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* For Best Viewing: Open in Slide Show Mode Click on icon or From the View menu, select the Slide Show option * To help you as you prepare a talk, we have included the relevant text from ITC in the notes pages of each slide © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2011 Ann Int Med. 155 (3): ITC2-1. in the clinic Pulmonary Hypertension © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2011 Ann Int Med. 155 (3): ITC2-1. What is pulmonary hypertension and what causes it? Pulmonary hypertension (PH) Mean pulmonary arterial pressure (PAP): >25 mm Hg Elevated PAP burdens normally thin-walled right ventricle Without treatment, right heart dysfunction = progressive symptoms, often eventually death PH classified into 5 categories, each with a different… Mechanism for the elevated PAP Natural history Approach to treatment © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2011 Ann Int Med. 155 (3): ITC2-1. What causes pulmonary hypertension? PH due to left heart disease (most common cause) Systolic or diastolic left heart dysfunction Mitral or aortic valve disorders PH due to chronic hypoxemic lung disease Obstructive lung disorders; interstitial lung disease Sleep-disordered breathing PH due to embolic disease Miscellaneous causes Pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) Heritable / genetic abnormalities; idiopathic Risk factors: collagen vascular diseases, HIV infection, liver disease, anorectic agent use © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2011 Ann Int Med. 155 (3): ITC2-1. Who should be screened? Patients with… Systemic sclerosis Family history of a heritable form of PAH Portal hypertension considered for organ transplant Increased perioperative mortality with elevated mean PAP Therapy may be needed prior to transplantation Annual screening recommended in this setting © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2011 Ann Int Med. 155 (3): ITC2-1. What are the symptoms? Progressive dyspnea (most common symptom) Fatigue Chest pain Presyncope / syncope Lower extremity edema Palpitations Hoarseness from Ortner syndrome (rare) © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2011 Ann Int Med. 155 (3): ITC2-1. What are the physical exam findings? Accentuated intensity of pulmonary second heart sound Tricuspid regurgitant murmur Pulmonary insufficiency murmur Right ventricular S3 or S4 Parasternal heave or subxiphoid thrust Jugular venous distension Peripheral edema Hepatomegaly Ascites © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2011 Ann Int Med. 155 (3): ITC2-1. What is the role of echocardiography patients with suspected PH? One of best tests to evaluate for possible PH May report an estimate of systolic PAP May provide information on cause of PH and symptoms ECHO evaluating dyspnea or cardiac murmur may find PH Indicators of more severe disease Right atrial or ventricular enlargement Hypertrophy; decreased right ventricular function Severe elevations in right ventricular pressure may cause leftward deviation of interventricular septalum Pericardial effusion © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2011 Ann Int Med. 155 (3): ITC2-1. What other tests should be ordered in the evaluation of PH? Autoantibody testing for collagen vascular disease Brain natriuretic peptide or N-terminal BNP Chest radiography; ECHO; EKG CBC; electrolytes / creatinine measurement HIV serologic testing Liver function testing Pulmonary function testing Oxyhemoglobin saturation at rest and with exertion Polysomnography Radionuclide ventilation-perfusion imaging Right heart catheterization Six-minute walking distance © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2011 Ann Int Med. 155 (3): ITC2-1. Which patients require cardiac catheterization? Right heart catheterization Required if PAH suspected (before advanced medical Rx) Also helps identify unrecognized left heart dysfunction and pulmonary venous hypertension Left heart catheterization Often done concurrently, particularly if risk for CAD No right heart catheterization needed… PH known to be due to left heart or chronic pulmonary disease AND and cath not needed to guide management Presence of PH itself doesn’t usually alter therapy © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2011 Ann Int Med. 155 (3): ITC2-1. How should right heart catheterization be done when PH is a consideration? Assess for possible left-to-right shunts Measure oxygen saturation in central veins, right atrium, right ventricle, pulmonary artery Increased oxyhemoglobin saturation suggests oxygenated blood being shunted to right-sided circulation Measure hemodynamics accurately At end of exhalation + level equipment at mid-thoracic line Unsure of wedge? Measure left ventricular end-diastolic pressure simultaneously Test pulmonary vasoreactivity in PAH © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2011 Ann Int Med. 155 (3): ITC2-1. What are the requirements for the diagnosis of PAH? Presence of PH Mean PAP > 25 mm Hg Absence of pulmonary venous hypertension Left atrial or “wedge” pressure < 15 mm Hg Elevated pulmonary vascular resistance > 3 Wood units Exclusion of significant chronic hypoxemic lung disease Exclusion of chronic thromboembolic disease © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2011 Ann Int Med. 155 (3): ITC2-1. When should a clinician consider consultation with a specialist in diagnosing pulmonary hypertension? Uncertainty regarding the diagnosis Multiple comorbid conditions that may complicate diagnosis or treatment High-risk features or NYHA functional class III or IV Refer to a specialized center for evaluation © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2011 Ann Int Med. 155 (3): ITC2-1. CLINICAL BOTTOM LINE: Diagnosis and Screening… Confirm elevated pulmonary pressures Evaluate for potential causes ECHO; chest X-ray Ventilation-perfusion scanning Pulmonary function and blood testing Assess disease severity Measure oxyhemoglobin saturation 6-minute walking distance Blood BNP Right heart catheterization