Background: Reactive systemic (AA, secondary) amyloidosis occurs in chronic inflammatory diseases, and most patients present with nephropathy. The amyloid fibrils are derived from the circulating acute-phase reactant serum amyloid A protein (SAA), but the relation between production of fibril precursor protein, amyloid load, and clinical outcome in AA and other types of amyloidosis is unclear. Methods: We studied amyloidotic organ function and survival prospectively for 12-117 months in 80 patients with systemic AA amyloidosis in whom serum SAA concentration was measured monthly and visceral amyloid deposits were assessed annually by serum amyloid P component scintigraphy. Underlying inflammatory diseases were treated as vigorously as possible. Findings: Amyloid deposits regressed in 25 of 42 patients whose median SAA values were within the reference range (<10 mg/L) throughout follow-up, and amyloidotic organ function stabilised or improved in 39 of these cases. Outcome varied substantially among patients whose median SAA concentration exceeded 10 mg/L, but amyloid load increased and organ function deteriorated in most of those whose SAA was persistently above 50 mg/L. Estimated survival at 10 years was 90% in patients whose median SAA was under 10 mg/L, and 40% among those whose median SAA exceeded this value (p=0.0009). Interpretation: Although isolated amyloid fibrils are stable in vitro, AA amyloid deposits exist in a state of dynamic turnover, and outcome is favourable in AA amyloidosis when the SAA concentration is maintained below 10 mg/L. The potential for amyloid to regress and for the function of amyloidotic organs to recover support therapeutic strategies to decrease the supply of amyloid fibril precursor proteins in amyloidosis generally. © 2001 Elsevier Science Ltd.
CITATION STYLE
Gillmore, J. D., Lovat, L. B., Persey, M. R., Pepys, M. B., & Hawkins, P. N. (2001). Amyloid load and clinical outcome in AA amyloidosis in relation to circulating concentration of serum amyloid A protein. Lancet, 358(9275), 24–29. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(00)05252-1
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