View clinical trials related to Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension.
Filter by:Pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) is characterized by a progressive increase in pulmonary vascular resistance leading to right ventricular failure and eventually to death. The therapeutic strategy has become complex and needs to perform recurring follow up evaluations including right heart catheterizations (RHC). Cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (cMRI) has the advantage to accurately assess right ventricular volumes and important prognostic predictors such as cardiac index, stroke volume and right ventricular ejection fraction. The main objective of EVITA is to assess the hemodynamic diagnosis performances at baseline and at follow up visits of cMRI in comparison with the results of the RHC (current guidelines) to detect an unfavorable hemodynamic status. The primary endpoint is sensitivity and specificity of cMRI for the diagnosis of an unfavorable status defined by the current RHC criteria (with 95% confidence interval). The secondary objectives are 1) to identify clinical and hemodynamic variables independently contributing to prognosis, 2) to describe complications due to cMRI and to RHC, 3) to compare acceptability and tolerability of cMRI over RHC for the patient, 4) to constitute biological collection of blood samples to determine diagnostic and prognostic PAH biomarkers, 5) To compare the measurements of indexed stroke volume performed by RHC and by cMRI, 6) To evaluate the prognostic value to predict an unfavourable hemodynamic status of cMRI variables (including indexed stroke volume) after taking into account NYHA functional class, 6-minute walk test distance and BNP or NT-proBNP after 4 months of PAH treatment and 7) To evaluate the prognostic value to predict the first occurrence of morbimortality events of cMRI variables (including indexed stroke volume) after taking into account NYHA functional class, 6-minute walk test distance and BNP or NT-proBNP after 4 months of PAH treatment. PAH patients will be recruited in centers of the French network of severe pulmonary hypertension in a prospective cohort study. 180 subjects will be enrolled in the study: that size will give the study 90% power to find significant at the 5%-level. If the primary endpoint were achieved, since first, strategies and procedures planed in this project are consistent with those currently used in routine and second, inclusion criteria are not limited to a sub-population of PAH patients, positive results could allow to broadly extend our findings. Therefore, it will be possible to decrease the number of RHC, an invasive and cumbersome procedure without altering the prognosis. Moreover, all clinical procedures would be performed in outpatient clinics and thereby would reduce the cost to assess the severity of the disease. Current recommendations for evaluation of severity and follow-up being mainly derived from consensus of opinion of the experts, positive results will also improve the level evidence of severity assessment of PAH patients. According to secondary objectives we expect to better predict morbimortality events with cMRI compared to RHC.
The objective of this study is to assess the safety, performance and initial effectiveness of the TIVUS™ System when used for pulmonary artery denervation through subjective and objective change in clinical parameters and haemodynamic evaluation. This is a prospective, multi-center, non-randomized, open-label clinical trail. The study will be conducted in up to 4 centers and will recruit up to 15 patients diagnosed with PAH, functional class III who have stable PAH on a stable drug regimen of two pulmonary arterial hypertension specific medications.
This study is collecting post-marketing information on the safety and effectiveness of Ventavis under the routine clinical practice for patients with PAH
Pulmonary hypertension (PHT) patients often receive long term oral anticoagulants. If the indication is strong, in the secondary chronic thrombo-embolism pulmonary hypertension (CTE-PHT) prevention, the frequent prescription (50 to 90% of patients) contrasts with their low level of proof in the PHT. Last but not least, anticoagulants are known to be the principal cause of iatrogenic hospitalization (major bleeding). In this study, patients are all followed during one year, to determine the annual frequency of major bleedings (according to the International Society on Thrombosis and Haemostasis (ISTH) international definition). Each event notified is validated by an independent committee for clinical events.
Pulmonary hypertension is a rare and severe disease, affecting a young population. Survival is very poor and has been closely related to right ventricular dysfunction. Current prognostic equations rely mostly on right heart catheterization data. The identification of simple echocardiographic prognostic factor is urgently needed. It could help identifying with a non invasive method, high risk patients who could benefit from an intensive specific therapy. 3D right ventricular imaging is a new echocardiographic tool which provides RV volumic analysis, RV ejection fraction, overcoming the classical limits of 2D ultrasound. The aim of this study is to validate a new software for 3D analysis of the right ventricle and assess its prognostic role in pulmonary hypertension. To do so, the investigators will realize a prospective monocentric longitudinal cohort study, including 100 pulmonary hypertension patients. Echocardiographic data will be collected at baseline and after 6 months.
HYPID-2 study is an extension of HYPID study (NCT01443598) : HYPID-2 is also an observational and prospective study of patients with interstitial lung disease and pre capillary hypertension diagnosed by right heart sided catheterization. It concerns only incident patients (i.e patients included within 6 months after PH diagnosis) whereas HYPID concerned prevalent and incident cases. The primary aim is the same than HYPID : identify prognostic factors
Activity-related dyspnoea appears to be the earliest and the most frequent complaint for which patients with PAH seek medical attention. This symptom progresses relentlessly with time leading invariably to avoidance of activity with consequent skeletal muscle deconditioning and an impoverished quality of life. Unfortunately, effective management of this disabling symptom awaits a better understanding of its underlying physiology. Our team has recently showed that PAH patients may exhibit reduced expiratory flows at low lung volumes at spirometry (namely instantaneous forced expiratory flows measured after 50% and 75% of the FVC has been exhaled [FEF50% and FEF75%] lower than predicted), despite a preserved forced expiratory volume in 1 second/forced vital capacity ratio (FEV1/FVC) . Several studies have shown that such a finding ("small airway disease") could be common in certain PAH cohorts, have either related it to incidental descriptions of airway wall thickening with lymphocytic infiltration in PAH or proposed several other speculative explanatory mechanisms, either biological or mechanical. Whatever its cause, reduced expiratory flows at low lung volumes imply that the operating tidal volume (VT) range becomes closer than normally to residual volume (RV) mostly through an increase in RV (elevated residual volume/total lung capacity ratio, RV/TLC). The reduced difference between forced and tidal expiratory flows promotes dynamic lung hyperinflation [i.e., a progressive increase in end-expiratory lung volume (EELV)] under conditions of increased ventilatory demand. Dynamic lung hyperinflation (DH) is well known to have serious sensory consequences, i.e., increase in dyspnoea intensity, as clearly shown in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and chronic heart failure. The aim of this study is to evaluate whether administration of inhaled BDs (β2-agonist and/or anticholinergic), as add-ons to vasodilators, would be beneficial to PAH patients by reducing and/or delaying the rate of onset of DH, thus ameliorating the exertional symptoms in patients with stable PAH undergoing high-intensity constant work-rate (CWR) cycle endurance test. This is a randomised double-blind placebo-controlled crossover study. Design: 5 visits; V1: screening, familiarization, incremental cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPET); V2: constant work-rate (CWR-CPET); V3, V4 and V5: CWR-CPET after intervention, in a random order: Placebo (P), Ipratropium Bromide (IB), Ipratropium Bromide + Salbutamol (IB+SALB).
The purpose of this study is to use non-invasive imaging to determine the metabolic phenotype of the right ventricle in patients with pulmonary arterial hypertension across a spectrum of disease severity.
To provide riociguat therapy to eligible patients with PAH originating from Bayer-sponsored trials with BAY63-2521/ Riociguat / Adempas® who are currently or recently treated in these trials until lack of patient benefit as assessed by investigator, or commercial availability and reimbursement.
Safety, tolerability, pharmacokinetics (PK), cardiac conduction and food effect study on single and multiple ascending doses of KAR5585 in healthy adults.