Nick H Kim1, Micah Fisher2, David Poch1, Carol Zhao3, Mehul Shah3, Sonja Bartolome4. 1. Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, USA. 2. Division of Pulmonary, Allergy, Critical Care and Sleep Medicine, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, USA. 3. Janssen Pharmaceuticals, Inc., South San Francisco, USA. 4. Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, USA.
Abstract
Limited data about the long-term prognosis and response to therapy in pulmonary arterial hypertension patients with World Health Organization functional class I/II symptoms are available. PubMed and Embase were searched for publications of observational registries and randomized, controlled trials in pulmonary arterial hypertension patients published between January 2001 and January 2018. Eligible registries enrolled pulmonary arterial hypertension patients ≥18 years, N > 30, and reported survival by functional class. Randomized, controlled trial inclusion criteria were pulmonary arterial hypertension patients ≥18 years, ≥6 months of treatment, and morbidity, mortality, or time to worsening as end points reported by functional class. The primary outcomes were survival for registries and clinical event rates for randomized, controlled trials. Separate random effects models were calculated for registries and randomized, controlled trials. Four randomized, controlled trials (n = 2482) and 10 registries (n = 6580) were included. Registries enrolled 9%-47% functional class I/II patients (the vast majority being functional class II) with various pulmonary arterial hypertension etiologies. Survival rates for functional class I/II patients at one, two, and three years were 93% (95% confidence interval (CI): 91%-95%), 86% (95% CI: 82%-89%), and 78% (95% CI: 73%-83%), respectively. The hazard ratio for the treatment effect in randomized, controlled trials overall was 0.61 (95% CI: 0.51-0.74) and 0.60 (95% CI: 0.44-0.82) for functional class I/II patients and 0.62 (95% CI: 0.49-0.78) for functional class III/IV. The calculated risk of death of 22% within three years for functional class I/II patients underlines the need for careful assessment and optimal treatment of patients with functional class I/II disease. The randomized, controlled trial analysis demonstrates that current medical therapies have a beneficial treatment effect in this population.
Limited data about the long-term prognosis and response to therapy in pulmonary arterial hypertensionpatients with World Health Organization functional class I/II symptoms are available. PubMed and Embase were searched for publications of observational registries and randomized, controlled trials in pulmonary arterial hypertensionpatients published between January 2001 and January 2018. Eligible registries enrolled pulmonary arterial hypertensionpatients ≥18 years, N > 30, and reported survival by functional class. Randomized, controlled trial inclusion criteria were pulmonary arterial hypertensionpatients ≥18 years, ≥6 months of treatment, and morbidity, mortality, or time to worsening as end points reported by functional class. The primary outcomes were survival for registries and clinical event rates for randomized, controlled trials. Separate random effects models were calculated for registries and randomized, controlled trials. Four randomized, controlled trials (n = 2482) and 10 registries (n = 6580) were included. Registries enrolled 9%-47% functional class I/II patients (the vast majority being functional class II) with various pulmonary arterial hypertension etiologies. Survival rates for functional class I/II patients at one, two, and three years were 93% (95% confidence interval (CI): 91%-95%), 86% (95% CI: 82%-89%), and 78% (95% CI: 73%-83%), respectively. The hazard ratio for the treatment effect in randomized, controlled trials overall was 0.61 (95% CI: 0.51-0.74) and 0.60 (95% CI: 0.44-0.82) for functional class I/II patients and 0.62 (95% CI: 0.49-0.78) for functional class III/IV. The calculated risk of death of 22% within three years for functional class I/II patients underlines the need for careful assessment and optimal treatment of patients with functional class I/II disease. The randomized, controlled trial analysis demonstrates that current medical therapies have a beneficial treatment effect in this population.
Pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) is a serious and progressive cardiopulmonary
disease that is characterized by remodeling of the pulmonary vasculature and
elevated pulmonary arterial pressure.[1-3] The consequences of PAH,
particularly for patients who do not receive timely and appropriate treatment,
include right ventricular failure, diminished functional status, and
death.[1,3-5] In recent years, a number of
medical therapies have been approved for the treatment of PAH, including endothelin
receptor antagonists, phosphodiesterase type 5 inhibitors, parenteral and
nonparenteral prostacyclins, a soluble guanylate cyclase stimulator, and a
non-prostanoid prostacyclin receptor agonist.[6-13] While these therapies improve
symptoms, exercise capacity, hemodynamics, and functional status, as well as reduce
hospitalizations and delay disease progression,[1,8] PAH remains a chronic,
progressive, and incurable disease.[14,15]Functional class (FC) is widely used as a clinical end point in studies of
cardiovascular diseases, including heart failure,[16] coronary artery disease,[17] and congenital heart disease.[18] In patients with PAH, FC is strongly associated with survival and is
considered to be an essential component of risk assessment and treatment
planning.[19,20] Patients in FC I or FC II generally have lower one- and
five-year mortality rates compared with those in FC III or FC IV. The Patient
Registry for the Characterization of Primary Pulmonary Hypertension reported a
median survival of almost six years for patients in FC I or FC II compared with 2.5
years and six months for those in FC III or FC IV, respectively, in an era when
medical treatments for PAH were limited.[21] Despite recent advances in medical therapy for patients with PAH, mortality
remains high and continues to be associated with FC. The Registry to Evaluate Early
and Long-term PAH Disease Management (REVEAL) reported five-year survival rates of
72.2%, 71.7%, 60.0%, and 43.8% for newly diagnosed patients in FC I, II, III, and
IV, respectively.[4] However, recent guidance on PAH treatment suggests that patient risk should
be assessed using a number of variables, not solely FC, and the goal of treatment
should be to attain and maintain a low-risk status.[22-24] Estimated one-year morality in
patients in the low-risk group is <5%.[22,23] Nevertheless, it is generally
accepted that FC I or II patients are at low risk for clinical worsening or
death.Meta-analysis provides a method to pool data from a number of studies, thus
increasing statistical power and providing more precise effect estimates. In this
study, we performed two separate meta-analyses of patients with PAH to characterize
long-term survival outcomes and treatment effects by FC. In the first meta-analysis,
we evaluated survival outcomes reported in observational registries with PAH
patients stratified by FC. In the second meta-analysis, we quantified the treatment
effects observed in randomized, controlled trials (RCTs) of approved PAH therapies
in FC I or II patients. To further understand the prognostic value of FC, we also
assessed treatment effects in patients in FC III or IV.
Materials and methods
The protocol for this meta-analysis was registered with the International Prospective
Register of Systematic Reviews (PROSPERO) and published (CRD42018092820).[25] The study adhered to the guidelines of the Preferred Reporting Items for
Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis.[26] Review and approval by an ethics committee were not required because
aggregate data were extracted from published studies.
Data sources and search strategy
We systematically searched the PubMed and Embase databases to identify relevant
English-language observational registry studies published between 1 January
2001, and 22 January 2018, that reported survival outcomes for PAH patients in
FC I through FC IV, and RCTs that reported treatment effects by FC. Terms for
the PubMed search for observational registries were “pulmonary arterial
hypertension” AND “registry”. search term used to identify RCTs in PubMed was
“pulmonary arterial hypertension”, with the search restricted to phase 3
trials.The Embase search strategy for registries used the terms “disease registry/exp”
OR “disease registry” AND “pulmonary hypertension/exp” OR “pulmonary
hypertension”. The search strategy for RCTs in Embase used RCT as a filter and
required that the phrase “pulmonary hypertension” appeared in the title of the
article and the word “placebo” was included in the title, abstract, or keywords.
The broader term of “pulmonary hypertension” was used in the Embase searches
because “pulmonary arterial hypertension” was not a search term in Embase. The
results of the systematic PubMed and Embase searches were supplemented by data
that were available in prescribing information and the annual reports of
registries.
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Studies eligible for inclusion in the meta-analysis of observational registries
were restricted to those that enrolled primarily adult (≥18 years) patients with
World Health Organization (WHO) Group 1 pulmonary hypertension (ie, PAH),[27] although registries that were devoted to specific PAH etiologies (e.g.
PAH associated with connective tissue disease (CTD)) were permitted. We included
only registries that reported overall survival by WHO or New York Health
Association FC and that had survival data for at least one year of follow-up.
