The Journal of pediatricsMulticenter Study
undefined Dec 2024
To describe the safety and effectiveness of treating pediatric patients who have pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) with selexipag in a real-world, multicenter cohort, given that data supporting its use in pediatric PAH are sparse.
We report a multicenter, retrospective, cohort study of children with PAH treated with selexipag. Demographic and clinical variables were extracted from the medical records. Clinical parameters were analyzed at 3 timepoints: before selexipag, 3-12 months after selexipag, and >12 months follow-up.
Eighty-seven patients were included, 32 received selexipag as add-on to background therapy, and 55 transitioned from another prostanoid. The median starting and final doses were 4.7 and 28.5 μg/kg/dose twice daily, respectively. Add-on patients demonstrated improved indexed pulmonary to systemic vascular resistance ratio after selexipag initiation (PVRi/SVRi, 0.62v0.53; P = .034) with a lower average mean pulmonary artery pressure (46 vs 39 mm Hg; P = NS), and oxygen consumption (maximal oxygen consumption during cardiopulmonary exercise testing [VO max] 27.8 mL/kg/min vs 30.9 mL/kg/min; P = NS). Transition patients demonstrated stable mean pulmonary artery pressure (47 mm Hg vs 45 mm Hg; P = NS) and a lower mean indexed pulmonary vascular resistance (10.9 Wood units∗m vs 8.2 Wood units∗m; P = NS) but late functional worsening in some with VO max decreased at follow-up (26.0 mL/kg/min vs 19.5 mL/kg/min). Side effects were noted in 40% of the cohort, but prompted discontinuation in only 2%.
In a large, multicenter cohort, the oral prostacyclin agonist selexipag demonstrates favorable tolerability and effectiveness. Add-on patients demonstrated early hemodynamic improvement. Transition patients demonstrated early stability with risk of late functional worsening, highlighting the importance of ongoing monitoring.
Declaration of Competing Interest The authors report no conflicts of interest.
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