Publication Date:
2012-11-16
Description:
Abstract 3240 The role of pulmonary hypertension as a common and attributable cause of mortality in patients with sickle cell disease remains controversial. To assess this question and explore risk factors for death in patients with sickle cell disease we evaluated 632 patients in the Walk-PHASST pulmonary hypertension screening cohort, recruited from nine different study sites in the United States and one site in the United Kingdom. Methods: Patient characteristics and their associations with mortality were analyzed with Cox proportional hazards regression analysis. Based on data from three right heart catheterization screenings studies that have recently been published, we defined the presence of pulmonary hypertension for this analysis by a Doppler-echocardiographic measurement of the tricuspid regurgitant jet velocity (TRV) ≥ 3.0 m/s, which has a 67–75% positive predictive value for a mean pulmonary artery pressure ≥ 25 mm Hg by right heart catheterization. This therefore represents a very conservative threshold for a large population screening study. Among subjects with a measurable TRV (n=572), 64 (11.2%) had measurements of ≥ 3.0 m/sec. Among those with measurable NT-proBNP (n=582), 140 (24.1%) had measurements ≥160 pg/mL, a value associated with both pulmonary hypertension and mortality. A total of 39 (7.4%) had both high TRV (≥3.0 m/sec) and high NT-proBNP (≥160 pg/mL). Results: Over a median follow-up time of 29 months, we observed 22 deaths. 50% (N=11) of these patients had a TRV≥ 3.0 m/sec. At 24 months the cumulative survival was 83% for patients with TRV ≥ 3.0 m/sec and 98% for patients with TRV 〈 3.0 m/sec (p
Print ISSN:
0006-4971
Electronic ISSN:
1528-0020
Topics:
Biology
,
Medicine
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