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Risk assessment in systemic lupus erythematosus-associated pulmonary arterial hypertension: CSTAR-PAH cohort study

Authors :
Qian Wang
Junyan Qian
Mengtao Li
Xiao Zhang
Wei Wei
Xiaoxia Zuo
Ping Zhu
Shuang Ye
Wei Zhang
Yi Zheng
Wufang Qi
Yang Li
Zhuoli Zhang
Feng Ding
Jieruo Gu
Yi Liu
Can Huang
Jiuliang Zhao
Yongtai Liu
Zhuang Tian
Yanhong Wang
Miaojia Zhang
Xiaofeng Zeng
Source :
Therapeutic advances in chronic disease. 13
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Objective: This study evaluated the prognostic value of the multivariable risk assessment for systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE)-associated pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH). Methods: A multicenter prospective cohort of SLE-associated PAH (CSTAR-PAH cohort) diagnosed based on right heart catheterization (RHC) was established. Baseline and follow-up records were collected. Three methods of risk assessment, including (1) the number of low-risk criteria, based on World Health Organization functional class (WHO FC), 6-min walking distance (6MWD), right atrial pressure (RAP), and cardiac index (CI); (2) the three-strata stratification based on the average risk score of four variables (WHO FC, 6MWD, RAP, and CI); and (3) the four-strata stratification based on COMPARE 2.0 model were applied. A risk-assessment method using three noninvasive low-risk criteria was applied at the first follow-up visit. Survival curves between patients with different risk groups were compared by Kaplan–Meier’s estimation and log-rank test. Results: Three-hundred and ten patients were enrolled from 14 PAH centers. All methods of stratification at baseline and first follow-up significantly discriminated long-term survival. Survival rates were also significantly different based on the noninvasive risk assessment in first follow-up visit. Survival deteriorated with the escalation of risk from baseline to first follow-up. Patients with baseline serositis had a higher rate of risk improvement in their follow-up. Conclusion: The risk assessment has a significant prognostic value at both the baseline and first follow-up assessment of SLE-associated PAH. A noninvasive risk assessment can also be useful when RHC is not available during follow-up. Baseline serositis may be a predictor of good treatment response in patients with SLE-associated PAH.

Subjects

Subjects :
Medicine (miscellaneous)

Details

ISSN :
20406223
Volume :
13
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Therapeutic advances in chronic disease
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....15c4fc0beafcf6d513b3089b3e0b94a3