Risk stratification and medical therapy of pulmonary arterial hypertension

Nazzareno Galiè(University of Bologna), Richard N. Channick(Harvard University), Robert P. Frantz(Mayo Clinic in Arizona), Ekkehard Grünig(Heidelberg University), Zhi‐Cheng Jing(Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences & Peking Union Medical College), О. М. Моисеева(Federal Almazov North-West Medical Research Centre), Ioana R. Preston(Tufts University), Tomás Pulido(Universidad La Salle), Zeenat Safdar(Cornell University), Yuichi Tamura(International University of Health and Welfare), Vallerie V. McLaughlin(University of Michigan)
European Respiratory Journal
December 13, 2018
Cited by 834Open Access
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Abstract

Pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) remains a severe clinical condition despite the availability over the past 15 years of multiple drugs interfering with the endothelin, nitric oxide and prostacyclin pathways. The recent progress observed in medical therapy of PAH is not, therefore, related to the discovery of new pathways, but to the development of new strategies for combination therapy and on escalation of treatments based on systematic assessment of clinical response. The current treatment strategy is based on the severity of the newly diagnosed PAH patient as assessed by a multiparametric risk stratification approach. Clinical, exercise, right ventricular function and haemodynamic parameters are combined to define a low-, intermediate- or high-risk status according to the expected 1-year mortality. The current treatment algorithm provides the most appropriate initial strategy, including monotherapy, or double or triple combination therapy. Further treatment escalation is required in case low-risk status is not achieved in planned follow-up assessments. Lung transplantation may be required in most advanced cases on maximal medical therapy.


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