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Dive into the research topics where Simone Longhi is active.

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Featured researches published by Simone Longhi.


Circulation | 2009

Systemic cardiac amyloidoses: disease profiles and clinical courses of the 3 main types.

Claudio Rapezzi; Giampaolo Merlini; Candida Cristina Quarta; Letizia Riva; Simone Longhi; Ornella Leone; Fabrizio Salvi; Paolo Ciliberti; Francesca Pastorelli; Elena Biagini; Fabio Coccolo; Robin M. T. Cooke; Letizia Bacchi-Reggiani; Diego Sangiorgi; Alessandra Ferlini; Michele Cavo; Elena Zamagni; Maria Luisa Fonte; Giovanni Palladini; Francesco Salinaro; Francesco Musca; Laura Obici; Angelo Branzi; Stefano Perlini

Background— Most studies of amyloidotic cardiomyopathy consider as a single entity the 3 main systemic cardiac amyloidoses: acquired monoclonal immunoglobulin light-chain (AL); hereditary, mutated transthyretin-related (ATTRm); and wild-type transthyretin-related (ATTRwt). In this study, we compared the diagnostic/clinical profiles of these 3 types of systemic cardiac amyloidosis. Methods and Results— We conducted a longitudinal study of 233 patients with clear-cut diagnosis by type of cardiac amyloidosis (AL, n=157; ATTRm, n=61; ATTRwt, n=15) at 2 large Italian centers providing coordinated amyloidosis diagnosis/management facilities since 1990. Average age at diagnosis was higher in AL than in ATTRm patients; all ATTRwt patients except 1 were elderly men. At diagnosis, mean left ventricular wall thickness was higher in ATTRwt than in ATTRm and AL. Left ventricular ejection fraction was moderately depressed in ATTRwt but not in AL or ATTRm. ATTRm patients less often displayed low QRS voltage (25% versus 60% in AL; P<0.0001) or low voltage-to-mass ratio (1.1±0.5 versus 0.9±0.5; P<0.0001). AL patients appeared to have greater hemodynamic impairment. On multivariate analysis, ATTRm was a strongly favorable predictor of survival, and ATTRwt predicted freedom from major cardiac events. Conclusions— AL, ATTRm, and ATTRwt should be considered 3 different cardiac diseases, probably characterized by different pathophysiological substrates and courses. Awareness of the diversity underlying the cardiac amyloidosis label is important on several levels, ranging from disease classification to diagnosis and clinical management.


Nature Reviews Cardiology | 2010

Transthyretin-related amyloidoses and the heart: a clinical overview

Claudio Rapezzi; Candida Cristina Quarta; Letizia Riva; Simone Longhi; Ilaria Gallelli; Massimiliano Lorenzini; Paolo Ciliberti; Elena Biagini; Fabrizio Salvi; Angelo Branzi

A nonhereditary form of systemic amyloidosis associated with wild-type transthyretin causes heart involvement predominantly in elderly men (systemic senile amyloidosis, or SSA). However, hereditary transthyretin-related amyloidosis (ATTR) is the most frequent form of familial systemic amyloidosis, a group of severe diseases with variable neurological and organ involvement. ATTR remains a challenging and widely underdiagnosed condition, owing to its extreme phenotypic variability: the clinical spectrum of the disease ranges from an almost exclusive neurologic involvement to a strictly cardiac presentation. Such heterogeneity principally results from differential effects of the various reported transthyretin mutations, the geographic region the patient is from and, in the case of the most common mutation, Val30Met, whether or not large foci of cases occur (endemic versus nonendemic aggregation). Genetic or environmental factors (such as age, sex, and amyloid fibril composition) also contribute to the heterogeneity of ATTR, albeit to a lesser extent. The existence of exclusively or predominantly cardiac phenotypes should lead clinicians to consider the possibility of ATTR in all patients who present with an unexplained increase in left ventricular wall thickness at echocardiography. Assessment of such patients should include an active search for possible red flags that can point to the correct final diagnosis.


