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Vallerie McLaughlin, MD

Pulmonary Hypertension Roundtable
Screening for PAH in Scleroderma: Identifying Hallmarks of the Disease and Optimal Treatment Strategies

Vallerie McLaughlin, MD, Associate Professor of Medicine, Rush Presbyterian-St. Luke’s Medical Center, Chicago, Illinois, conducted this roundtable discussion. The panel included James R. Seibold, MD, Professor and Director, UMDNJ Scleroderma Program. New Brunswick New Jersey; David B. Badesch, MD, Professor of Medicine and Clinical Director, Pulmonary Hypertension Center, University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Denver, Colorado; and Virginia Steen, MD, Professor of Medicine, Georgetown University Medical Center, Washington, DC.


James R. Seibold, MD

David B. Badesch, MD

Virginia Steen, MD

 

Dr McLaughlin: What do we think is the true inci-dence of pulmonary arterial hypertension in the scleroderma population?

Dr Steen: We first have to separate the different kinds of pulmonary hypertension that occur in scle-roderma. Patients with limited scleroderma, or the CREST syndrome, as it is referred to, get primarily what we call vasculopathy or an isolated pulmonary hypertension unrelated to interstitial fibrosis, and it can occur in the very serious deadly form in up to as many as 20% of patients. Other patients, and it’s anywhere from 10% to 30%, will have some evidence of either potential pulmonary hypertension or mild pulmonary hypertension as evidenced by abnormal findings on pulmonary function tests (PFTs) or echocardiograms. Another patient population, those with diffuse scleroderma, is more likely to have the interstitial fibrosis and they can have pulmonary hypertension related to that. And then there is the group of patients sort of in between, those who have a little bit of pulmonary fibrosis and a little bit of pulmonary hypertension, and depending on the nuances of their disease, one seems to predominate.

Dr Seibold: Scleroderma generally segregates into a rapidly evolving widespread form called diffuse scle-roderma. These patients have a fairly high risk of having an inflammatory pulmonary process that looks a lot like nonspecific interstitial pneumonitis and the early onset of interstitial fibrosis. These patients develop dyspnea and impaired exercise capacity that is a mixture of their established inter-stitial lung disease but is clinically exacerbated by the evolution of the pulmonary vascular lesion. At the other end of the spectrum, you have limited scleroderma patients who seem to be relatively spared, although not completely, from this whole dynamic of interstitial inflammation and fibrosis but who develop an isolated vasculopathy that really starts to become clinically relevant somewhere around the 10th year or so of disease. The educated guess here is that the pulmonary vascular or arterio-lar lesion is universal, and it can progress slowly and show up as pulmonary arterial hypertension alone at later stages of limited scleroderma, but it is a cofactor in the morbidity of patients with interstitial lung disease, including diffuse scleroderma.

Dr McLaughlin: David, do you have any pearls on how one might differentiate pulmonary fibrosis from pulmonary arterial hypertension, recognizing that in some patients they do occur simultaneously?

Dr Badesch: I would suggest looking for physical exam find-ings that suggest pulmonary hypertension or pulmonary fibrosis, and then using echocardiography to support or refine the diagnosis of pulmonary hypertension. A right-heart catheteri-zation can be done to confirm the presence of pulmonary hypertension. The diffusing capacity can fall in either pul-monary fibrosis or pulmonary hypertension, but if it falls in isolation, meaning that the lung volumes are normal, it may suggest the presence of pulmonary hypertension.

Dr McLaughlin: Would the pulmonary function test then be an appropriate screening tool to perform on an annual basis in the scleroderma population? Dr Badesch: I think it is very reasonable to follow the PFTs regularly. If you see an isolated fall in the diffusing capacity this should raise the possibility and lead to further evaluation, perhaps with an echocardiogram.

Dr Seibold: The pearls are that virtually all scleroderma patients who have pulmonary arterial hypertension have a dif-fusing capacity less than 55% of predicted. There are a couple of data sets that argue that when the percent of forced vital capacity (FVC) is compared with the percent of DLCO, if that ratio is elevated, it also enriches for the diagnosis of pulmonary arterial hypertension. One published series sug-gests a ratio of greater than 1.4. Our own data at our center suggest that that ratio might be 1.8.

