Despite recommendations on early referral for lung transplantation in cases of pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH), there is a lack of in-depth understanding of this current landscape; in this analysis, clinical parameter data were used to compare outcomes between patients who were and were not referred for lung transplantation.
Despite knowledge that patients who have pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) could greatly benefit from lung transplantation—as well as that early referral for this transplant may confer a survival advantage—new research shows unacceptably low and late referrals for the procedure for these patients.1
Using data from the Pulmonary Hypertension Association Registry, experts examined outcomes between those who were and were not referred for lung transplant by drilling down to the clinical parameters that potentially differentiated each. They published their findings in a recent issue of The Journal of Heart and Lung Transplantation,1 noting that these patients often face health equity–related challenges that other pretransplantation populations do not, including access and perioperative risk. This is despite guidance on transplant candidate selection and advocacy for early referral, as well as best practice suggestions for PAH-related lung transplants.2-4
The analysis included 1671 patients, accounting for 4607 person-years of follow-up. Of these, 199 (12%) patients were referred for transplant, and 1472 (88%) patients were not referred.
Overall, follow-up was similar between the 2 groups (P = .82), with a median (IQR) of 837 (427-1476) days seen among those not referred compared with 810 (473-1475) days seen among those who were referred. Among the 12% referred for transplant, 50% had not undergone the procedure by the time of the study, 30% had undergone transplant, and the remaining died prior to the procedure.
The ever-referred and never-referred patients had these demographics in common: private insurance coverage (56% and 53%, respectively), ever married (79% and 80%), employed (39% each), and non-Hispanic ethnicity (85% each).
Patients referred for transplant were more likely to meet the following criteria:
Despite recommendations on early referral for lung transplantation in cases of pulmonary arterial hypertension, there is a lack of in-depth understanding of this current landscape, explain the authors of the present study. | Image Credit: Pixel-Shot-stock.adobe.com
These patients also demonstrated higher disease functional class and higher European Society of Cardiology/European Respiratory Society baseline risk scores (P < .001); higher heart rate, transpulmonary gradient, and pulmonary vascular resistance (P < .008); and lower systolic blood pressure, cardiac output, cardiac index, and stroke volume index (P < .02).
Lower rates of referral were seen in patients who self-identified as Native American vs the highest rates seen in patients who self-identified as Black or Asian (P = .010); in the Midwest region of the US compared with the Northeast, South, and West regions (P = .024); and in patients with HIV-associated or toxin-associated PAH vs those who had pulmonary veno-occlusive disease– and connective tissue disease–related PAH (P = .004). Just 21% of patients with WHO FC IV disease and 18% considered to have high-risk disease were referred for transplant
No differences were seen in mental health–related quality of life (HRQOL) between the patient groups, but patients referred for transplant did demonstrate worse generic-physical HRQOL (P < .001). Further, adjusting for age older than 60 and excluding patients with a body mass index above 35 kg/m2 or below 16 kg/m2 did not change the authors findings.
Overall, the authors saw a 42% greater risk of death (HR, 1.42; 95% CI, 1.02-1.99) in patients referred vs not referred for transplant, which remained significant even after adjusting for age, gender, race, and PAH-specific therapy.
“It should also be noted that, there are many factors which are challenging to evaluate in a registry, which also warrant referral,” the authors wrote. “As such, it is concerning that rates of referral were low for our cohort since we did not capture all the indications for referral.”
There are many potential reasons behind the low transplant referral rates they saw, they added. These could include the many effective PAH therapies available to patients, low rates of post–lung transplant survival, misconceptions on transplant benefits, and clinician views on early transplant or unlikely candidacy for the procedure. Also, patients may have contraindications to or not want to undergo a transplant.
“Future studies could assess provider perceptions on referral for transplantation to better understand why [and] should assess patient perceptions on early referral for transplantation,” the authors concluded, “to understand if there are any downsides to early referral from the patient.”
References
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