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Pulmonary Hypertension: What you need to know William Leeds, DO, FCCP Pulmonary & Sleep Associates Veritas Clinical Specialties Topeka, KS

Pulmonary Hypertension: What you need to know

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Pulmonary Hypertension: What you need to know. William Leeds, DO, FCCP Pulmonary & Sleep Associates Veritas Clinical Specialties Topeka, KS. Definition Right heart catheterization showing Sustained elevation of mean pulmonary artery pressure > 25 mmHg at rest. Secondary RHC parameters - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Pulmonary Hypertension:   What you need to know

Pulmonary Hypertension: What you need to know

William Leeds, DO, FCCP

Pulmonary & Sleep Associates

Veritas Clinical Specialties

Topeka, KS

Page 2: Pulmonary Hypertension:   What you need to know

What is Pulmonary Hypertension?

• Definition– Right heart

catheterization showing

• Sustained elevation of mean pulmonary artery pressure > 25 mmHg at rest

• Secondary RHC parameters– MPCWP < 15 mmHg– PVR > 3 Woods

Units

Page 3: Pulmonary Hypertension:   What you need to know

WHO Classifications

• Group I: Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension (estimated 15 cases per 1 million adults)– Idiopathic (primary)– Familial– Drug- and toxin-induced– Associated with connective tissue disease, HIV,

portal hypertension– Associated with significant venous or capillary

involvement– Persistent pulmonary hypertension of the

newborn

Page 4: Pulmonary Hypertension:   What you need to know

WHO Classifications, cont.

• Group II: Pulmonary Hypertension Owing to Left Heart Disease

• Group III: Pulmonary Hypertension Owing to Lung Diseases or Hypoxemia

• Group IV: Chronic Thromboembolic Pulmonary Hypertension

• Group V: Pulmonary Hypertension with

Unclear Multifactorial Mechanisms

Page 5: Pulmonary Hypertension:   What you need to know

Class Description

IPatients with PH but without resulting limitation of physical activity. Ordinary physical activity does not cause undue dyspnea, chest pain, or near syncope.

II

Patients with PH resulting in slight limitation of physical activity. They are comfortable at rest. Ordinary physical activity causes undue dyspnea or fatigue, chest pain, or near syncope.

III

Patients with PH resulting in marked limitation of physical activity. They are comfortable at rest. Less than ordinary activity causes undue dyspnea or fatigue, chest pain, or near syncope.

IV

Patients with PH with inability to carry out any physical activity without symptoms. These patients manifest signs of right-heart failure. Dyspnea and/or fatigue may even be present at rest. Discomfort is increased by any physical activity.

WHO Functional Classes of PAH

Page 6: Pulmonary Hypertension:   What you need to know

Pathogenesis of PAH: Proliferative Vasculopathy

Triggers (Initiation Factors)• Inflammation• Autoimmunity• Infection• Hemodynamic shear stress• Hypoxia• Drugs/chemicals/toxins

Genetic Predisposition• BMPR-2 and ALK-1 genes• Kv channels• Oxygen-sensing mechanisms• 5-HHT

Activation Pathogenic Vascular Mediators• Endothelial dysfunction

– Vasoactive mediators– Growth factors

Vascular Wall Remodeling• Proliferation• Vasoconstriction• In-situ thrombosis

Adapted from Gaine S. JAMA. 2000;284:3160-3168.Slide courtesy of Roxanna Sulica, MD.

Page 7: Pulmonary Hypertension:   What you need to know

Diagnosis of PAH

• Often made late in the disease– Median duration

between symptom onset and diagnosis is 27 months

• Late diagnosis due to– Under-recognition– Nonspecific

symptoms– Confusion with other

conditions– iPAH is diagnosis of

exclusion

Page 8: Pulmonary Hypertension:   What you need to know

Signs and symptoms of PAH

• No early symptoms• Progressive DOE,

fatigue, palpitations, chest pains, cough, hoarseness, syncope

• Symptoms of RHF– Ascites– Edema

• Must screen high-risk populations– Family history of

iPAH– Connective tissue

disease– Pulmonary embolism– Congenital heart

disease

Page 9: Pulmonary Hypertension:   What you need to know

Prognosis of iPAh is poor with supportive care only

Median survival 2.8 years

0

20

40

60

80

100

0 0.5 1 1.5 2 2.5 3 3.5 4 4.5 5

Years of follow up

Per

cent

age

surv

ivin

g

Page 10: Pulmonary Hypertension:   What you need to know

PAH/ssc progresses even more rapidly

0

20

40

60

80

100

10 11 12 13

Years from diagnosis of pulmonary hypertension

Per

cent

sur

viva

l

PAH

Lung involvement without PAH

No lung involvement

9876543210

Page 11: Pulmonary Hypertension:   What you need to know

Diagnostic workup (CC: SOB)

