4.3 Article

Serum transthyretin levels in senile systemic amyloidosis: effects of age, gender and ethnicity

Journal

AMYLOID-JOURNAL OF PROTEIN FOLDING DISORDERS
Volume 15, Issue 4, Pages 255-261

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/13506120802525285

Keywords

Transthyretin; senile systemic amyloidosis; TTR V122I; serum transthyretin

Funding

  1. Young Family Amyloid Research Fund
  2. Amyloid Research Fund of Boston University
  3. NIH [AG19259]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Serum transthyretin (TTR) levels are reduced in familial amyloidotic polyneuropathy (FA-P). A single study of patients with senile systemic amyloidosis (SSA) in Sweden found that those individuals also had a significantly lower mean serum TTR concentration than age- and gender-matched controls. To determine if the same phenomenon prevailed in an ethnically more heterogeneous population, we compared the serum TTR levels, as determined by ELISA, in 45 documented SSA patients with congestive heart failure, 20 AL patients with congestive heart failure and population controls. Serum TTR concentrations in the controls were influenced in a statistically significant manner by age, gender and ethnicity. Although it is unlikely that such differences are clinically relevant, they must be considered when assessing the meaning of serum TTR concentrations in any clinically defined population. The serum concentrations in patients with SSA did not differ from age, gender and ethnically matched controls or from a group of AL patients with significant clinical cardiac involvement. We also compared TTR concentrations in 12 African-Americans carrying the TTR VI 221 allele with those in 826 African-Americans who were homozygous wild type at the TTR locus. The TTR V122I carriers had significantly lower serum TTR concentrations than appropriate controls even though the majority of such individuals had not reached the age of clinical or anatomic risk, i.e. over 60. Thus, as in carriers of other TTR mutations the serum TTR level is lower than normal, despite having a much later appearance of clinical disease.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.3
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available