Registries that mandated medical therapy and those that enrolled fewer than 30
patients were excluded.Studies included in the meta-analysis of RCTs were limited to those that were
randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, phase 3 studies that (a) enrolled
primarily adults (≥18 years) with PAH, (b) reported data by FC, (c) had an
active intervention arm with an average duration of exposure ≥6 months, (d) had
a placebo or other intervention comparison group, and (e) reported morbidity,
mortality, or time to clinical worsening by WHO or New York Health Association
FC as primary or secondary study end points.Studies that enrolled mostly adolescents or children were excluded to eliminate
variability in survival outcomes or treatment response that might be
attributable to age. Only peer-reviewed studies were included. Conference
abstracts and publications that did not contain the end points of interest were
excluded. The remaining inclusion criteria were intentionally kept as broad as
possible to reduce potential bias.
Study selection and data extraction
The full citation and source database were recorded for all studies that were
identified through the searches of the PubMed and Embase databases and other
sources. Two reviewers independently screened each title and abstract to
determine if the study was eligible for inclusion in the registry meta-analysis.
Full-text reviews were performed if information contained in the abstract and
title was not sufficient to determine if the publication met the inclusion
criteria. Cases of disagreement were resolved by discussion between the two
reviewers, with direction provided by the senior author, as needed. The reason
for exclusion was recorded for all studies that were considered ineligible for
inclusion. The RCTS were known—there have been only five long-term (i.e.
outcomes measured at ≥6 months) event-driven RCTs of PAH medications since
2013—and these were confirmed by the authors.Data from each eligible study were extracted from the publication into Excel
files and verified by an independent reviewer. Data discrepancies were resolved
by discussion and in consultation with the senior author and the statistician,
when necessary. Patient age, sex, PAH etiology, FC, six-minute walk distance
(6MWD), and survival information, as well as first author, study dates, and
publication year, were extracted for all registry studies. Data recorded for
each RCT included the name of the first author, year of publication, study
design, PAH therapy, control intervention, number of patients overall and per
treatment group, and baseline patient demographic and clinical characteristics
(age, sex, PAH etiology, FC, and 6MWD). Time to the occurrence of clinical
events (e.g. death, hospitalization, clinical worsening, or disease
progression), including the hazard ratio (HR) and associated confidence interval
(CI), was recorded for each RCT. The HR measures the reduction in risk of
occurrence of such an event between the treatment arm and the control arm. The
definition of clinical event could vary between the RCTs. Secondary end points,
such as 6MWD, FC, N-terminal pro hormone B-type natriuretic peptide levels,
B-type natriuretic peptide levels, pulmonary vascular resistance, cardiac index,
pulmonary artery pressure, and right atrial pressure were recorded for
observational registries and RCTs if they were reported.
Quality assessment and publication bias
Patient characteristics were reviewed across studies, and sensitivity analyses
removing studies with potential differences in baseline conditions were
performed. For RCTs, selections were limited to randomized phase 3 studies to
avoid bias. For registries, a sample size >30 was required to avoid bias
introduced by small sample sizes.
Statistical analysis
Overall survival rates with 95% CIs were calculated for patients in FC I or II
and for those in FC III or IV at study enrollment at years 1, 2, and 3 in each
observational registry. The overall observed event rates and CIs were calculated
with the Mantel–Haenszel method. Study-specific HRs with 95% CIs were calculated
to evaluate the treatment effect for patients in FC I or II and for those in FC
III or IV at study enrollment in each RCT. Statistical heterogeneity in survival
rates and treatment effects was examined with the I2 statistic,[28] with values >50%, indicating substantial heterogeneity.[29]Separate meta-analysis models were calculated for the observational registry
studies and for the RCTs. The I2 statistic of the
fixed effects model for the registry studies indicated substantial heterogeneity
(value >50%) among the studies (Supplemental Table 1). Therefore, a random
effects meta-analysis model using the inverse variance method of DerSimonian and Laird[30] which reduces the impact of heterogeneity was used to combine estimates
of survival from the observational registry studies stratified by FC I or II and
by FC III or IV. While the I2 statistic of the fixed
effects model for the RCTs was not >50%, it was sufficiently close to 50%
(Supplemental Table 2) that we elected to use a random effects model to
summarize the pooled treatment effect from the RCTs, stratified by FC I or II
and by FC III or IV. All statistical analyses were performed with Comprehensive
Meta-Analysis Version 3 Software (Biostat, Englewood, NJ).