• CXR• Complete PFT• Initial labs (CBC,

CMP, BNP)• Physical exam• Med hx/symptom

review• Echocardiogram

• If echo shows PAH– VQ scan/CT angio– Labs (ANA, RF, HIV,

ANCA, anti-Scl 70, ESR, CRP)

– Polysomnogram– 6MWT– RHC

Page 12: Pulmonary Hypertension:   What you need to know

Right heart catheterization

• PA pressure

• PCW pressure

• Cardiac output

• PA saturation

• Pulmonary vascular resistance

• Vasodilator challenge

• Exercise challenge

Page 13: Pulmonary Hypertension:   What you need to know

Treatment options

• Treat the underlying/contributing condition

• Oxygen if needed– Check 6MWT and nocturnal oximetry

• Oral medications

• Inhaled medications

• IV medications

• Surgical interventions

Page 14: Pulmonary Hypertension:   What you need to know

Targets for PAH therapy

Page 15: Pulmonary Hypertension:   What you need to know

Oral medication options for PAH

• Warfarin (iPAH)• Calcium channel blockers (amlodipine)

– Blocks entry of calcium into heart and muscle cells

– Improves ability of heart to pump blood– Relaxes smooth muscle in walls of heart and

smooth muscles– Only a small number of PAH patients respond– Side effects: nausea, h/a, rash, edema,

dizziness, fatigue

Page 16: Pulmonary Hypertension:   What you need to know

Oral medication options, cont.

• PDE-5 inhibitors– Blocks the action of phosphodiesterase– Dilates pulmonary vasculature– Side effects: vision problems, h/a

• Endothelin receptor antagonists– Blocks vasoconstrictive effects of

endothelin-1– Dilates pulmonary vasculature– Side effects: liver toxicity and anemia

(requires routine monitoring), edema

Page 17: Pulmonary Hypertension:   What you need to know

Inhaled medication options

• Inhaled iloprost (Ventavis)– Dilates systemic and pulmonary vessels– Inhaled multiple times daily– Side effects: cough, h/a, throat pain

• Inhaled treprostinil (Tyvaso)– Dilates systemic and pulmonary vessels– Inhibits platelet aggregation– Inhaled multiple times daily– Side effects: cough, throat irritation, h/a

Page 18: Pulmonary Hypertension:   What you need to know

IV medication options

• IV epoprostenol (Flolan)– Directly dilates peripheral vessels– Inhibits platelet aggregation– Must be initiated in hospital– Cannot be stopped abruptly– Side effects: h/a, nausea, jaw pain,

flushing, hypotension

Page 19: Pulmonary Hypertension:   What you need to know

Surgical options

• Atrial septostomy

• Heart-lung transplant

Page 20: Pulmonary Hypertension:   What you need to know

Treatment options summarized

Page 21: Pulmonary Hypertension:   What you need to know

Case Studies

• GL

• BB

• KS

Page 22: Pulmonary Hypertension:   What you need to know

Case Study GL

• Presented to pulmonary service in September 2006 at age 53

• Chief complaint was progressive SOB with exertion

• PMH: scleroderma dx at age 39, unspecified arrhythmia, GERD, depression, allergies, arthritis, and migraine h/a

• PSH: tonsillectomy

Page 23: Pulmonary Hypertension:   What you need to know

GL, continued

• Current medications: inderal, nexium, miacalcin, percocet, tramadol, mucinex, alavert, vitamin C

• Allergies: imitrex (unknown reaction)

