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The goal of this clinical trial is to investigate whether new imaging techniques can help us to better understand the cardiac amyloidosis. The disease can be slowed down with various medications (e.g., tafamidis, acoramidis, or vutrisiran). However, treatment is not effective in all patients-in about one-third of cases, the disease continues to progress. So far, we know little about the exact causes of this and what biological changes occur in the heart muscle.
The main question it aims to answer is:
Will new imaging techniques help us understand the course of the cardiac amyloidosis?
Participants will have additional examinations:
Time required:
Full description
Experimental Design The study design is an open label prospective longitudinal study with serial imaging at baseline and after 12-month follow-up. The entire study population will include 50 participants with cardiac ATTR amyloidosis, as recently defined by multi-societal criteria.
Conventional markers of disease progression
These markers are collected during routine clinical follow-up of patients in our Outpatient Clinic. The markers are divided into three domains and include the following outcomes:
Data Analysis Plan Power calculation for sample size is challenging as no previous study has evaluated the response of our endpoints in myocardial FAPI uptake or serum BMP4 concentration to tafamidis. We therefore focused sample size calculation of echocardiographic myocardial stiffness. Based on our own preliminary data, we estimate median baseline values for myocardial stiffness of 2.6 m/s [IQR, 1.7-3.8] in cardiac amyloidosis. Disease progression is expected in about 30% of participants. While myocardial stiffness is expected to remain unchanged in cardiac amyloidosis without disease progression a 20% relative increase (i.e. 0.5 ± 0.5 m/s) is considered in cardiac amyloidosis with disease progression. A sample size of 40 participants (i.e. 30 participants without and 10 participants with disease progression) has a statistical power of 80% to predict a difference in response of myocardial stiffness to tafamidis.
Non-normally distributed, paired data of repeated measures (i.e. longitudinal changes per group) are compared by Wilcoxon signed rank test. Non-normally distributed unpaired data of changes (i.e. longitudinal changes between groups) are compared by Mann-Whitney test. The correlations are compared by a z-test on Fisher z-transformed correlation coefficients.
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50 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
Dominik C Benz, PD Dr. med.
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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