Sensitivity analyses
Studies with potential outliers in baseline demographic or clinical
characteristics and outcome variables were identified. The meta-analyses for the
observational registries and RCTs were performed with and without these studies
to determine their impact on the overall estimates of survival and treatment
effect.An additional sensitivity analysis of newly diagnosed patients pooling data from
all newly diagnosed patients for which data were reported by FC was performed
using a random effects model.
Results
Search results for observational registries
A total of 495 studies were identified from the PubMed, Embase, and annual
reports of registry searches. Of these, 397 did not meet the inclusion criteria
for observational registries based on the abstract and title review (Fig. 1). A total of 98
full-text articles were reviewed. Following review of the full-text
publications, 10 studies were included in the registry meta-analysis.[4,31-40]
Fig. 1.
Flowchart of studies for the meta-analysis of observational
registries. FC, functional class; PAH, pulmonary arterial
hypertension; PH, pulmonary hypertension; WHO, World Health
Organization.
Flowchart of studies for the meta-analysis of observational
registries. FC, functional class; PAH, pulmonary arterial
hypertension; PH, pulmonary hypertension; WHO, World Health
Organization.
Characteristics of observational registries
A total of 6580 patients were enrolled in the 10 registry studies, with
enrollment periods ranging from 1995–2004[34] to 2013–2014[39] (Table 1).
Overall, the mean patient age was 50.4 years, ranging from 36[31,35] to 61 years.[36] One registry study included patients ≥14 years with an overall mean age
of 36 years.[35] The majority of registry patients (70%) were female, ranging from 51% in
the United Kingdom National Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension Registry[32] to 82% in the Connective Tissue Disease-Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension
registry that was also established in the United Kingdom.[36] Across the 10 registries, 46% of patients were diagnosed with idiopathic
PAH or familial PAH and 20% had PAH associated with CTD or other etiologies.
Table 1.
Baseline patient demographic and disease characteristics from the
observational registries.
Characteristics
Study
Enrollment period
Number of patients
Age (years), mean (SD)
Female (%)
IPAH + FPAH/CTD/ other (%)
FC I or II (%)
6MWD (m), mean
Condliffe et al.[36]
1/2001–6/2006
343
61 (12)
82
0/100/0
14
231
Farber et al.[4]
3/2006–12/2009
2749
52 (15)
79
50/26/24
42
359
HSCIC[39]
8/2013–3/2014
1116
58 (20)
66
100/0/0
9
NR
Humbert et al.[33,40]
10/2002–10/2003
674
50 (15)
65
43/15/42
25
329
Idrees et al.[35]
12/2009–11/2012
107
36 (8)
63
55/15/30
27
298
Jing et al.[31]
1/1999–10/2004
72
36 (12)
71
100/0/0
39
NR
Kane et al.[34]
1/1995–12/2004
484
52 (15)
75
56/24/20
29
329
Korsholm et al.[37]
1/2000–3/2012
134
50 (21)
58
33/23/44
26
328
McLaughlin et al.[38]
8/2005–7/2007
791
55 (16)
77
38/29/33
47
NR
Sithamparanathan et al.[32]
1/2001–12/2010
110
53 (12)
51
0/0/100
21
NR
Overall
–
6580
50.4
70
46/20/34
26
314.9
6MWD: six-minute walk distance; CTD: connective tissue disease;
FC: functional class; FPAH: familial pulmonary arterial
hypertension; HSCIC: Health and Social Care Information Center;
IPAH: idiopathic pulmonary arterial hypertension; SD: standard
deviation.
Baseline patient demographic and disease characteristics from the
observational registries.6MWD: six-minute walk distance; CTD: connective tissue disease;
FC: functional class; FPAH: familial pulmonary arterial
hypertension; HSCIC: Health and Social Care Information Center;
IPAH: idiopathic pulmonary arterial hypertension; SD: standard
deviation.
Meta-analysis of observational registries
The pooled analysis by FC showed a survival rate at year 1 of 93.3% (95% CI:
90.7–95.2) for WHO FC I or II patients compared with 81.2% (95% CI: 77.8–84.2)
for FC III or IV patients (Fig.
