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Transthyretin cardiac amyloidosis (ATTR-CA) is a relentlessly progressive disease that can progress to end stage heart failure, at which point recently approved transthyretin production silencing or structure stabilizing therapies provide no clinical benefit. For well-selected individuals, heart transplantation is an excellent therapeutic option to improve survival. Historically, concomitant liver transplantation has been used to halt the progression of non-cardiac transthyretin amyloidosis (ATTR) manifestations, especially for individuals with TTR genotypes associated with significant neuropathy. However, despite this, patients continue to experience progressive non-cardiac manifestations, particularly gastrointestinal and neuropathic, which can have a substantial influence on post-heart transplantation morbidity. Concomitant liver transplantation is also associated with substantial morbidity and its future therapeutic role is questionable with recently established therapies for ATTR. Therefore, there is a clear unmet need to determine the utility and safety of ATTR targeted therapies for patients with recent heart transplantation for end-stage ATTR-CA. The central hypothesis of this proposal is that in patients who have received a heart transplantation for end-stage ATTR-CA, tafamidis therapy will be efficacious and well-tolerated. We aim to determine the safety and efficacy of tafamidis in stable patients who have undergone heart or combined heart/liver transplantation for ATTR (wild-type or variant) cardiac amyloidosis. The proposed study will be a single-arm intervention clinical trial with tafamidis. Because of the efficacy of tafamidis for both variant ATTR-CA and wild-type ATTR-CA, there is no clinical equipoise for an inactive-comparator placebo arm. The primary endpoint of this study will be serial change in plasma transthyretin (TTR) levels from baseline to 12 months at 3-month intervals. The secondary endpoints of this study will include serial changes in neuropathy assessments, modified body mass indices, incident transplant-specific adverse events, and pharmacokinetics of tafamidis. Observations from this study will establish the role of tafamidis use for the management of ATTR in patients after transplantation for end-stage ATTR-CA.
Full description
A. Primary Aim
To determine the safety and efficacy of tafamidis in patients who have undergone heart or combined heart/liver transplantation for ATTR (wild-type or variant) cardiac amyloidosis.
Primary Hypothesis. Initiation of the TTR stabilizer, tafamidis, post heart or heart/liver transplant for ATTR cardiac amyloidosis, (wild-type or variant disease) will be associated with an increase in plasma transthyretin levels during 12 months of therapy.
B. Secondary Aims
C. Study Type / Design
The proposed study will be a single-arm, intervention clinical trial. Because of the observed efficacy of tafamidis and other therapies for both ATTRv and ATTRwt, there is no clinical equipoise for an inactive-comparator placebo arm.
D. Expected Outcomes
Upon completion of this clinical trial, it is our expectation that we will establish the efficacy and safety of tafamidis in patients with who have undergone heart transplantation for ATTR-CA. Further, we expect to have shown that tafamidis will have predictable pharmacokinetics and will lead to improvement in polyneuropathy questionnaire scores and mBMI. Such findings would be important, because they would justify the use of tafamidis to halt ATTR progression in patients who have undergone heart transplantation for advanced ATTR-CA.
Specifically, we will expect the following:
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25 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
Amir Mehdizadeh; Katalin Martits-Chalangari
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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