CardioNerds Academy member Georgia Vasilakis Tsatiris, MD, The University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, is joined by expert faculty Kevin Alexander, MD, FACC, FHFSA, of Stanford Health Care, to discuss the characterization and cardiovascular-related impact of transthyretin cardiac amyloidosis (ATTR-CM), which can result in cardiac dysfunction and progressive heart failure.
Dr. Georgia Vasilakis Tsatris: Hi everyone. My name’s Georgia Vasilakis Tsatiris. I’m a PGY-3 and rising Chief Resident at the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center and a fellow of the CardioNerds Academy. Today we will be discussing very exciting new data from the ATTRibute-CM trial and its new insights into the treatment of the TTR cardiac amyloidosis, particularly related to its impact on cardiovascular related hospitalizations and survival. This data is hot off the press and presented recently at the 2024 American Heart Association or AHA annual meeting.
We once again have the privilege of speaking with Dr. Kevin Alexander, who’s an Assistant Professor of cardiovascular medicine at Stanford University School of Medicine. While he sees a wide variety of advanced heart failure in transplant cases clinically, Dr. Alexander has expertise in diagnosing and treating cardiac amyloidosis, a common rare disease that is an underdiagnosed cause of heart failure. Dr. Alexander is at the forefront of enhancing our understanding of this condition, and with grant support from the National Institutes of Health and the American Heart Association among other sources. Dr. Alexander, we’re all excited to learn from you and it’s so great to see you again.