burning, shooting pain) or hypoesthesia of the feet. Temperature and pain sensation are impaired earlier than vibration and position sensation. By the time sensory neuropathy progresses to the level of the knees, the hands have usually become affected. Individuals with TTR pathogenic variants p.Leu78His, p.Leu78Arg, p.Lys90Asn, p.Ile104Ser, p.Ile127Val, and p.Tyr134His tend to develop carpal tunnel syndrome as an initial manifestation [Nakazato 1998, Connors et al 2000, Benson 2001, Hund et al 2001, Connors et al 2003]. Due to sensory neuropathy, trophic ulcers on the lower extremities are common.
Motor neuropathy (muscle atrophy and weakness) of the extremities develops with foot drop, wrist drop, and disability of the hands and fingers. Eventually sensorimotor neuropathy shows a glove-and-stocking distribution.
Autonomic neuropathy may be the presenting manifestation of ATTRv amyloidosis, including orthostatic hypotension, constipation alternating with diarrhea, attacks of nausea and vomiting, delayed gastric emptying, impotence, anhidrosis, and urinary retention or incontinence. Frequently, the autonomic neuropathy produces the most significant morbidity of the disorder. Amyloid deposition in the gastrointestinal tract wall, especially with involvement of the gastrointestinal autonomic nerves, is common [Ikeda et al 1982, Ikeda et al 1983].
Cardiac amyloidosis. Most individuals develop cardiac manifestations after age 50 years. Cardiac manifestations include arrhythmias such as atrioventricular block, sick sinus syndrome, and atrial fibrillation due to amyloid deposition in the heart. Amyloid deposition in the myocardium causes progressive restrictive cardiomyopathy and heart failure, and it is thought that ventricular diastolic dysfunction precedes systolic dysfunction. In some individuals, cardiomyopathy is the predominant feature and peripheral neuropathy is not present.
The typical electrocardiogram shows a pseudoinfarction pattern with prominent Q wave in leads II, III, aVF, and V1-V3, presumably resulting from dense amyloid deposition in the anterobasal or anteroseptal wall of the left ventricle. The echocardiogram reveals left ventricular hypertrophy with preserved systolic function. The thickened walls show a "granular sparkling appearance."
Leptomeningeal amyloidosis / cerebral amyloid angiopathy. Liver transplant and disease-modifying drugs do not affect TTR production in the choroid plexus, and TTR production in the cranial nervous system (CNS) continues in those on therapy. This results in the emergence of CNS manifestations. The most common include transient focal neurologic episodes (TFNEs), in which affected individuals have short, self-limited episodes of focal cortical dysfunction, including hemiparesis, hemisensory disturbance, and motor aphasia. TFNEs are common, particularly in individuals with TTR pathogenic variant p.Val50Met and long-standing disease [Sekijima et al 2016, Taipa et al 2023, Takahashi et al 2023]. Following TFNEs, dementia and intracranial hemorrhage can develop approximately 20 years after the onset of ATTRv amyloidosis [Takahashi et al 2023].
Amyloid deposition is seen in the pial and arachnoid membrane, as well as in the walls of blood vessels in the subarachnoid space. Amyloid in the blood vessels disappears as the vessels penetrate the brain parenchyma. More rarely, a few individuals have developed myelopathy, caused by amyloid deposition in the blood vessel walls in the spinal cord [Dowell et al 2007].
In leptomeningeal amyloidosis, protein concentration in the cerebrospinal fluid is usually high, and gadolinium-enhanced MRI typically shows extensive enhancement of the surface of the brain, ventricles, and spinal cord [Brett et al 1999]. CNS amyloid deposition can also be detected by amyloid PET, using Pittsburgh compound B (PiB) [Sekijima et al 2016].
Ophthalmopathy. Ocular involvement, including vitreous opacity, glaucoma, dry eye, and ocular amyloid angiopathy, is common and occurs in most individuals with TTR pathogenic variant p.Val50Met [Ando et al 1997]. Vitreous opacification has been reported in approximately 20% of individuals with ATTRv amyloidosis. Four of 43 individuals with TTR pathogenic variant p.Val50Met developed vitreous amyloidosis as the first manifestation of ATTRv amyloidosis [Kawaji et al 2004]. In one individual vitreous opacification was the only evidence of ATTRv amyloidosis [Yazaki et al 2002].
Nephropathy. The kidney is consistently involved, with marked deposition of amyloid demonstrated at postmortem examination. Mild-to-severe kidney involvement is usually seen in the advanced stage [Haagsma et al 2004, Lobato et al 2004]. Kidney involvement is preceded by proteinuria. Kidney failure occurs in about one third of individuals of Portuguese descent with early-onset ATTRv amyloidosis caused by TTR pathogenic variant p.Val50Met [Lobato et al 2004]; however, severe kidney dysfunction rarely occurs in individuals with late-onset disease. Anemia with low erythropoietin has been reported in 25% of individuals [Beirão et al 2004].
Other
Shortness of breath induced by diffuse pulmonary amyloid deposition has been reported in two individuals [
Yazaki et al 2000].
Prognosis. Sensorimotor and autonomic neuropathy progress over ten to 20 years. Cachexia is a common feature at the late stage of the disease. Affected individuals usually die of cardiac failure, kidney failure, or infection.
Homozygotes / compound heterozygotes. Homozygosity for TTR pathogenic variant p.Val50Met has been reported in at least 19 individuals from 14 families [Tojo et al 2008]. Individuals homozygous and compound heterozygous for other TTR pathogenic variants have also been reported. Individuals with biallelic TTR pathogenic variants have increased penetrance and earlier onset than heterozygotes within the same family [Reddi et al 2014]; amyloid deposition is also more widespread in those with biallelic pathogenic variants than in heterozygotes [Yoshinaga et al 2004]. However, there are some reported homozygous individuals from non-endemic areas with p.Val50Met or p.Val142Ile with disease onset at the same age as heterozygotes [Uchida et al 2015, Micaglio et al 2023].