
Results from a new cohort study suggested an underdiagnosis of amyloidosis among black U.S. residents, as well a high degree of regional variability of amyloidosis diagnoses.
Researchers for the paper, published online in JAMA Cardiology, looked at death certificate information from the CDC’s Wide-ranging Online Data for Epidemiologic Research database and the National Vital Statistics System between 1979 and 2015. The analysis included a total of 30,764 U.S. individuals with amyloidosis listed as the cause of death, and 26,591 in whim amyloidosis was listed as a contributing cause of death. Outcomes of interest included age-adjusted amyloidosis mortality rate per million (population stratified by year, sex, race, and state/county of residence).
US mortality data revealed significant underdetection of #amyloidosis, particularly in #AfricanAmericans. Learn more https://t.co/57o2kxFoBP
— JAMA Cardiology (@JAMACardio) July 30, 2018