Pulmonary Therapy (Jun 2024)
A PrOsPective Cohort Study on Interstitial Lung Disease-Associated Pulmonary Hypertension with a ParticulaR Focus on the Subset with Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension Features (POPLAR Study)
Abstract
Abstract Introduction The pathogenesis and clinical profiles of patients with pulmonary hypertension (PH) associated with interstitial lung disease (ILD-PH) are poorly understood. Whether and to what extent pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH)-specific therapy improves hemodynamic and outcome in ILD-PH are also unknown. Study Objective This study aims to clarify the characteristics, clinical course and response to PAH-specific therapy of ILD and/or PH by enrolling three unique subsets: PAH, ILD-PH, and ILD. Methods The proposed study is a retrospective and prospective, multi-centre, observational cohort study of patients treated at any of three university hospitals in the Hokkaido region of Japan who have any one of the following: PAH; ILD-PH with or without PAH features; or ILD without PH. We aim to enrol 250 patients in total. For the retrospective observation period, data obtained after 1 January 2010, will be analysed, and the prospective observation period will be 1 year. We will compare the clinical data of patients with ILD-PH with those of patients with PAH and those of patients with ILD without PH in the real-world clinical setting. In addition, within the cohort of patients with ILD-PH, we will explore the subset with “ILD-PH with PAH features” and compare the response to PAH-specific therapy with that of PAH. The primary outcome will be the change in pulmonary vascular resistance from first treatment to follow-up in patients with PAH and ILD-PH with PAH features (excluding ILD-PH without PAH feature and ILD-no-PH for the primary outcome). The exploratory outcomes will include analyses of PH-associated biomarkers, right ventricular function and patient-reported outcomes. Results This is a protocol article and the results will be presented after data collection is completed. Conclusion The POPLAR study will provide data that help better understand the pathophysiology of ILD-PH and improve the quality of life and outcome of patients with PH and/or ILD. Trial Registration Japan Registry of Clinical Trials: jRCT1010230018.
Keywords