Circulation | 2014

Left Ventricular Structure and Function in Transthyretin-Related Versus Light-Chain Cardiac Amyloidosis

Candida Cristina Quarta; Scott D. Solomon; Imran Uraizee; Jenna Kruger; Simone Longhi; Marinella Ferlito; Christian Gagliardi; Agnese Milandri; Claudio Rapezzi; Rodney H. Falk

Background— Immunoglobulin amyloid light-chain (AL)-related cardiac amyloidosis (CA) has a worse prognosis than either wild-type (ATTRwt) or mutant (ATTRm) transthyretin (TTR) CA. Detailed echocardiographic studies have been performed in AL amyloidosis but not in TTR amyloidosis and might give insight into this difference. We assessed cardiac structure and function and outcome in a large population of patients with CA and compared findings in TTR and AL-related disease. Methods and Results— We analyzed 172 patients with CA (AL amyloidosis, n=80; ATTRm, n=36; ATTRwt, n=56) by standard echocardiography and 2-dimensional speckle-tracking imaging-derived left ventricular (LV) longitudinal (LS), radial, and circumferential strains. Despite a preserved LV ejection fraction (55±12%), LS was severely impaired in CA. Standard measures of LV function and speckle-tracking imaging worsened as wall thickness increased, whereas apical LS was preserved regardless of the pathogenesis of CA and the degree of wall thickening. Compared with ATTRm and AL amyloidosis, ATTRwt was characterized by greater LV wall thickness and lower ejection fraction. LS was more depressed in both ATTRwt and AL amyloidosis (−11±3% and −12±4%, respectively, P=0.54) than in ATTRm (−15±4%, P<0.01 versus AL amyloidosis and ATTRwt). TTR-related causes were favorable predictors of survival, whereas LS and advanced New York Heart Association class were negative predictors. Conclusions— In patients with CA, worsening LV function correlated with increasing wall thickness regardless of pathogenesis. Patients with ATTRwt had a statistically greater wall thickness but lesser mortality than those with AL amyloidosis, despite very similar degrees of LS impairment. This paradox suggests an additional mechanism for LV dysfunction in AL amyloidosis, such as previously demonstrated light-chain toxicity.


Amyloid | 2008

Gender-related risk of myocardial involvement in systemic amyloidosis

Claudio Rapezzi; Letizia Riva; C. Cristina Quarta; Enrica Perugini; Fabrizio Salvi; Simone Longhi; Paolo Ciliberti; Francesca Pastorelli; Elena Biagini; Ornella Leone; Robin M. T. Cooke; Letizia Bacchi-Reggiani; Alessandra Ferlini; Michele Cavo; Giampaolo Merlini; Stefano Perlini; Sonia Pasquali; Angelo Branzi

To investigate associations between gender and myocardial involvement in systemic amyloidosis, we reviewed all patients presenting between 1994 and September 2006 in our institutional network (100 AL and 98 familial transthyretin-related amyloidosis (ATTR) patients, plus 12 elderly men with senile systemic amyloidosis). We focused on echocardiographic descriptors of myocardial involvement (height-indexed mean left ventricular (LV) wall thickness, LV mass index), and baseline LV function. Among familial ATTR patients, female prevalence was lower within the highest tertile of either echocardiographic indicator of myocardial involvement. Gender was independently associated with height-indexed mean LV wall thickness (as were gene mutations). Female prevalence appeared rather similar across the different neurological stages. Within the subgroup of familial ATTR patients with amyloidotic cardiomyopathy, women tended to display a considerably less severe morphological and functional echocardiographic profile. We explored the possible role of female sex hormones by considering menopausal status: women in the highest tertile of mean LV wall thickness index were more often postmenopausal than those in the other two tertiles and had a much higher (∼15 years) mean age; analogous age-related associations were not observable for men. In conclusion, these findings raise the hypothesis that some biological characteristic associated with female gender protects against myocardial involvement in familial ATTR.


