Increasing clinicians' suspicion of ATTR amyloidosis using a retrospective algorithm

This study aimed to increase the index of suspicion for transthyretin amyloidosis (ATTR) among cardiologists leading to increased screening for amyloidosis. A retrospective algorithm was created to identify patients at risk for ATTR. A list of these patients and instructions on how to order amyloido...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cardio-Oncology 2024-11, Vol.10 (1), p.78-8, Article 78
Hauptverfasser: Ammon, Jessica, Alexander, John, Petit-Frere, Woodson, Alkhatib, Deya, Rawal, Aranyak, Newman, Grace, Akbiligic, Oguz, Borkowski, Brian, Jefferies, John, Rhea, Isaac B
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This study aimed to increase the index of suspicion for transthyretin amyloidosis (ATTR) among cardiologists leading to increased screening for amyloidosis. A retrospective algorithm was created to identify patients at risk for ATTR. A list of these patients and instructions on how to order amyloidosis testing were given to cardiologists, who then determined if further evaluation was warranted. The ordering trends of Technetium 99 m-Pyrophosphate (PYP) scans and the number of ordering physicians before and after this intervention were recorded across the entire practice. The algorithm identified 349 potential high-risk patients of which only 23 eventually had PYP scans performed resulting in 2 equivocal and 1 positive results. Across the practice, over the 28 months before initiating this protocol, PYP scans were ordered for 22 patients of which 6 were equivocal or positive. Over the 23-month course of this project, 142 PYP scans were ordered of which 18 were equivocal or positive. The number of ordering providers increased from 7 prior to the protocol's implementation to 22 by the end of this project within 23 months. On change point analysis, PYP scan ordering increased after protocol initiation (regression coefficient 1.27 vs. 6.31, p 
ISSN:2057-3804
2057-3804
DOI:10.1186/s40959-024-00282-6