Chronic Thromboembolic Pulmonary Hypertension (CTEPH)

Joanna Pepke‐Żaba(Vienna General Hospital), Marion Delcroix(Vienna General Hospital), Iréne Lang(Vienna General Hospital), Eckhard Mayer(Vienna General Hospital), Pavel Jansa(Vienna General Hospital), David Ambrož(Vienna General Hospital), Carmen Treacy(Vienna General Hospital), Andrea Maria D’Armini(Vienna General Hospital), Marco Morsolini(Vienna General Hospital), Repke J. Snijder(Vienna General Hospital), Paul Bresser(Vienna General Hospital), Adam Torbicki(Vienna General Hospital), Bent Bruun Kristensen(Vienna General Hospital), Jerzy Lewczuk(Vienna General Hospital), Iveta Šimková(Vienna General Hospital), Joan Albert Barberà(Vienna General Hospital), Marc de Perrot(Vienna General Hospital), Marius M. Hoeper(Vienna General Hospital), Seán Gaine(University College Dublin), Rudolf Speich(Vienna General Hospital), Miguel Ángel Gómez‐Sánchez(Universidad Complutense de Madrid), Gábor Kovács(Vienna General Hospital), A. Hamid(Université Paris-Sud), Xavier Jaïs(Université Paris-Sud), Gérald Simonneau(Université Paris-Sud)
Circulation
October 4, 2011
Cited by 1,043Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension (CTEPH) is often a sequel of venous thromboembolism with fatal natural history; however, many cases can be cured by pulmonary endarterectomy. The clinical characteristics and current management of patients enrolled in an international CTEPH registry was investigated. METHODS AND RESULTS: The international registry included 679 newly diagnosed (≤6 months) consecutive patients with CTEPH, from February 2007 until January 2009. Diagnosis was confirmed by right heart catheterization, ventilation-perfusion lung scintigraphy, computerized tomography, and/or pulmonary angiography. At diagnosis, a median of 14.1 months had passed since first symptoms; 427 patients (62.9%) were considered operable, 247 (36.4%) nonoperable, and 5 (0.7%) had no operability data; 386 patients (56.8%, ranging from 12.0%- 60.9% across countries) underwent surgery. Operable patients did not differ from nonoperable patients relative to symptoms, New York Heart Association class, and hemodynamics. A history of acute pulmonary embolism was reported for 74.8% of patients (77.5% operable, 70.0% nonoperable). Associated conditions included thrombophilic disorder in 31.9% (37.1% operable, 23.5% nonoperable) and splenectomy in 3.4% of patients (1.9% operable, 5.7% nonoperable). At the time of CTEPH diagnosis, 37.7% of patients initiated at least 1 pulmonary arterial hypertension-targeted therapy (28.3% operable, 53.8% nonoperable). Pulmonary endarterectomy was performed with a 4.7% documented mortality rate. CONCLUSIONS: Despite similarities in clinical presentation, operable and nonoperable CTEPH patients may have distinct associated medical conditions. Operability rates vary considerably across countries, and a substantial number of patients (operable and nonoperable) receive off-label pulmonary arterial hypertension-targeted treatments.


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