| Literature DB >> 32661103 |
Yaniv Dotan1, Jeffrey Stewart2, Andrew Gangemi2, He Wang3, Amandeep Aneja3, Bhaidharbi Chakraborty3, Chandra Dass4, Huaqing Zhao5, Nathaniel Marchetti2, Gilbert D'Alonzo2, Francis C Cordova2, Gerard Criner2, Albert James Mamary2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Pulmonary hypertension (PH) causes increased morbidity and mortality in patients with interstitial lung diseases (ILD). Classification schemes, while well-characterised for the vasculopathy of idiopathic PH, have been applied, unchallenged, to ILD-related PH. We evaluated pulmonary arterial histopathology in explanted human lung tissue from patients who were transplanted for advanced fibrotic ILD.Entities:
Keywords: interstitial fibrosis; lung transplantation; primary pulmonary hypertension
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32661103 PMCID: PMC7359183 DOI: 10.1136/bmjresp-2019-000532
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open Respir Res ISSN: 2052-4439
Figure 1Study design. mPAP, mean pulmonary artery pressure; PH, pulmonary hypertension; RHC, right heart catheterisation; TUH, Temple University Hospital.
Heath and Edwards’s scheme for hypertensive pulmonary vascular disease with progressive structural changes10
| Grade | Pathology |
| 0 | Normal |
| 1 | Distal extension of muscle into distal arterioles and medial thickening of muscular arteries |
| 2 | Medial hypertrophy with cellular intimal proliferation in small muscular arteries |
| 3 | Progressive fibrous vascular occlusion, concentric intimal fibrosis |
| 4 | Progressive generalised arterial dilatation lesions, including plexiform lesions |
| 5 | Chronic dilatation with medial and intimal fibrosis, prominent plexiform lesions, angiomatoid lesions, pulmonary hemosiderosis |
| 6 | Necrotising arteritis |
Patient characteristics grouped by PH severity
| Non-PH (n=7) | Mild-moderate PH (n=13) | Severe PH (n=18) | All patients (n=38) | |
| Age (years) | 67±5 | 67±8 | 61±8 | 65±8 |
| Gender (M/F) | 6/1 | 8/5 | 12/6 | 26/12 |
| FEV1/FVC (%) | 85±6 | 77±14 | 76±16 | 78±14 |
| FEV1* | 54±15 | 55±17 | 54±21 | 54±18 |
| FVC* | 47±11 | 55±19 | 56±22 | 53±19 |
| TLC* | 48±12 | 50±16 | 58±16 | 53±15 |
| RV* | 41±16 | 47±29 | 59±20 | 51±23 |
| DLCO* | 27±14 | 24±11 | 21±9 | 22±10 |
| mPAP (mm Hg) | 17±3† | 26±2† | 49±12† | 35±16 |
| PVR (WU) | 2.76±1.4 | 3.37±1.14 | 9.13±6.09‡ | 5.9±5.1 |
*Per cent of predicted.
†Statistically significant between all groups comparisons.
‡Statistically significant between none and mild/moderate to severe PH groups.
DLCO, lung diffusion of carbon monoxide; FEV1, forced expiratory volume in the first second; FVC, forced vital capacity; mPAP, mean pulmonary artery pressure; PH, pulmonary hypertension; PVR, pulmonary vascular resistance; RV, residual volume; TLC, total lung capacity; WU, Wood units.
Figure 2H&E (×200), various grades of histological changes (A–F). (A) Muscular artery with medial hypertrophy (increased number of smooth muscle nuclei arranged in parallel around the lumen). (B) Muscularisation of arterioles (thick muscle layer in arterial wall composed of numerous smooth muscle cells with closely spaced nuclei). (C) Intimal proliferation and fibrosis in addition to medial hypertrophy. (D) Concentric intimal fibrosis resulting in circumferential luminal narrowing. (E, F) Plexiform lesions; concentric intimal fibrosis causing near luminal obliteration and multiple small vascular spaces and expansion and partial destruction of the arterial wall with extension of the lesion into the perivascular connective tissue.
Figure 3Pulmonary vasculopathy grades for all patients (n=38). Briefly, Grade 0—normal; Grade 1—medial thickening; Grade 2—medial hypertrophy; Grade 3—concentric intimal fibrosis; Grade 4—plexiform lesions (for full description, see Heath and Edwards scheme, table 1).
Figure 4Pulmonary vasculopathy grades by PH severity (none, mild-moderate and severe PH). Briefly, Grade 0—normal; Grade 1—medial thickening; Grade 2—medial hypertrophy; Grade 3—concentric intimal fibrosis; Grade 4—plexiform lesions (for full description, see Heath and Edwards scheme, table 1). PH, pulmonary hypertension.
Comparison of patients’ characteristics between patients with and without plexiform lesions
| Patients with plexiform lesions (n=8) | Patients without plexiform lesions (n=30) | |
| Age (years) | 65±7 | 63±11 |
| Gender (M/F) | 6/2 | 20/10 |
| Lung disease (IPF/non-IPF) | 2/6 | 13/17 |
| FEV1/FVC (%) | 78±15 | 81±13 |
| FEV1* | 55±18 | 53±22 |
| FVC* | 54±18 | 52±23 |
| TLC* | 53±17 | 56±12 |
| RV* | 50±24 | 59±21 |
| DLCO* | 21±9 | 28±14 |
| mPAP (mm Hg) | 33±12 | 43±25 |
| PVR (WU) | 5±3 | 9±10 |
| H&E vascular grade | 4 | 2±0.7† |
*Per cent of predicted.
†Statistically significant.
DLCO, lung diffusion of carbon monoxide; FEV1, forced expiratory volume in the first second; H&E, Heath and Edwards pulmonary vasculopathy grades; IPF, idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis; mPAP, mean pulmonary artery pressure; PVR, pulmonary vascular resistance; RV, residual volume; TLC, total lung capacity; WU, Wood units.