2a and Table
2). Survival rates at year 2 declined for both patient groups to
85.5% (95% CI: 81.5–88.7) and 66.7% (95% CI: 62.2–71.0) for those in FC I or II
and FC III or IV, respectively (Fig. 2b and Table 2). The pooled survival rate at year 3 for FC I or II patients
was 78.4% (95% CI: 73.1–82.9) compared with 54.8% (95% CI: 50.4–59.2) for those
in FC III or IV (Fig. 2c
and Table 2).
Fig. 2.
Forest plots of survival at one year (a), two years (b), and three
years (c) by WHO FC. CI, confidence interval; CTD, connective tissue
disease; FC, functional class; QuERI, Quality Enhancement Research
Initiative; REVEAL, Registry to Evaluate Early and Long-term PAH
Disease Management; SD, standard deviation; UK, United Kingdom; WHO,
World Health Organization.
Table 2.
Overall survival in observational registries.
FC I/II
FC III/IV
Survival at one year (95% CI)
93.3% (90.7%–95.2%)
81.2% (77.8%–84.2%)
Survival at two years (95% CI)
85.5% (81.5%–88.7%)
66.7% (62.2%–71.0%)
Survival at three years (95% CI)
78.4% (73.1%–82.9%)
54.8% (50.4%–59.2%)
CI: confidence interval; FC: functional class.
Forest plots of survival at one year (a), two years (b), and three
years (c) by WHO FC. CI, confidence interval; CTD, connective tissue
disease; FC, functional class; QuERI, Quality Enhancement Research
Initiative; REVEAL, Registry to Evaluate Early and Long-term PAH
Disease Management; SD, standard deviation; UK, United Kingdom; WHO,
World Health Organization.Overall survival in observational registries.CI: confidence interval; FC: functional class.
Search results for RCTs
Of the five long-term, event-driven phase 3 RCTs of PAH medications published
since 2013, four met the inclusion criteria for the RCT meta-analysis.[41-44] The fifth trial,
Endothelin Antagonist Trial in Mildly Symptomatic PAH Patients (EARLY)[45] limited enrollment to only patients in FC II and, therefore, was excluded
from the meta-analysis.
Characteristics of RCTs
The patient populations and definitions of clinical events are summarized in
Table 3, with
all studies reporting death as well as disease progression as primary end
points. Other clinical end points included the need for a lung transplant or
balloon atrial septostomy, changes in medical therapy, hospitalization for
worsening PAH, decreased 6MWD, and worsening FC.
Table 3.
Definitions of clinical events and patient populations and for the
randomized controlled trials.
Study
GRIPHON[41]
SERAPHIN[42]
AMBITION[43]
COMPASS-2[44]
Clinical event definitions for morbidity and
mortality
• Death • Hospitalization for worsening PAH • Need for
lung transplant or balloon atrial septostomy •
Initiation of parenteral prostanoid therapy •
Initiation of long-term oxygen
therapy • Disease progression indicated by:
o Decreased 6MWD and worsening of WHO FC o Need for
additional PAH medication
• Death • Need for lung transplant or balloon atrial
septostomy • Initiation of intravenous prostanoid
therapy • Disease progression indicated by decreased
6MWD and worsening of symptoms (based on change in WHO
FC or right heart failure) AND need for additional PAH
medication
• Death • Hospitalization for worsening PAH • Disease
progression indicated by decreased 6MWD and worsening
WHO FC • Unsatisfactory long-term clinical
response (based on worsening 6MWD and WHO FC after
≥6 months)
• Death • Hospitalization for worsening PAH • Need for
lung transplant or balloon atrial septostomy •
Initiation of intravenous prostanoid therapy • Disease
progression indicated by: o Increased symptoms on a
patient-reported instrument AND need for additional PAH
medication o Decreased 6MWD AND need for additional PAH
medication
Patient population
• Background therapy with ERA and/or PDE5i medications
permitted
• Background therapy with non-ERA medications
permitted
• Treatment-naive
• On a stable dose of sildenafil and no other PAH
medication in the prior three months
Italics indicate difference in definition of clinical event
compared to the other studies. 6MWD: six-minute walk distance;
AMBITION: Ambrisentan plus Tadalafil in Pulmonary Arterial
Hypertension; COMPASS-2: Effects of the Combination of Bosentan
and Sildenafil Versus Sildenafil Monotherapy on Pulmonary
Arterial Hypertension; ERA: endothelin receptor antagonist; FC:
functional class; GRIPHON: Prostacyclin (PGI2)
Receptor Agonist In Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension; PAH:
pulmonary arterial hypertension; PDE5i: phosphodiesterase type 5
inhibitor; SERAPHIN: Study with an Endothelin Receptor
Antagonist in Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension to Improve.
