Patient-Reported Outcome Measures in Wild-Type and Variant Cardiac Transthyretin Amyloidosis: The Impact of Transthyretin Amyloidosis on Life qualitY (ITALY) Study
Overview
- Phase
- Not Applicable
- Intervention
- Not specified
- Conditions
- Transthyretin Amyloidosis
- Sponsor
- University of Messina
- Enrollment
- 250
- Locations
- 5
- Primary Endpoint
- reliability
- Last Updated
- 5 years ago
Overview
Brief Summary
Specific, standardized, comprehensive, universally accepted Patient-Reported Outcome Measures (PROMs) are currently lacking for variant and wild-type cardiac amyloid transthyretin amyloidosis (v-ATTR/wt-ATTR). Our goal is then to create two scores able to provide a cumulative assessment of cardiac involvement, peripheral neuropathy (in v-ATTR), and comorbidities, and their impact on the quality of life.
In the setting of a nationwide collaboration involving 5 main Italian referral centers for this condition (in Ferrara, Florence, Pavia, Pisa and Messina), a panel will be created, including experts of ATTR cardiomyopathy, neurologists, geriatricians, health management specialists, as well as patients with either variant or wild-type ATTR cardiomyopathy (n=50).
The most clinically relevant domains for patients (such as physical limitations, symptoms, self-efficacy and knowledge, social interference, quality of life, age-related issues, social and family environment, frailty, comorbidities) will be identified. Two sets of 30 items (one for variant and another for wild-type ATTR cardiomyopathy) will be created in collaboration with patients. Questions will be formatted for gender neutrality, clarity, interpretability, and possible foreign language translations. PROMs scores will be validated through administration to around 250 consecutive outpatients. Score performance will be evaluated in terms of internal consistency, response to clinical changes, comparison with conventional clinical measures. The time needed for completion, the clarity of questions and the need for assistance from a family caregiver will be evaluated.
This project will hopefully lead to the identification of disease-specific metrics that may serve as a clinically meaningful outcome in cardiovascular research, patient management, and quality assessment.
Investigators
Gianluca Di Bella
Professor
University of Messina
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria
- •Diagnosis of cardiomyopathy due to ATTR amyloidosis, diagnosed by endomyocardial biopsy or on the basis of the algorithm for the non-invasive diagnosis of cardiac ATTR amyloidosis (Gillmore et al., 2016).
- •Clinical stability, defined as the lack of unscheduled hospitalizations and/or significant changes in cardiac therapies from at least 1 month.
Exclusion Criteria
- •Lack of informed consent.
- •Inability of understanding a written text in Italian.
- •Absence of the conditions of clinical stability, as defined above.
Outcomes
Primary Outcomes
reliability
Time Frame: baseline to 6 months
internal consistency
Secondary Outcomes
- responsiveness(baseline to HF hospitalization (<6 months))
- validity of each domain(baseline to 6 months)