401. Treatment pattern and clinical outcomes in portopulmonary hypertension: A database study in Japan.
- Author
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Atsukawa M, Takano M, and Omura J
- Abstract
Background and Aim: Portopulmonary hypertension (PoPH) is a complication associated with portal hypertension. Since the epidemiological study in Japan was limited, this study aimed to investigate the characteristics, treatment patterns, and prognosis of PoPH patients in real-world data., Methods: The characteristics and treatment patterns of PoPH ( n = 386) and portal hypertension without pulmonary arterial hypertension (portal hypertension w/o PAH) ( n = 96 463) were analyzed based on the Medical Data Vision (MDV) dataset from April 2008 to September 2020. Survival-time analyses of emergency hospitalization and mortality were also conducted between matched pair cohorts of PoPH ( n = 210) and portal hypertension w/o PAH ( n = 840)., Results: Among 386 PoPH patients, the Child-Pugh classification of PoPH group comprised patients with Class A (59 [15.3%]), B (109 [28.2%]), and C (42 [10.9%]), and missing (176 [45.6%]). Regarding the feature of PoPH group, the proportion of primary biliary cholangitis (PBC) (13.7%) and splenomegaly (9.8%) was higher compared with portal hypertension w/o PAH group. The survival time of all-cause hospitalization in PoPH group was shorter than portal hypertension w/o PAH group in matched pair cohort ( P < 0.001 by log-rank test). Of PoPH patients, the frequency of PAH-specific medicine usage within 90 days was monotherapy of 79 patients (20.5%), combination therapy of 64 patients (16.6%), and PAH-specific medicine usage of 243 patients (63.0%)., Conclusion: This was the first study demonstrating that high proportion of PBC and splenomegaly and a greater risk of hospitalization were observed in PoPH patients based on the analysis using administrative claim database., (© 2022 Janssen Pharmaceutical K.K. and The Authors. JGH Open published by Journal of Gastroenterology and Hepatology Foundation and John Wiley & Sons Australia, Ltd.)
- Published
- 2022
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