Definitions of clinical events and patient populations and for the
randomized controlled trials.Italics indicate difference in definition of clinical event
compared to the other studies. 6MWD: six-minute walk distance;
AMBITION: Ambrisentan plus Tadalafil in Pulmonary Arterial
Hypertension; COMPASS-2: Effects of the Combination of Bosentan
and Sildenafil Versus Sildenafil Monotherapy on Pulmonary
Arterial Hypertension; ERA: endothelin receptor antagonist; FC:
functional class; GRIPHON: Prostacyclin (PGI2)
Receptor Agonist In Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension; PAH:
pulmonary arterial hypertension; PDE5i: phosphodiesterase type 5
inhibitor; SERAPHIN: Study with an Endothelin Receptor
Antagonist in Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension to Improve.The demographic and clinical characteristics of patients enrolled in the four
RCTs are presented in Table
4. The studies were published between 2013 and 2017 with a total
enrollment of 2482 patients, including 1228 who received study medication and
1254 who were randomized to comparator arms. Overall, the majority of patients
were female. The mean age of patients was 50.2 and 51.0 years in the
intervention and comparison groups, respectively. PAH etiology was balanced
between the intervention and comparator arms. In the intervention and comparator
arms, 55% and 57%, respectively, had idiopathic PAH and 32% and 31% had
CTD-associated PAH. Patients in FC I or II comprised 43% and 42% of the
intervention and control groups, respectively, although one RCT[43] included 30% FC I or II patients and 70% FC III or IV. Mean 6MWD was
similar between the intervention and comparator groups.
Table 4.
Baseline demographic and disease characteristics for the randomized
controlled trials.
Intervention
Comparison
Study
Number of patients
Age (years), mean (SD)
Female (%)
IPAH/CTD/ other (%)
FC I or II/III or IV (%)
6MWD (m), mean
Number of patients
Age (years), mean (SD)
Female (%)
IPAH/CTD/ other (%)
FC I or II/III or IV (%)
6MWD (m), mean
AMBITION[43]
253
55 (14)
74
50/41/9
30/70
354
247
54 (15)
81
56/34/10
32/68
352
COMPASS-2[44]
159
53 (15)
79
62/27/11
45/55
363
175
55 (16)
73
65/26/9
39/61
358
GRIPHON[41]
574
48 (15)
80
54/29/17
48/52
359
582
48 (16)
80
58/29/13
45/55
348
SERAPHIN[42]
242
46 (15)
80
56/30/14
50/50
363
250
47 (17)
74
51/33/16
52/48
352
Overall
1,228
50.2
78
55/32/13
43/56
359
1254
51.0
77
57/31/12
42/58
351
6MWD: six-minute walk distance; AMBITION: Ambrisentan plus
Tadalafil in Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension; COMPASS-2: Effects
of the Combination of Bosentan and Sildenafil Versus Sildenafil
Monotherapy on Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension; CTD: connective
tissue disease; FC: functional class; GRIPHON: Prostacyclin
(PGI2) Receptor Agonist In Pulmonary Arterial
Hypertension; IPAH: idiopathic pulmonary arterial hypertension;
SD: standard deviation; SERAPHIN: Study with an Endothelin
Receptor Antagonist in Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension to
Improve Clinical Outcome.
Baseline demographic and disease characteristics for the randomized
controlled trials.6MWD: six-minute walk distance; AMBITION: Ambrisentan plus
Tadalafil in Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension; COMPASS-2: Effects
of the Combination of Bosentan and Sildenafil Versus Sildenafil
Monotherapy on Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension; CTD: connective
tissue disease; FC: functional class; GRIPHON: Prostacyclin
(PGI2) Receptor Agonist In Pulmonary Arterial
Hypertension; IPAH: idiopathic pulmonary arterial hypertension;
SD: standard deviation; SERAPHIN: Study with an Endothelin
Receptor Antagonist in Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension to
Improve Clinical Outcome.
