| Literature DB >> 33343879 |
Joseph B Tella1, Thomas J Kulik1,2, Julia E McSweeney3, Lynn A Sleeper1,2, Minmin Lu1, Mary P Mullen1,2.
Abstract
For pediatric pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) patients treated with parenteral prostanoids, response predictors, and the dose-effect relationship are ill defined. We determined the following: (1) which pulmonary vascular hemodynamic variable, after initiating prostanoids, best correlates with a significant clinical response; (2) the time interval after treatment when if no pulmonary hemodynamic improvement has occurred, none is ever likely to; and (3) the relationship between the prostanoid dose and its hemodynamic effects. This is a retrospective cohort study of 31 pediatric patients with Group 1 PAH treated with parenteral prostanoids. We found the following: (1) A fall in mean pulmonary arterial pressure (mPAP) of ≥25% predicted freedom from adverse clinical events with 80.7% accuracy and was also associated with improved functional class. (2) Thirty-three percent of patients who avoided an adverse clinical event demonstrated a ≥25% reduction in mPAP after 1 year of treatment, and 65% by 2 years. (3) Lower mPAP was seldom seen with doses of epoprostenol >60 ng/kg/min (100 ng/kg/min for treprostinil). Cardiac index was positively correlated with the dose of epoprostenol but not treprostinil; cardiac index >4 l/min/m2 was seen at modest as well as high doses. We conclude that a ≥25% fall in mPAP on prostanoids indicates a positive clinical response which, if validated in other studies, may be useful for patient management or clinical trials. Some patients take more than 2 years for this change. Exceptionally high doses were generally not more effective than lower, although we could not determine whether lower doses would have been as effective.Entities:
Keywords: cardiac output; prognosis; prostacyclin
Year: 2020 PMID: 33343879 PMCID: PMC7727065 DOI: 10.1177/2045894020944858
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pulm Circ ISSN: 2045-8932 Impact factor: 3.017