Relevance of comorbidities on initial combination therapy in pulmonary arterial hypertension

Roberto Badagliacca, Michele D'Alto, Stefano Ghio, Paola Argiento, Natale Daniele Brunetti, Gavino Casu, Nadia Cedrone, Marco Confalonieri, Marco Corda, Michele Correale, Carlo D'Agostino, Lucrezia De Michele, Serena Di Marino, Domenico Filomena, Giuseppe Galgano, Alessandra Greco, Carlo Lombardi, Giovanna Manzi, Valentina Mercurio, Massimiliano Mulè, Giuseppe Paciocco, Silvia Papa, Emanuele Romeo, Laura Scelsi, Davide Stolfo, Patrizio Vitulo, Carmine Dario Vizza

Source: ERJ Open Res, 8 (4) 00298-2022; 10.1183/23120541.00298-2022
Journal Issue: October

Congress or journal article abstractFull text journal articlePDF journal article, handout or slides

Abstract

Rationale

Demographic characteristics of pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) patients have changed over time, but the effects of cardiovascular risk factors on risk status and pulmonary vascular resistance (PVR) reduction with initial oral combination therapy are not known. Therefore, we tested the relevance of cardiovascular comorbidities in this setting.

Methods

The study enrolled 181 treatment-naive PAH patients with a 6-month (IQR 144–363 days) right heart catheterisation and risk assessment after initial oral combination therapy.

Results

Group A included 96 (53.0%) patients without cardiac comorbidities; Group B included 54 (29.8%) patients with one cardiac comorbidity; Group C included 31 (17.1%) patients with two cardiac comorbidities or more. Group C patients were older with a balanced sex distribution. There was a significant difference in PVR reduction moving from the absence to one or at least two cardiac comorbidities, respectively: median -45.0%, -30.3%, -24.3%. A European Respiratory Society/European Society of Cardiology low-risk status was present at first follow-up in 50 (52.0%) patients in Group A, 19 (35.1%) in Group B and 9 (29.0%) in Group C; a REVEAL 2.0 low-risk status was present at first follow-up in 41 (42.0%) patients in Group A, 15 (27.7%) in Group B and 7 (22.6%) in Group C. Group A patients were 2.3 times more likely to achieve/maintain a low-risk status compared with Group B and C (OR 2.27, 95% CI 1.15–4.54, p=0.02). No significant difference was observed between patients with non-cardiac comorbidities and those without comorbidities.

Conclusion

Initial oral combination therapy seems associated with a less effective response for patients with cardiovascular comorbidities compared with the others, related to the magnitude of treatment-induced decrease in PVR.



Rating: 0
You must login to grade this presentation.

Share or cite this content

Citations should be made in the following way:
Roberto Badagliacca, Michele D'Alto, Stefano Ghio, Paola Argiento, Natale Daniele Brunetti, Gavino Casu, Nadia Cedrone, Marco Confalonieri, Marco Corda, Michele Correale, Carlo D'Agostino, Lucrezia De Michele, Serena Di Marino, Domenico Filomena, Giuseppe Galgano, Alessandra Greco, Carlo Lombardi, Giovanna Manzi, Valentina Mercurio, Massimiliano Mulè, Giuseppe Paciocco, Silvia Papa, Emanuele Romeo, Laura Scelsi, Davide Stolfo, Patrizio Vitulo, Carmine Dario Vizza. Relevance of comorbidities on initial combination therapy in pulmonary arterial hypertension. ERJ Open Res, 8 (4) 00298-2022; 10.1183/23120541.00298-2022

You must login to share this Presentation/Article on Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn or by email.

Member's Comments

No comment yet.
You must Login to comment this presentation.