Meta-analysis of RCTs
The pooled treatment effect for the entire population, regardless of FC, was
HR = 0.61 (95% CI: 0.51–0.74), indicating a 39% reduction in the risk of having
a morbidity or mortality event in patients being treated with the specific PAH
therapy. The overall observed morbidity/mortality clinical event rate in
patients with FC I or FC II disease in the treatment arms was 18.9% (95% CI:
11.5%–29.4%) compared to 30.3% (95% CI: 24.4%–37.0%) in the control arms. The
overall observed morbidity/mortality clinical event rate in patients with FC III
or FC IV disease in the treatment arms was 36.6% (95% CI: 27.3%–47.1%) compared
to 52.5% (95% CI: 41.2%–63.5%) in the control arms. The pooled treatment effect
for FC I or II patients was HR = 0.60 (95% CI: 0.44–0.82) (Fig. 3a) and, for FC III or IV patients,
it was HR = 0.62 (95% CI: 0.49–0.78) (Fig. 3b), indicating a 40% and a 38%
reduction in risk, respectively.
Fig. 3.
Forest plots of treatment effect in PAH RCTs in FC I/II patients (a)
and in FC III/IV patients (b). Treatment effect in PAH RCTs
excluding AMBITION in FC I/II patients (c) and in FC III/IV patients
(d). AMBITION, Ambrisentan plus Tadalafil in Pulmonary Arterial
Hypertension; CI, confidence interval; FC, functional class;
GRIPHON, Prostacyclin (PGI2) Receptor Agonist In
Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension; HR, hazard ratio; REVEAL, Registry
to Evaluate Early and Long-term PAH Disease Management; SERAPHIN,
Study with an Endothelin Receptor Antagonist in Pulmonary Arterial
Hypertension to Improve Clinical Outcome.
Forest plots of treatment effect in PAH RCTs in FC I/II patients (a)
and in FC III/IV patients (b). Treatment effect in PAH RCTs
excluding AMBITION in FC I/II patients (c) and in FC III/IV patients
(d). AMBITION, Ambrisentan plus Tadalafil in Pulmonary Arterial
Hypertension; CI, confidence interval; FC, functional class;
GRIPHON, Prostacyclin (PGI2) Receptor Agonist In
Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension; HR, hazard ratio; REVEAL, Registry
to Evaluate Early and Long-term PAH Disease Management; SERAPHIN,
Study with an Endothelin Receptor Antagonist in Pulmonary Arterial
Hypertension to Improve Clinical Outcome.Review of the clinical characteristics of patients enrolled in the four RCTs
revealed that the Ambrisentan plus Tadalafil in Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension
(AMBITION) trial enrolled substantially fewer patients in FC I (0%) or II (31%)[43] than the other three RCTs in which nearly 50% of the patients were FC I
or II.[41,42,44] In
addition, treatment with any PAH medication was an exclusion criterion in AMBITION,[43] while in the other three RCTs, 64%–100% of patients were being treated
with other PAH therapies at enrollment and throughout the studies.[41,42,44] Therefore,
a separate meta-analysis was performed in which the AMBITION trial was excluded.
The results were similar to the overall analysis. The HR was 0.64 for patients
in WHO FC I or II (95% CI: 0.50–0.82) (Fig. 3c) and 0.63 (95% CI: 0.46–0.86) for
those in FC III or IV (Fig.
3d).
Discussion
It has generally been assumed that the risk of disease progression or death is low in
patients with FC I or II PAH while those in FC III or IV are considered to be at
increased risk for poor outcomes. However, reliance on FC as the sole prognostic
factor has been challenged with current treatment guidelines recommending
multiparameter risk assessments, with the goal of treatment being to attain and/or
maintain a low-risk status.[22-24] Our results
support this recommendation by showing that patients in FC I or II can have a
substantial mortality risk.We performed two meta-analyses resulting in complementary findings. The meta-analysis
of observational registry studies was designed to examine survival rates by WHO FC.