Mandatory if therapy directed at PH itself (e.g., PAH) © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2011 Ann Int Med. 155 (3): ITC2-1. What is the approach to treatment of PH? Identify the cause Chronic cardiac or pulmonary disease Treat the underlying condition Oxygen therapy Maintain oxygen saturation ≥90% Right heart dysfunction Minimize fluid overload and dyspnea Use diuretics Restrict salt Monitor weight © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2011 Ann Int Med. 155 (3): ITC2-1. How should patients with PH due to left heart disease be treated? Systolic HF Use: ACE inhibitors; β-blockers; diuretics Possibly: cardiac resynchronization, implantable cardioverter defibrillator placement, digitalis HFpEF Control BP + heart rate with β-blockers, diuretics Left HFrEF Differentiate from PAH Don’t use prostacyclin analogues, endothelin antagonists PH secondary to left valvular heart disease Evaluation for correction of valvular disease © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2011 Ann Int Med. 155 (3): ITC2-1. How should patients with PH due to lung disease be treated? Optimize treatment of underlying cause Sleep apnea (minimize nocturnal desaturation) COPD Idiopathic lung disease Use supplemental oxygen to avoid hypoxia Enroll in pulmonary rehabilitation Don’t use PAH therapy in PH due to lung disease © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2011 Ann Int Med. 155 (3): ITC2-1. How should patients with chronic thromboembolic PH be treated? Prevention of recurrent clot / embolism (anticoagulation) Pulmonary thromboendarterectomy (PTE) Refer to center experienced in procedure and postop Improves symptoms in most patients Surgical mortality at experienced centers: <5% Use medical therapy directed at PH only when… PTE impossible due to distal location of disease within pulmonary vasculature Therapeutic bridge needed until PTE performed Patient decides not to have PTE © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2011 Ann Int Med. 155 (3): ITC2-1. What drugs are available for the treatment of PAH? Diuretics Supplemental oxygen Calcium-channel blockers (trial only if demonstrated vasoreactivity) Anticoagulants Digoxin Advanced therapies Endothelin Antagonists (for lower risk patients) Phosphodiesterase-5 Inhibitors (for lower risk patients) Prostacyclins (for higher risk patients) © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2011 Ann Int Med. 155 (3): ITC2-1. Is there a role for combination therapy in PAH? Sequential addition of advanced therapies: current model Initial therapy: based on illness severity + functional class If PAH worsens: add therapies until treatment goals met Approach shown to improve 6-min walking distance and delay clinical worsening Combination therapy Optimum and safest approaches not yet established Investigations ongoing © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2011 Ann Int Med. 155 (3): ITC2-1. What is the role of lung transplantation? Treats underlying pulmonary condition in patients with… Late-stage respiratory disease: severe PH + COPD or ILD PAH: consider transplant when progressive disease requires parenteral therapy Defer until deterioration occurs despite max medical Rx Double lung transplantation: preferred procedure for PAH Reduces right ventricular afterload: right heart often recovers PAH: 23% unadjusted 3-mo mortality after procedure Heart-lung transplantation For uncorrectable congenital heart lesions For concomitant primary cardiac failure © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2011 Ann Int Med. 155 (3): ITC2-1. What is the role of exercise? Exercise improves exercise capacity and QOL Important adjunct to medical therapy Avoids deconditioning from being sedentary PH isn’t a contraindication to judicious exercise Encourage patients to remain active within symptom limits Mild breathlessness is acceptable Avoid severe breathlessness, exertional dizziness, near syncope, or chest pain Isometric exercises discouraged due to exertional syncope © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2011 Ann Int Med. 155 (3): ITC2-1. CLINICAL BOTTOM LINE: Treatment… Right HF Use diuretics, salt restriction PH due to left heart or chronic hypoxemic lung disease Treat underlying disorders (not PH per se) Chronic thromboembolic PH Use anticoagulants + possible thromboendarterectomy PAH Perform right heart catheterization with vasodilator test Don’t treat empirically with calcium-channel blockers Advanced therapies: prostacyclins, endothelin-receptor antagonists, PDE5 inhibitors Evaluate need for supplemental oxygen Lung transplantation: in nonresponsive advanced disease © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2011 Ann Int Med. 155 (3): ITC2-1. What is the prognosis of PH? Negative prognostic sign in many conditions (HF, COPD) In particular, PAH prognosis Worse in presence of advanced NYHA/WHO functional class, shorter 6-min walking distance Worse with connective tissue disease Worse with portopulmonary hypertension Untreated PAH: median survival 2.8 years © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2011 Ann Int Med. 155 (3): ITC2-1. What should patients be taught about pulmonary hypertension? How PH is distinct from systemic hypertension How PH often connotes significant systemic disease Regardless of the cause Requires ongoing closely coordinated medical care Requires monitoring salt intake, fluid balance, weight That patients with PAH may need to… Self-administer medications Monitor themselves for AEs or progression of disease Know how other health issues might compromise PAH care Where to find information and peer support © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2011 Ann Int Med. 155 (3): ITC2-1. CLINICAL BOTTOM LINE: Prognosis… PH a negative prognostic sign in many conditions (HF, COPD) Treatment can delay complications Ongoing closely coordinated medical care is important Monitor salt intake, fluid balance, weight PH almost always connotes significant systemic disease © Copyright Annals of Internal Medicine, 2011 Ann Int Med. 155 (3): ITC2-1.