| Literature DB >> 26648729 |
Qian-Qian Liu1, Zhi-Cheng Jing2.
Abstract
Pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) is a devastating disease in which remodeling of the small pulmonary arteries leads to a progressive increase in pulmonary vascular resistance and right-sided heart failure. Over the past decade, new treatments for PAH, such as the use of ERAs, PDE-5 inhibitors and prostacyclin analogs, have brought about dramatic improvements in clinical outcomes. Epoprostenol infusion therapy has been shown to improve hemodynamics, functional status, and survival, and it remains the gold standard for treatment of patients with severe PAH. Many agents, approved for PAH are always delivered in pill form. Although oral therapy occupies an important position, it has some drawbacks and limitations in PAH management. For patients in World Health Organization functional class IV and with severe right heart failure, there are few data on the long-term survival of patients treated with oral medications. Further research, exploration, and clinical experience with oral therapy in severe PAH and combination therapy will redefine its position in PAH management.Entities:
Keywords: oral therapy; pulmonary arterial hypertension; right heart failure; survival
Year: 2015 PMID: 26648729 PMCID: PMC4664513 DOI: 10.2147/TCRM.S49026
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ther Clin Risk Manag ISSN: 1176-6336 Impact factor: 2.423
The side effects and damage of major PAH-specific therapies
| Major targeted pathways | Compounds | PAH-specific drugs | Administration routes | The side effects and damages
| ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Related to the administration routes | Related to the pharmacological action
| |||||
| More frequent | Others | |||||
| Endothelin pathway | ERAs | Bosentan | Oral | – | Liver transaminase elevation | Flushing, headaches dizziness, peripheral edema, palpitations, chest pain, nasopharyngitis, anemia |
| Ambrisentan | Oral | – | Peripheral edema | Nasal congestion, upper respiratory tract infection, nausea, sinusitis, nasopharyngitis, flushing, headaches, liver transaminase elevation, abdominal pain, constipation, palpitations, dyspnea | ||
| Macitentan | Oral | – | Headaches, nasopharyngitis, anemia | Peripheral edema, anemia, upper respiratory tract infection, dizziness, bronchitis, dyspnea, cough, liver transaminase elevation | ||
| Sitaxentan | Oral | – | Acute liver toxicity | Nasal congestion, flushing | ||
| Nitric oxide-cGMP pathway | PDE-5 inhibitors | Sildenafil | Oral | – | Headaches, flushing, epistaxis | Left ventricular dysfunction, postural hypotension, dyspepsia, back pain, diarrhea, extremity pain, myalgia, cough, pyrexia, insomnia, influenza, visual disturbance, grand mal seizure, drug hypersensitivity, urticaria, angioedema, gastroesophageal reflux disease, posterior subcapsular cataract, neck stiffness, abdominal pain |
| Intravenous | – | Flushing | Flatulence, hypotension, syncope | |||
| Tadalafil | Oral | – | Headaches, myalgia, flushing | Diarrhea, nausea, back pain, dyspepsia, dyspnea, extremity pain, muscle spasms, upper respiratory tract infection, epistaxis, palpitations, arthralgia, chest pain, vomiting, fatigue, nasal congestion, edema, bronchitis, insomnia, urinary tract infection, blurred vision | ||
| sGC stimulators | Riociguat | Oral | – | Headaches, flushing, hypotension | Dyspepsia, peripheral edema, nausea, syncope, bleeding (including hemoptysis), dizziness, diarrhea, vomiting, nasopharyngitis, anemia, palpitations, chest pain, dyspnea, gastroesophageal reflux disease, cough, nasal congestion, pyrexia, fatigue, chest discomfort, gastritis | |
| Prostacyclin pathway | Prostacyclin analogs | Epoprostenol | Continuous intravenous infusion | Catheter-related infections, sepsis, thromboembolic event, irritation, bleeding, drug-delivery system malfunction | Jaw pain, diarrhea, flushing | Headaches, nausea, vomiting |
| Iloprost | Inhaled | Increased cough | Flushing, jaw pain, headaches | Hypotension, influenza-like syndrome, peripheral edema, nausea, diarrhea, dizziness | ||
| Treprostinil | Oral | – | Headaches, flushing, nausea | Diarrhea, jaw pain, vomiting, extremity pain | ||
| Continuous subcutaneous infusion | Severe infusion site pain, reaction, bleeding and bruising | Diarrhea, jaw pain, flushing | Peripheral edema, nausea, rash, dizziness, vomiting, headaches, vasodilatation | |||
| Continuous intravenous infusion | Catheter-related blood stream infection, thromboembolic event, irritation, bleeding, drug-delivery system malfunction | Extremity pain, headaches, diarrhea | Jaw pain, nausea, fatigue, loose stools, vomiting, dizziness, dyspnea, flushing, palpitations, peripheral edema | |||
| Inhaled | Cough, throat irritation, | Headaches, nausea, | Flushing, diarrhea, anemia, abdominal pain, diabetes mellitus, | |||
| pharyngolaryngeal pain | dizziness | gastric ulcer | ||||
| Beraprost | Oral | – | Headaches, flushing, jaw pain | Diarrhea, extremity pain, nausea, pharyngitis, asthenia, palpitations, vasodilatation | ||
Note:
Sitaxentan was withdrawn from the market in 2010 because of an increasing number of deaths attributed to acute liver toxicity. –, not applicable.