Heart Failure Reviews | 2015

Cardiac amyloidosis: the great pretender

Claudio Rapezzi; Massimiliano Lorenzini; Simone Longhi; Agnese Milandri; Christian Gagliardi; Ilaria Bartolomei; Fabrizio Salvi; Mathew S. Maurer

Cardiac amyloidosis (CA) is often misdiagnosed because of both physician-related and disease-related reasons including: fragmented knowledge among different specialties and subspecialties, shortage of centres and specialists dedicated to disease management, erroneous belief it is an incurable disease, rarity of the condition, intrinsic phenotypic heterogeneity, genotypic heterogeneity in transthyretin-related forms and the necessity of target organ tissue histological diagnosis in the vast majority of cases. Pitfalls, incorrect beliefs and deceits challenge not only the path to the diagnosis of CA but also the precise identification of aetiological subtype. The awareness of this condition is the most important prerequisite for the management of the risk of underdiagnoses and misdiagnosis. Almost all clinical, imaging and laboratory tests can be misinterpreted, but fortunately each of these diagnostic steps can also offer diagnostic “red flags” (i.e. highly suggestive findings that can foster the correct diagnostic suspicion and facilitate early, timely diagnosis). This is especially important because outcomes in CA are largely driven by the severity of cardiac dysfunction and emerging therapies are aimed at preventing further amyloid deposition.


Jacc-cardiovascular Imaging | 2014

Identification of TTR-Related Subclinical Amyloidosis With 99mTc-DPD Scintigraphy

Simone Longhi; Pier Luigi Guidalotti; Candida Cristina Quarta; Christian Gagliardi; Agnese Milandri; Massimiliano Lorenzini; Luciano Potena; Ornella Leone; Ilaria Bartolomei; Francesca Pastorelli; Fabrizio Salvi; Claudio Rapezzi

We have previously documented that 99mTc-3,3-diphosphono-1,2-propanodicarboxylic acid (99mTc-DPD) has a high affinity for transthyretin (TTR)-infiltrated myocardium, allowing a differential diagnosis with light-chain cardiac amyloidosis [(1)][1] and other non-amyloidotic cardiomyopathies with a


Amyloid | 2012

New pathological insights into cardiac amyloidosis: implications for non-invasive diagnosis.

Ornella Leone; Simone Longhi; Candida Cristina Quarta; Teresa Ragazzini; Lucilla Badiali De Giorgi; Ferdinando Pasquale; Luciano Potena; Luigi Lovato; Agnese Milandri; Giorgio Arpesella; Claudio Rapezzi

Background: Knowledge of the patterns of myocardial amyloid accumulation could improve the interpretation of electrocardiographic, echocardiographic and magnetic resonance imaging findings of amyloidosis. We assessed the extent and pattern of myocardial amyloid infiltration in explanted or autopsied hearts of patients with cardiomyopathy related to acquired monoclonal immunoglobulin light-chain (AL) or hereditary transthyretin (TTR) related amyloidosis (ATTR). Methods: We analyzed nine explanted/autopsied hearts from patients with AL (n = 4) and ATTR (n = 5) cardiac amyloidosis. For each heart, a biventricular histological macrosection was obtained at mid-ventricular level and analyzed with both inspective and computer-assisted histologic and histomorphometric analysis aimed in particular at quantifying muscle cells, fibrosis and amyloid infiltration. Results: The extent of amyloid infiltration of the left ventricle (LV) ranged from 45 to 76% (median [interquartile range (IQR)] = 57% [51–64]) of the overall surface. Although LV trabecular and subendocardial were the most infiltrated layers (45–94%, median [IQR] = 73% [67–84] and from 44 to 71%, median [IQR] = 57% [49–59], respectively), intra- and inter-patient heterogeneity was high. Three main patterns of amyloid infiltration of the LV were identified: diffuse (five cases), mainly subendocardial (two cases), and mainly segmental (two cases). The extent of amyloid infiltration of the right ventricle ranged from 48 to 93% (median [IQR] = 61% [59–83]); contributions of parietal and trabecular layers ranged from 32 to 99% (median [IQR] = 63% [47–88]) and from 49 to 93% (median [IQR] = 74% [64–79]), respectively. Conclusions: In amyloidotic cardiomyopathy, amyloid deposition is highly heterogeneous. Different patterns of infiltration are identifiable, including diffuse, mainly segmental and mainly subendocardial. Awareness of this variability can help the interpretation of ECGs, echocardiograms and magnetic resonance imaging.


