A 62-year-old female with known systemic serum amyloid A (AA) amyloidosis presented with signs and symptoms of new-onset heart failure. Echocardiography demonstrated mild left ventricular (LV) dilation, preserved ejection fraction, and grade II diastolic dysfunction without typical signs of cardiac amyloidosis (CA) but a profound focal hypertrophy of the free right ventricular (RV) wall (a, b). Positron emission tomography/computed tomography (PET/CT) with the amyloid-binding tracer 18F-florbetaben was subsequently performed since endomyocardial biopsy was not deemed justified due to localized hypertrophy of the free RV wall. As shown in c-e, a highly increased RV tracer uptake with only moderately increased LV tracer uptake was found (retention index for RV and LV is 0.0026 and 0.0016, respectively). Tracer uptake co-localized with the echocardiographic finding of RV hypertrophy, suggesting cardiac involvement of AA amyloidosis with predominant right-sided amyloid deposition.

figure a

Amyloid-binding radiotracers have already received approval for beta-amyloid brain imaging. Previous exploratory studies demonstrated their high diagnostic accuracy for CA of transthyretin or light-chain type [1,2,3], yet no study has evaluated their utility in an AA amyloidosis cohort. While endomyocardial biopsy is an established method for diagnosing CA, it may be prone to sampling error in the case of localized disease. This report demonstrates the sensitivity of 18F-florbetaben PET/CT to detect AA-CA. PET/CT provides high image quality and quantitative measures of tracer uptake, thus making detection, localization, and absolute quantification of amyloid feasible and has the potential to substitute or even outperform endomyocardial biopsy, particularly in the case of focal or early-stage disease.