Abbreviation: PAH, pulmonary arterial hypertension.
Half-life of PAH-specific drugs
| Drugs | Half-life |
|---|---|
| Bosentan | 5.4 h |
| Ambrisentan | 9–15 h |
| Macitentan | Macitentan, ACT-064992 (2 h) |
| Epoprostenol | 2–3 min |
| Iloprost | 30 min |
| Treprostinil | 4.5 h |
| Beraprost | 35–40 min |
| Sildenafil (for PAH) | 3.7 h |
| Tadalafil (for PAH) | 18 h |
| Riociguat | 5–10 h |
Note:
Beraprost has been approved in Japan and South Korea, but not in the US or Europe for PAH.
Abbreviations: PAH, pulmonary arterial hypertension; h, hours; min, minutes.
WHO-FC of patients and primary endpoints in studies with PAH-specific drugs
| Drugs (study) | WHO-FC I | WHO-FC II | WHO-FC III | WHO-FC IV | Primary endpoint | Year |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bosentan | 0 | 0 | 195 (92) | 18 (8) | 6MWD | 2002 |
| Ambrisentan | 5 (2) | 65 (32) | 117 (58) | 14 (7) | 6MWD | 2008 |
| Ambrisentan | 3 (1) | 86 (45) | 99 (52) | 4 (2) | 6MWD | 2008 |
| Macitentan | 1 (1) | 387 (52) | 337 (45) | 14 (2) | TTCW | 2013 |
| Epoprostenol | 0 | 0 | 120 (67) | 58 (33) | 6MWD | 2002 |
| Iloprost | 0 | 0 | 119 (59) | 84 (41) | 6MWD and WHO-FC | 2002 |
| Treprostinil | 0 | 53 (12) | 382 (81) | 34 (7) | 6MWD | 2002 |
| Beraprost | 0 | 61 (53) | 55 (47) | 0 | 6MWD | 2003 |
| Sildenafil | 1 (1) | 107 (38) | 160 (58) | 9 (3) | 6MWD | 2005 |
| Sildenafil | 1 (1) | 100 (38) | 150 (58) | 7 (3) | WHO-FC and 6MWD | 2011 |
| Tadalafil | 4 (1) | 130 (32) | 264 (65) | 7 (2) | 6MWD | 2009 |
| Vardenafil | 0 | 30 (47) | 34 (53) | 0 | 6MWD | 2011 |
| Riociguat | 14 (3) | 187 (42) | 237 (53) | 4 (1) | 6MWD | 2013 |
Notes:
Beraprost has been approved in Japan and South Korea, but not in the US or Europe for PAH;
vardenafil is currently not approved for PAH patients.
Abbreviations: PAH, pulmonary arterial hypertension; WHO-FC, World Health Organization functional class; 6MWD, 6-minute walk distance; TTCW, time to clinical worsening.
Characteristics of studies with patients exposed to combination therapy of approved PAH drugs
| Combination drugs | No of subjects | Major WHO-FC status of subjects | Follow-up time | Primary endpoint | Primary endpoint meets the defined significance | Type of combination |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bosentan + inhaled iloprost (STEP) | 67 | III (94%) | 12 weeks | 6MWD | No | Sequential combination |
| Bosentan + inhaled iloprost (COMBI) | 40 | III (100%) | 12 weeks | 6MWD | No | Sequential combination |
| Bosentan or sildenafil + inhaled treprostinil (TRIUMPH-1) | 235 | III (98%) | 12 weeks | 6MWD | Yes | Sequential combination |
| ERA or PDE-5 inhibitors or both + oral treprostinil (FREEDOM-C) | 350 | II (21%), III (76%) | 16 weeks | 6MWD | No | Sequential combination |
| ERA or PDE-5 inhibitors or both + oral treprostinil (FREEDOM-C2) | 310 | II (26%), III (73%) | 16 weeks | 6MWD | No | Sequential combination |
| Epoprostenol + sildenafil (PACES) | 267 | II (25%), III (66%), IV (6%) | 16 weeks | 6MWD | Yes | Sequential combination |
| Epoprostenol + bosentan (BREATHE-2) | 33 | III (76%), IV (24%) | 16 weeks | Hemodynamic evaluation | No | Upfront combination |
| Epoprostenol + bosentan + sildenafil | 19 | III (42%), IV (58%) | Median exposure 39.2 months | 6MWD and PVR | Yes | Upfront combination |
Abbreviations: PVR, pulmonary vascular resistance; PAH, pulmonary arterial hypertension; WHO-FC, World Health Organization functional class; 6MWD, 6-minute walk distance.