Jacc-cardiovascular Imaging | 2012

Defining the Diagnosis in Echocardiographically Suspected Senile Systemic Amyloidosis

Candida Cristina Quarta; Pier Luigi Guidalotti; Simone Longhi; Cinzia Pettinato; Ornella Leone; Alessandra Ferlini; Elena Biagini; Francesco Grigioni; Maria Letizia Bacchi-Reggiani; Massimiliano Lorenzini; Agnese Milandri; Angelo Branzi; Claudio Rapezzi

Senile systemic amyloidosis (SSA) is a cardiomyopathy mainly affecting elderly men due to intramyocardial deposition of wild-type (nonmutant) transthyretin (TTR) ([1][1]). Since the heart is the only involved organ, SSA—which requires endomyocardial biopsy (EMB) for a definite diagnosis—is often


Amyloid | 2012

Cardiac involvement in hereditary-transthyretin related amyloidosis

Claudio Rapezzi; Simone Longhi; Agnese Milandri; Massimiliano Lorenzini; Christian Gagliardi; Ilaria Gallelli; Ornella Leone; Candida Cristina Quarta

Hereditary transthyretin-related amyloidosis remains a widely underdiagnosed condition, owing to its extreme phenotypic variability: the clinical spectrum of the disease ranges from an almost exclusive neurologic involvement to strictly cardiac manifestations. This heterogeneity is linked to several factors including specific transthyretin mutations, geographic distribution and endemic vs. non-endemic aggregation type. The existence of exclusively or predominantly cardiac phenotypes makes the recognition of the disease very challenging since it can mimic other more common causes of left ventricular “hypertrophy”. Assessment of such patients should include an active search for possible red flags that can indicate the correct final diagnosis.


European heart journal. Acute cardiovascular care | 2016

Troponin T elevation in acute aortic syndromes: Frequency and impact on diagnostic delay and misdiagnosis

Fabio Vagnarelli; Anna Corsini; Giulia Bugani; Massimiliano Lorenzini; Simone Longhi; Maria Letizia Bacchi Reggiani; Elena Biagini; Maddalena Graziosi; Laura Cinti; Giulia Norscini; Nevio Taglieri; Franco Semprini; Samuele Nanni; Ferdinando Pasquale; Guido Rocchi; Giovanni Melandri; Giuseppe Ambrosio; Claudio Rapezzi

Aims: Despite troponin assay being a part of the diagnostic work up in many conditions with acute chest pain, little is known about its frequency and clinical implications in acute aortic syndromes (AASs). In our study we assessed frequency, impact on diagnostic delay, inappropriate treatments, and prognosis of troponin elevation in AAS. Methods and results: Data were collected from a prospective metropolitan AAS registry (398 patients diagnosed between 2000 and 2013). Cardiac troponin test, using either standard or high sensitivity assay, was performed according to standard protocol used in chest pain units. Troponin T values were available in 248 patients (60%) of the registry population; the overall frequency of troponin positivity was 28% (ranging from 16% to 54%, using standard or high sensitivity assay respectively, p = 0.001). Troponin positivity was frequently associated with acute coronary syndromes (ACS)-like electrocardiogram findings, and with a twofold increased risk of long in-hospital diagnostic time (odds ratio (OR) 1.92, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.05–3.52, p = 0.03). The combination of positive troponin and ACS-like electrocardiogram abnormalities resulted in a significantly increased risk of in-hospital delay/coronary angiography/antithrombotic therapy due to a misdiagnosis of ACS (OR 2.48, 95% CI 1.12–5.54, p = 0.02). However, troponin positivity was not associated with in-hospital mortality (OR 1.63, 95% CI 0.86–3.10, p = 0.131). Conclusions: Troponin positivity was a frequent finding in AAS patients, particularly when a high sensitivity assay was employed. Abnormal troponin values were strongly associated with ACS-like electrocardiogram findings and with in-hospital diagnostic delay but apparently they did not influence in-hospital mortality.

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