Dr McLaughlin: Is there a population that should have echocardiography on a regular basis?

Dr Seibold: Yes. We might want to step back a step. Before I said that pulmonary arterial hypertension patients are typi-cally dyspneic and sometimes clinical dyspnea on exertion is missed in rheumatologic practice. Scleroderma patients have a chronic catabolic disease; they tend to have ambulation difficulties, they tend to become very sedentary for orthopedic and musculoskeletal and peripheral vascular reasons, complicating their scleroderma. So they don’t typically present com-plaining of dyspnea on exertion. And I think that rheumatolo-gists probably as a rule tend to back into this diagnosis through regular performance of pulmonary function testing. And it seems quite reasonable to recommend annual pul-monary function testing as a minimum interval, across the board for all scleroderma patients, probably more frequently, if you were following someone early with active inflammatory fibrotic disease. It also follows that if the best screening test for pulmonary arterial hypertension is a Doppler echocardio-gram, it is appropriate to obtain a baseline study in all patients with scleroderma, and that this test might also be repeated at some minimum interval. I don’t think that we have the trial data that exactly validate what the standard of clinical practice should be. One argument should be that if you are doing pulmonary function testing and you see changes in the diffusing capacity, that might trigger repeat of the Doppler echocardiogram. Another argument might be that repeat Doppler echocardiograms might be done at about the same interval as repeat pulmonary function tests.

Dr McLaughlin: What do you do in your practice, Jim? Dr Seibold: I look at the pulmonary function test as the out-come and turn to the Doppler echo as a measure of process. We get baseline echoes on as many patients as we can, but the decision to repeat is usually not triggered by time interval but by some index of suspicion, either clinical dyspnea or a change in the pulmonary function test. Dr McLaughlin: And Ginny, what do you do in your practice?

Dr Steen: I think that is exactly what I do. I probably do not repeat the PFT yearly in everyone if they have normal diffusing capacity or only mildly decreased DLCO. On the other hand, if they already have a diffusing capacity of 60 to 65% and they have had 10 years of disease, then following PFT’s on a yearly basis would be helpful at least to detect changes that would precipitate doing an echocardiogram. Many patients have echocardiograms that show mild pulmonary hypertension, which is in the range where the echo is difficult to interpret. Since we don’t know how many of those are real pulmonary hypertension versus false positives, I think it is important to keep that in mind and to proceed to catheterization when you find mild pulmonary hypertension rather than jumping ahead and making a diagnosis of this deadly disease. I know we all have had experiences where we have an echo that says that the pulmonary artery pressures are 40 and you get all worried and nervous and you do a cath and the results are totally normal.

Dr Badesch: My impression is that follow-up and screening for pulmonary hypertension in the rheumatology and internal medicine community are probably not as stringent as what we have heard from Jim and Ginny. My sense is that by the time patients get referred to us for the evaluation and treatment of pulmonary hypertension they often have relatively advanced disease.

Dr Seibold: I agree. I think there is a disconnect between the way the true scleroderma expert approaches this and the way the community rheumatologist/internist approaches this. Lacking a pharmacoeconomic or costs of care study to actual-ly validate it, I tend to come down in favor of a recommenda-tion of a minimum annual interval. I agree that there are sub-sets of patients who don’t change much over time. But if we are looking at a rate of transition from nonpulmonary hyper-tension to pulmonary hypertension of any level that may approach 5% of patients per year, that is a rather high inci-dence and I think that would justify a blanket recommenda-tion for annual pulmonary function testing.

Dr McLaughlin: And I think this is all more an issue now that we have effective therapies. Perhaps 10 or 15 years ago rheumatologists were not screening because frankly there was not much to do, but I think all of that has changed in the current era.

Dr Seibold: From a recent questionnaire that the Scleroderma Clinical Trials Consortium circulated to the broad community of United States and Canadian rheumatologists, it looked like echocar-diography was being performed in the assessment of dyspnea only about 25% of the time.