• FH: COPD in father, lung ca and COPD in brothers

• SH: 30 pk-yrs of cigarette use; quit in 2000

Page 24: Pulmonary Hypertension:   What you need to know

GL Diagnostics

• CXR 8/20/03: “mild decrease of lung volumes and mild increased prominence of interstitial markings in both lung bases since 1992 Some degree of interstitial lung disease cannot be ruled out”

• PFT 9/19/06: FVC 2.19 L (70%), FEV1 1.79 L (70%), FEV1/FVC 82, IC 1.67 L (77%), RV 1.15 L (64%), TLC 3.44 L (70%), Diffusion 36%, DL/VA 2.53 L (55%)

Page 25: Pulmonary Hypertension:   What you need to know

GL Diagnostics, cont.

• Echocardiogram 8/21/06: EF 60-65%, abnormal LV diastolic filling/impaired relaxation, mild AR, mild MR, mild TR, mild PR, RVSP 68 mmHg

• RHC 11/01/06: mean RA 10, mean RV 7, PAP 70/29 (mean 44), MPCWP 13, CO ~4L; adenosine trial showed decreased MPAP 38

• 6MWT: 390 m, O2 sat nadir 92% on room air

Page 26: Pulmonary Hypertension:   What you need to know

GL Treatment Course

• November 2006: bosentan, sildenafil, and warfarin initiated

• August 2007 CT: mild bibasilar interstitial fibrosis

• October 2007: oxygen added– 6MWT 183 m; O2 sat nadir 83% on room air

• November 2007: transtracheal oxygen initiated

• February 2008: Ventavis added

Page 27: Pulmonary Hypertension:   What you need to know

GL Treatment Course, cont.

• August 2008: referred to KUMC– RHC: normal EF, RA 8, MPAP 47, MPCWP 12-

14, CO 5.4– 6MWT 428 m; O2 sat nadir 92% on 3L– CT chest: progression of bibasilar fibrosis– IV prostacyclin held due to stability of RHC

findings

• October 2008: unable to proceed with lung transplant due to financial issues

• May 2009: 6MWT 292 m; O2 sat nadir 86% on 4L

Page 28: Pulmonary Hypertension:   What you need to know

GL Treatment Course, cont.

• June 2009:– RHC: MPAP 66, MPCWP 22, CO 4.6– Significant GERD symptoms

• February 2010: transitioned from Ventavis to Tyvaso

• July 2010: symptoms acutely worsened– Hospitalized for hemoptysis– Hospice discussed

Page 29: Pulmonary Hypertension:   What you need to know

GL Treatment Course, cont.

• November 2010: last contact

– Echo: EF 65%, RV severely dilated with moderate systolic dysfunction, RA severely dilated, moderate TR, PAP 84

– PFT: FVC 1.83 (60%), FEV1 1.59 (65%), FEV1/FVC 87, TLC 62%, Diffusion 11%

Deceased February 2011

Page 30: Pulmonary Hypertension:   What you need to know

GL Discussion

• Questions/comments?

Page 31: Pulmonary Hypertension:   What you need to know

Case Study BB

• Presented to pulmonary service in July 2002 at age 45

• Chief complaint was progressive dyspnea on exertion for last 6 months

• PMH: poss. CVA or seizure age 19 w/no further recurrence

• PSH: none• FH: CAD in father,

mother, brother (brother had heart surgery at age 46)

• SH: no tobacco or illicit drug use

Page 32: Pulmonary Hypertension:   What you need to know

Case Study BB, cont.

• Current medications: Combivent inhaler and previous use of prednisone without significant improvement in symptoms

• Allergies: NKDA

Page 33: Pulmonary Hypertension:   What you need to know

BB Diagnostics

• PFT 7/10/02: FVC 3.78 L (108%), FEV1 2.64 L (91%), TLC 6.18 l (114%), VC 3.78 L (108%), RV 2.4 L (128%), Diffusion 94%

• ABG on room air 7/19/02: pH 7.395, pCO2 36.8, PO2 57.1, BE -2.0, HCO3 21.9, O2 sat 88%

• LHC 7/19/02: RA 1, RV 0, MPAP 50, MPCWP 11, CO 4.21 L

• O2 sat 88% with ambulation

Page 34: Pulmonary Hypertension:   What you need to know

BB Treatment Course

• July 2002: Placed on Oxygen, digoxin and bosentan

• Referred to Mayo Clinic, Rochester MN– Diagnosed with Primary Pulmonary Htn

• September 2002: initiated on warfarin• RHC 12/02: RA 7, MPAP 43, MPCWP 15,

CO 4.73; Flolan trial showed MPAP 46, MPCWP 10, CO 7.43– Amlodipine added

Page 35: Pulmonary Hypertension:   What you need to know

BB Treatment Course, cont.

