Title: Amyloidosis for the young ladies
1Amyloidosis for the young ladies
2Amyloidosis
- Definition In medicine, amyloidosis refers to a
variety of conditions in which amyloid proteins
are abnormally deposited in organs causing
disease. A protein is amyloid if, due to an
alteration in its secondary structure, it takes
on a particular insoluble form, called the
beta-pleated sheet. -
3AMYLOIDOSIS
- Disease characterized by extracellular deposition
of pathologic insoluble fibrillar proteins in
organs and tissues. - Term amyloid first coined by Virchow in mid 19th
century (meaning starch or cellulose). - Amyloid found to stain with congo red, appearing
red microscopically in normal light but apple
green when viewed in polarized light. - Fibrillar nature and beta pleated sheet
configuration described by electron microscopy in
1959.
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5Amyloidoses Are Protein Misfolding Diseases
6Amyloidoses Are Protein Misfolding Diseases
7Binding sites for Congo red
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9- Protein Misfolding Diseases
- A specific protein may be unable to carry out its
normal function because it is improperly folded
or because it is not sufficiently stable due to
misfolding. - A protein may be unable to carry out its normal
function because it is not trafficked to the
proper location due to misfolding. - A protein may fail to fold or to remain folded
correctly and consequently aggregate (often with
other components) leading to amyloid diseases.
(Amyloidosis refers strictly to diseases in
which extracellular deposits are formed, but the
terms amyloid diseases or protein aggregation
diseases are now being used to refer to diseases
in which protein deposits are intra- or
extracellular.) - Some of the clinical symptoms of the
non-neurological amyloidoses seem to be due to
the accumulation of large deposits of aggregated
proteins in vital organs - In neurodegenerative diseases, cellular function
appears to be impaired by the interaction of
aggregated proteins with cellular components.
This impairment is associate with evidence of
elevated oxidative stress, but the mechanism is
unknown.
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11Pathogenesis of the major forms of amyloid fibrils
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13Systemic amyloidoses are those which affect more
than one body organ or system. Localised
amyloidoses affect only one body organ or tissue
type. Primary amyloidoses arise from a disease
with disordered immune cell function such as
multiple myeloma and other immunocyte dyscrasias.
Secondary (reactive) amyloidoses are those
occurring as a complication of some other chronic
inflammatory or tissue destructive disease.
14- Imaging techniques Technetium Tc 99m
pyrophosphate binds avidly to many types of
amyloid. Quantitative assessment not possible and
strongly positive results usually only occur in
pts with severe disease. Technetium labeled
aprotinin may be more sensitive. - Quantitative scintigraphy can be done with
iodine-123- labeled serum amyloid P component
(sensitive for AL, ATTR and AA amyloid).
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21Multiple Myeloma Incidence and Etiology
- 13,000 cases/year in USA
- Median age - 65 yrs.
- Incidence in African-Americans is two-fold other
ethnic groups - Familiar clusters are rare
- Environmental/occupational exposures have been
implicated
22AL AMYLOIDOSIS
- Part of the spectrum of plasma cell dyscrasias.
- Cellular source of AL amyloid is always a single
clone of the B-lymphocytic lineage, usually
exhibiting the morphologic appearance of plasma
cells. - Underlying clonal proliferative disorder may be
frankly neoplastic (iemultiple myeloma) or
conversely a low grade proliferation of
monoclonal plasma cells.
23Heart failure
Autonomic nervous system involvement
Macroglossia hoarsenes
Carpal tunnel sy
Peripheral nervous system involvement
Thrombocytosis
AL AMYLOID
Splenomegaly
Anemia
Hypofunction of adrenal glands hypothyreosis
Hepatomegaly
Nephrotic syndrome
24- Among MM patients, amyloidosis reported with
variable frequency, but rarely exceeds 20. - Majority of patients without myeloma associated
AL, occurs in the setting of an apparently
benign monoclonal gammopathy. - Characterized by low concentrations of monoclonal
Igs in serum/urine and an often occult low grade
monoclonal plasma cell proliferation in BM.