Dr McLaughlin: I’d like to talk about proceeding with a heart catheterization to further evaluate patients who have pulmonary hypertension on an echocardio-gram. One thing that is always important in looking at pul-monary hypertension patients is testing for vasoreactivity. And the scleroderma population, at least in my experience, is very rarely vasoreactive and so I am frequently asked by rheumatol-ogists “Why do we have to cath in the first place?” Dave, do you want to comment on that?

Dr Badesch: That’s a good question. Our experience mimics yours somewhat in that I think the likelihood of acute vasore-activity is lower in the population with scleroderma than in primary pulmonary hypertension. I still think that cardiac catheterization plays an important role in evaluation of these patients. I think that establishing their baseline hemodynamics, or ruling out the rare patient with an intercardiac shunt or some other lesion that is contributing to their development of pulmonary hypertension, is important. Furthermore, in patients who are failing despite the best available medical therapy, it may be important to repeat the cardiac catheterization to confirm that it is worsening of their pulmonary hyper-tension that is accounting for their symptoms. In that situa-tion, comparing the current hemodynamics to their baseline results can be very helpful. So, I still feel that right-heart catheterization plays a role in these patients, but it may not be so much in terms of evaluating vasoreactivity as in estab-lishing a baseline, ruling out other contributing factors, and then having that information available for future comparison.

Dr McLaughlin: The other important measurement on the right-heart cath, particularly in this patient population, is wedge pressure or left ventricular end-diastolic pressure. This patient population tends to be older than the primary pul-monary hypertension population, they tend to have more con-comitant illnesses, such as hypertension, and they may in fact have mild pulmonary hypertension on an echocardiogram that is really the result of systemic hypertension and left ventricu-lar hypertrophy and elevation of LVEDP causing their pul-monary hypertension. So it is also crucial in securing the cor-rect diagnosis and subsequently the correct treatment for these patients.

Dr Seibold: If I had to make a quick list about why one should be willing to do right- heart catheterization in scleroderma it would be 1) to confirm and to precisely quantify the diagno-sis; 2) to exclude the possibility of occult left ventricular diastolic failure; and 3) to exclude a component of concomi-tant cardiac problems. In around 20% of the caths that we do here, we frequently find that the aortic valvular lesions are a little bit worse than was suspected, or we find mitral valve pathology, or something along those lines that truly influences our approach to therapy. Fourth on the list would be that the echo is not a perfect test. It is relatively imprecise in those that have estimated pulmonary artery systolic pressures less than 40. And there is a relatively substantial group of patients, maybe as many as 20%, who lack a tricuspid jet and one cannot get a reliable estimate of pulmonary artery systolic pressure by Doppler. So, that would be the complete list. There is no question that rheumatologists are not requesting right-heart catheterizations by their consultants frequently enough.

Dr McLaughlin: Why don’t we move along to those therapies? David, you were the principal investigator of the first trial of Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension in the Scleroderma Spectrum of Diseases with Flolan. Do you want to summarize the very impressive results of that trial for the group?

Dr Badesch: As you know, prostacyclin was initially developed for patients with primary pulmonary hypertension and we saw an improvement in exercise capacity, cardiopulmonary hemo-dynamics, and survival in a 12-week study. We attempted to replicate that study in the scleroderma population and what we found was that prostacyclin did in fact improve the exercise capacity and cardiopulmonary hemodynamics similarly to the way that it had in the population with primary pulmonary hypertension. We did not see a survival benefit over the three-month course of that study, but the study was not powered to detect a survival benefit. I believe that the study of prostacyclin in patients with scleroderma-associated pulmonary hypertension has led to the inclusion of such patients in the subsequent trials of therapeutic agents for pulmonary hypertension.

Dr McLaughlin: It is important to point out what the prognosis is of scleroderma complicated by pulmonary hypertension in the absence of any treatment at all. It is a horrific survival curve.

Dr Badesch: In looking at several studies done prior to the use of prostacyclin in these patients, it appears as though the two-year survival rate was in the range of 40 to 55% or so, in patients who developed pulmonary hypertension as a compli-cation of scleroderma disease.

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