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Comparison of the current renal staging, progression and response criteria to predict renal survival in AL amyloidosis using a Mayo cohort.

Maria Eleni DrosouLisa E VaughanEli MuchtarFrancis K BuadiDavid DingliAngela DispenzieriAmie L FonderMorie A GertzRonald S GoWilson I GonsalvesSuzanne R HaymanMiriam A HobbsYi Lisa HwaPrashant KapoorTaxiarchis V KourelisShaji KumarRobert A KyleMartha Q LacyYi LinCamden L LopezJohn A LustSundararajan Vincent RajkumarStephen J RussellSurbhi SidanaMustaqeem A SiddiquiM Hasib SidiqiRahma M WarsameNelson R Leung
Published in: American journal of hematology (2021)
Three sets of criteria (International Society of Amyloidosis [ISA], Palladini and Kastritis) were independently developed for staging, progression and response criteria to predict renal survival in patients with AL amyloidosis. We evaluated these criteria using a cohort of 495 newly diagnosed AL amyloidosis patients with renal involvement using time to event competing risk analysis at baseline, 3, 6 and 12 months after treatment. Only Palladini and Kastritis had a staging system and both predicted a higher risk of end stage renal disease (ESRD) in the stage III vs stage I patients but only the Palladini model was predictive for stage II patients. At 3 months, risk of ESRD was significantly higher for Palladini and ISA renal progression (hazard ratio [HR] 2.8 [95% CI: 1.5-5.3, p = .001] and 2.5 [CI: 1.4-4.6, p = .004, respectively]), but renal response was not significantly protective; conversely, the risk of ESRD was not significantly higher for the Kastritis renal progression, but was significantly protective for the Kastritis renal responders (HR 0.38 [95% CI: 0.17-0.84], p = .017). Both progression and response with ISA, Palladini and Kastritis criteria were predictive of ESRD at 6 months and 12 months. While the Palladini staging criteria at baseline, and the ISA and Palladini criteria for progression at 3 months performed better than the Kastritis criteria at baseline and 3 months post-treatment, the Kastritis criteria performed better for response 3 months after treatment. All three sets of criteria performed well at and after 6 months post-treatment. These differences are important when choosing endpoints for clinical trials.
Keyphrases
  • end stage renal disease
  • chronic kidney disease
  • peritoneal dialysis
  • newly diagnosed
  • clinical trial
  • lymph node
  • ejection fraction
  • combination therapy
  • open label
  • study protocol