• Echo 9/8/03: EF 63%, moderate RV enlargement, moderately decreased RVSF, RVSP 77

• Echo 11/04: RVSP 74, moderate RV enlargement, mild TR

• Echo 02/06: severe RV enlargement, RVSP 81

• February 2006: Sildenafil added• Care turned over to Mayo Clinic physicians• Last contact May 2006

Page 36: Pulmonary Hypertension:   What you need to know

BB Discussion

• Questions/comments?

Page 37: Pulmonary Hypertension:   What you need to know

Case Study KS

• Presented to pulmonary service August 2011 at age 46

• Chief complaint was increased dyspnea and LE edema x 2 months

• PMH: DVT/PE 1996, HTN, DM, hypothyroid, obesity and allergies

• PSH: none• FH: father died age

48 of AMI; HTN, DM• SH: works at a

bank, denies cigarette and illicit drug use

Page 38: Pulmonary Hypertension:   What you need to know

Case Study KS, cont.

• Current medications: amlodipine, vit E, levothyroxine, MVI, losartan/hctz, ASA, furosemide, fish oil, metformin, Ca/Vit D, omeprazole, warfarin, potassium

• Drug allergies: NKDA

Page 39: Pulmonary Hypertension:   What you need to know

KS Diagnostics

• Labs 7/12/11: BNP 430, Hgb 11.1, Hct 34.6, BMP WNL, HIV neg.

• CT 7/22/11: no pulmonary emboli/no acute process

• Cardiac stress test 7/27/11: LVEF 57%, dilated RV, normal EKG

• Bilateral LE doppler 8/3/11: no DVT

• VQ lung scan 8/3/11: high probability for PE in lateral segment of RLL

Page 40: Pulmonary Hypertension:   What you need to know

KS Diagnostics, cont.

• Echo 7/27/11: normal LVF, abnormal septal motion likely r/t right-sided volume overload, trace MR, RA and RV significantly enlarged, mod TR, RVSP 107

• PSG 8/4/11: AHI 106, REM AHI 109, baseline O2 sat 84%, O2 sat nadir 53%

Page 41: Pulmonary Hypertension:   What you need to know

KS Treatment Course

• August 2011: warfarin, nasal CPAP w/O2, and weight loss initiated; CV meds adjusted

• October 2011: hospitalized for dizziness secondary to abnormal uterine bleeding (Hgb 6.2)– Consideration given to IVC filter

• 098

Page 42: Pulmonary Hypertension:   What you need to know

Case Study CZ

• First presented to pulmonary service February 2010 at age 66

• Chief complaint was dyspnea, cough and sputum production

• PMH: a-fib, chronic bronchitis, HTN, hypothyroid

• PSH: constrictive pericarditis surgery

• FH: CAD in parents• SH: 20 pk-yrs of

cigarette use, no illicit drug use

Page 43: Pulmonary Hypertension:   What you need to know

Case Study CZ, cont.

• Current medications: Toprol, warfarin, vit D, calcium, ASA, furosemide, levothyroxine, albuterol, Benicar, omeprazole, simvastatin

• Allergies: cefdinir, penicillin, codeine, propoxyphene

Page 44: Pulmonary Hypertension:   What you need to know

CZ Diagnostics

• PFT 2/12/10: FVC 1.48 L (58%), FEV1 1.14 L (59%), FEV1/FVC 77, TLC 5.03 L (110%), VC 2.53 L (98%), RV 2.5 L, Diffusion 115%

• Echo 9/8/10: LV hypertrophy, EF 75%, moderate RV enlargement with reduced RVSF, mod-severely dilated RA, mild TR, RVSP 45-50

• RHC 9/8/10: MPCWP 31, MPAP 43, CO 2.7, post-nitric oxide infusion CO 2.7