| Literature DB >> 29480092 |
Wen Li1, Chang-Ming Xiong1, Qing Gu1, Xiao-Tong Wang1, Xiao-Ling Cheng1, Li Huang1, Tao Yang1, Qin Luo1, Zhi-Hui Zhao1, Xin-Hai Ni1, Zhi-Hong Liu1, Jian-Guo He1.
Abstract
Pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) is a severe complication of hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia (HHT); however, little is known about its clinical characteristics and prognosis. Nine newly diagnosed HHT-PAH patients were prospectively recruited between October 2007 and January 2016 and were followed up every half-year. Eighteen idiopathic pulmonary arterial hypertension (IPAH) patients, matched with HHT-PAH patients on mean pulmonary arterial pressure, pulmonary capillary wedge pressure, pulmonary vascular resistance, cardiac index, and World Health Organization (WHO) functional class (FC), were recruited. The clinical characteristics of HHT-PAH patients were described and the prognosis of these two cohorts were compared. Of HHT-PAH patients, 55.56% were WHO FC III. Kaplan-Meier survival analysis showed one- and three-year survival rates of HHT-PAH patients were 77.8% and 53.3% respectively, which were worse than matched IPAH patients (log rank: P = 0.047). HHT-PAH patients had higher red cell distribution width (14.88 ± 2.93% versus 13.19 ± 0.83%, P = 0.031), larger right ventricular anteroposterior diameter (34.67 ± 6.67 mm versus 28.56 ± 6.35 mm, P = 0.029), and lower mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentration (317.38 ± 17.71 g/L versus 335.72 ± 14.68 g/L, P = 0.011) than matched IPAH patients. Multivariate Cox proportional hazards regression analyses showed baseline total bilirubin independently predicted the mortality of HHT-PAH after adjusting by age, cardiac index, mixed venous oxygen saturation, or serum uric acid. HHT-PAH patients may have a worse prognosis than matched IPAH patients. Baseline total bilirubin may be a promising predictor for the long-term prognosis in HHT-PAH patients.Entities:
Keywords: clinical characteristics; hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia; prognosis; pulmonary arterial hypertension
Year: 2018 PMID: 29480092 PMCID: PMC5888830 DOI: 10.1177/2045894018759918
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pulm Circ ISSN: 2045-8932 Impact factor: 3.017