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26Bone marrow aspirate Plasma cell infiltrate
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28AL Amyloidosis
Kidney (74)
Heart (58)
Bone marrow plasma cell clone synthesizing
amyloidogenic light chain
Liver (28)
No of organs involved 1 (31) gt1 (69)
GI (8)
29Primary Amyloidosis Histopathology
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31Conditions Associated With AA Amyloidosis
Chronic Inflammatory Diseases Chronic Infections Neoplasia
Rheumatoid arthritis Psoriatic arthritis Chronic juvenile arthritis Ankylosing spondylitis Behcets syndrome Reiters syndrome Adult Still's disease Inflammatory bowel disease Hereditary periodic fevers Tuberculosis Osteomyelitis Bronchiectasis Leprosy Pyelonephritis Decubitus ulcers Whipples disease Acne conglobata Common variable immunodeficiency Hypo/agammaglobulinemia Cystic fibrosis Hepatoma Renal carcinoma Castleman's disease Hodgkin's disease Adult hairy cell leukemia Waldenström's disease
32Presenting Clinical Features in AA Amyloidosis
33- Macroglossia occurs in 10-20
- Amyloid can be found within any part of the GI
tact and may infiltrate parenchyma, organs and
nerves. - Peripheral neuropathy may be presenting
manifestation or develop subsequently during the
course of the illness (history of carpal tunnel
frequently elicited). - Neuropathy usually distal, symmetric and
progressive. Cranial nerve and autonomic nerve
involvement also well described. - Motor neuropathy rare.
34Macroglossia
35Purpura
36HEPATIC/SPLENIC
- Involvement of liver common.
- Hepatomegaly may be striking at presentation and
usually disproportionate to extent of liver
enzyme abnormalities (except alkaline phosphatase
which is frequently elevated). - Presence of jaundice is an adverse prognostic
factor and MST from onset of jaundice is only 3
months. - Patients may present with severe intrahepatic
cholestasis. - Massive splenic deposition may result in
functional hyposplenism.
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40Extensive hypertrophy with yellow amyloid deposits
41CARDIAC
- May present with rapid and progressive onset of
CHF. - Characteristically, features are predominantly of
right sided CHF. - ECG low voltage and may have a pattern of MI in
absence of CAD. - ECHO concentrically thickened ventricles with
normal-small cavity and diastolic dysfunction on
doppler. - Clinical clue is marked worsening of failure when
CCB used.
42Echocardiogram revealing thickened walls with
small chambers
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45RENAL
- Nephrotic syndrome present in 30-50 at
diagnosis. - Nephrotic syndrome and renal failure develop only
rarely during course of the illness if not
present at time of diagnosis. - ? BJP have been associated with inferior survival
as compared with ?BJP or no monoclonal protein,
irrespective of serum creatinine.
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47Lambda
Kappa
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52- AL arthropathy may simulate RA. Most striking
appearance is the shoulder pad sign secondary
to swelling of the shoulder joints. - Vascular infiltration may result in easy bruising
especially in the eyelids and flexural regions.
Purpuric lesions typically occur above the
nipple. - Factor X deficiency (acquired) can occur in up to
10 of pts and over 2/3 of pts with acquired
factor X deficiency have systemic Amyloidosis.
53B2 Microglobulin in Dialysis-related Amyloidosis
Dialysis-related amyloidosis requires an
increased concentration of free ?2-microglobulin
54AmyloidosisHeart
55This islet of Langerhans demonstrates pink
hyalinization (with deposition of amyloid) in
many of the islet cells. This change is common in
the islets of patients with type II diabetes
mellitus.
56PROGNOSIS
- Serious disease with high mortality.
- Overall median survival after diagnosis is lt
2years in most series. - Patients with co-existent MM have a poorer
prognosis. - Survival time largely dependent upon the organ
system predominantly involved. - Cardiac involvement is major determinant of
prognosis and most common cause of death MST
from onset of CHF is 7 months.
57- Results of a a large trial of 220 pts by Kyle et
al in 1997 clarified the role of colchicine in AL
Amyloidosis. - Median duration of survival was 8months for the C
group, 18 months for the MP group and 17 months
for the MPC group. - Median survival for pts with cardiac amyloid was
5 months, 16 months for pts with renal
involvement and 34 months for those with PN.
Survival was best in those patients showing a 50
reduction in serum or urine paraprotein levels.
58CONCLUSIONS
- Systemic, uncommon disease with poor long term
survival. - Symptoms often vague and recognition of syndromes
associated with amyloidosis is key. - In general, current therapy is suboptimal
although new treatment options including
thalidomide, proteosome inhibitors, antisense
oligonucleotides and SCT hold promise for the
future.
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