The meta-analysis of RCTs was designed to quantify the effect of PAH therapy on
morbidity and mortality by WHO FC. The observational registry meta-analysis revealed
that, despite a lower risk of death compared with patients in FC III or IV, those
with FC I or II PAH were not “low risk”—as defined by PAH treatment
guidelines[22,23]—with a 7% one-year morality rate. This mortality risk increased
substantially to 22% at three years. Results from the meta-analysis of RCTs
indicated that PAH medications reduced the risk of morbidity and mortality by
35%–40% in patients with FC I or II PAH, which was comparable to the effect of
medical therapy for patients in FC III or IV. Together, these two analyses establish
that some patients with FC I or II PAH are at a higher risk of death or worsening of
PAH and medical therapy for PAH may offer considerable clinical benefit in such
patients.In selecting the registry studies, we aimed to gather a widely representative sample.
Indeed, the patient populations varied by geographic region, PAH etiology, date of
enrollment, and potentially other factors that were not captured. Heterogeneity
analysis indicated substantial heterogeneity among the studies; however, the impact
of this was reduced by using a random effects model. The CIs of the HRs for death
were not large, and we believe this analysis provides a reasonable estimate of
mortality over time in this patient population. The three-year mortality of 22% in
FC I/II patients determined by our meta-analysis is higher than the rate of 6% (FC
I) to 1% (FC II) in previously diagnosed FC I/II patients and similar to the rate of
22% (FC II) to 28% (FC I) in newly diagnosed FC I/II patients reported in the REVEAL registry,[4] which enrolled patients in a similar time window as the current study. Our
analysis included studies which enrolled newly and previously diagnosed patients;
however, only the REVEAL study reported survival data by FC in newly and in
previously diagnosed patients, precluding an analysis of the effect of diagnostic
status by FC. We performed an exploratory sensitivity analysis to estimate survival
in the newly diagnosed patients in our sample (Supplementary Table 3). Mortality
rates for FC I/II patients were 29% at three years, a rate comparable to the rate
observed in newly diagnosed patients in REVEAL. Greater survival rates in previously
diagnosed patients may be attributed, at least in part, to survivor bias.Differences in survival estimates overall between studies may also be affected by
geographic differences in standard of care and availability of therapies. Pooling
data using meta-analysis are particularly useful to better understand rare diseases
like PAH because it substantially increases the sample size thereby increasing the
reliability of the results. Even though it is a pooled estimate, the analysis of
registries is limited in that all registries completed enrollment prior to 2015 when
the first study using upfront combination therapy was published (AMBITION);[43] thus, improved outcomes resulting from more intensive therapeutic regimens
are not reflected in the survival estimates reported here. However, given the
perception that patients with FC I/II disease are “low risk”, it is not clear that
these patients would be treated with more intensive treatment regimens if they were
available. An additional limitation of the registry analysis is the lack of data for
patients in FC I. In the 10 registries, 31% of patients were FC I/II. In the five
registries reporting baseline disease characteristics separately for FC I patients,
only 6% were FC I. Thus, these survival estimates are more broadly applicable to
patients in FC II.Our analysis of RCTs was limited in that the definition of a clinical event was not
the same in each study (Table
3); however, there was a high degree of similarity across studies. There
was also a risk of publication bias in the analysis, because studies with positive
results are more likely to be published. Finally, the pooled data were not adjusted
or stratified by patient factors other than FC, such as age, sex, comorbid health
conditions, whether patients were newly or previously diagnosed, or background PAH
therapy. It is likely that these demographic and clinical characteristics also play
a role in patient response to PAH treatment. This analysis does not provide
information on which therapeutic regimens are most effective, rather it suggests
that all regimens reported in the RCTs substantially reduced the risk of a morbidity
or mortality event in patients with FC I/II symptoms. Analyzing the relationship
between specific regimens and survival in the registry studies is beyond the scope
of this analysis.In summary, this report describes the first comprehensive analysis of the long-term
clinical outcomes of PAH patients in FC I or II assessing both observational
real-world registries and RCTs. Our meta-analysis of survival stratified by FC
establishes that the risk of death for patients with FC I or II PAH is considerable.
The observed considerable mortality rate in FC I or II patients and a favorable
response to medical therapies support the current treatment guidelines that even FC
I or II patients require close surveillance and optimization of PAH therapy.Click here for additional data file.Supplemental material, sj-pdf-1-pul-10.1177_2045894020935291 for Long-term
outcomes in pulmonary arterial hypertension by functional class: a meta-analysis
of randomized controlled trials and observational registries by Nick H. Kim,
Micah Fisher, David Poch, Carol Zhao, Mehul Shah and Sonja Bartolome in
Pulmonary Circulation
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