Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease Clinical Trial
Official title:
Inhaled Iloprost for Disproportionate Pulmonary Hypertension in Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease
Pulmonary hypertension is frequently present in COPD and it is generally limited to a mild
increase in mean pulmonary artery pressure. However some COPD patients are characterized by
higher levels of mPAP at rest, fulfilling the definition of moderate or severe PH
disproportionate PH .
In these patients the elevated pulmonary pressures adversely affect the prognosis.At the
present time the evidence for the the use of specific pulmonary vasodilators in the
management of these patients are scarce and cannot be recommended.the aim of this study is
to evaluate the medium term efficacy and safety of the inhaled prostacyclin stable analog,
iloprost in patients with COPD and moderate to severe pulmonary hypertension
While pulmonary hypertension is frequently present in COPD, particularly in the presence of
hypoxemia, it is generally limited to a mild increase in mean pulmonary artery pressure in
the face of a normal cardiac output.
Apart from this classical and widely observed profile of PH with modestly elevated mPAP,
some COPD patients are characterized by higher levels of mPAP at rest, fulfilling the
definition of moderate or severe PH . This kind of PH may be observed in patients presenting
with a severe obstructive disease, but sometimes contrasts with a mild or moderate
obstruction. In the latter case, the term disproportionate PH has been proposed, but it can
be extended to describe all COPD patients with moderate to- severe PH.
Therefore, it is possible that in some patients with COPD, pulmonary hypertension
contributes to the clinical picture because of right ventricular output limitation and is
responsible for the poor prognosis of these patients, which is similar to that in primary
pulmonary arterial hypertension.
The exact incidence of clinically significant pulmonary hypertension, defined as pulmonary
hypertension that contributes to symptomatology and prognosis, is difficult to estimate in
COPD. A prevalence of 5.8%- 13.5% in patients seems reasonable which would suggest an
incidence of 1-3/10,000, which is 100 times the incidence of idiopathic pulmonary arterial
hypertension.
These patients are characterized by marked effort dyspnea , profound hypoxemia, hypocapnia,
moderate airway obstruction and a very low DLCO.
PH in COPD was an independent prognostic factor. Indeed, patients with similar airflow
limitation had lower life expectancy when PH was resent. Patients with PH had a
significantly lower survival rate at 5 yrs compared with patients without PH (33 versus
66%). Pathologic studies that stemmed from long-term oxygen trials pointed to the fact that
pulmonary vascular remodeling in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) is more than
just medial hypertrophy from long-lasting hypoxic vasoconstriction. In these patients, all
vessel wall layers appear to be involved, with intimal changes actually being the most
prominent. Major remodeling of all pulmonary arterial vessel layers explains why pulmonary
hypertension in COPD is often not,or minimally, reversible by supplemental oxygen, acutely
or chronically. The pathobiology of pulmonary artery remodeling in advanced COPD remains
incompletely explored. There are data supporting an endothelium-derived
vasoconstrictor-dilator imbalance, mainly from a decreased endothelial nitric oxide
expression. Plasma levels of ET-1 are increased both in patients with severe COPD and there
is evidence that ETA and ETB receptor expression is increased in the pulmonary arteries of
patients with COPD.
The major unmet medical need is the absence of a simple drug therapy that relieves the
breathlessness or muscle fatigue, reduces pulmonary vascular resistance and the overloaded
right ventricles that severely limits exercise tolerance in COPD and affects survival.
The only validated therapeutic approach of the 'common' PH in COPD patients is long-term
oxygen therapy. A large variety of vasodilators has been tested in numerous studies both
after short- and medium-term administration. The early enthusiasm vanished subsequently for
several reasons: modesty of the vasodilator effect, inability for some drugs to sustain the
acute benefit, no specificity of the vasodilator effect with concomitant systemic
vasodilatation, deleterious effect on gas exchange due to a diminution of the
ventilation/perfusion ratio and no demonstration of a survival benefit. At the present time
vasodilators cannot be recommended in the management of COPD.
Treatments of PAH have shown a dramatic change in the past few years. Synthetic prostacyclin
(epoprostenol), prostacyclin analogues, endothelin-1 receptor antagonists and
phosphodiesterase-5 inhibitors are in use in group I PAH with improve clinical outcome.
Based on analogy to primary pulmonary hypertension, a specific interventions aiming at the
restoration of endothelial vasoconstrictor- dilator imbalance could be undertaken.
Selective pulmonary vasodilatation by inhalation of the vasorelaxant agent is an appealing
concept to circumvent some of the hazards inherent in systemic vasodilator therapy in COPD
patients with PH. Treatment of these patients with aerosolization of iloprost may reduce
pulmonary vascular resistance , increases cardiac output while conserving
ventilation-perfusion matching and and shunt preventing worsening of arterial hypoxia and
wasting of the small ventilatory reserve of these patients.
In order to resolve these uncertainties we suggest evaluating the effectiveness of an
inhaled iloprost in COPD patients with moderate to severe pulmonary hypertension. This
evaluation would include monitoring and measurement of all the relevant cardio-respiratory
variables as set out in detail below.
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Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Single Group Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Treatment
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