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Pharmacological therapy for patients with chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension

Marius M. Hoeper
European Respiratory Review 2015 24: 272-282; DOI: 10.1183/16000617.00001015
Marius M. Hoeper
Dept of Respiratory Medicine, Hannover Medical School and German Centre for Lung Research (DZL), Hannover, Germany
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  • For correspondence: Hoeper.Marius@mh-hannover.de
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Abstract

Chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension (CTEPH) is a rare but life-threatening disease resulting from unresolved thromboembolic obstructions. Pulmonary endarterectomy (PEA) surgery is the gold-standard treatment as it is potentially curative; however, not all patients are deemed operable and up to one-third have persistent or recurrent CTEPH after the procedure. Pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) and CTEPH have similar clinical presentations and histopathological features, so agents shown to be effective in PAH have often been prescribed to patients with CTEPH in the absence of proven therapies. However, clinical evidence for this strategy is not compelling. A number of small uncontrolled trials have investigated endothelin receptor antagonists, prostacyclin analogues and phosphodiesterase type 5 inhibitors in CTEPH with mixed results, and a phase III study of the endothelin receptor antagonist bosentan met only one of its two co-primary end-points. Recently, however, the soluble guanylate cyclase stimulator, riociguat, was approved in the USA and Europe for the treatment of inoperable or persistent/recurrent CTEPH following positive results from the phase III CHEST study (Chronic Thromboembolic Pulmonary Hypertension Soluble Guanylate Cyclase–Stimulator Trial). This article reviews the current evidence for the use of pharmacological therapies in CTEPH.

Abstract

A review of pharmacological treatment of inoperable or persistent/recurrent CTEPH and the future standard of care http://ow.ly/KMUQV

Introduction

Chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension (CTEPH) is a rare but potentially fatal disease. Unresolved thromboembolic obstructions can cause the formation of scar tissue, which, in turn, can partially or completely block the pulmonary arteries. Blood flow is redistributed and high intravascular pressures can result in vascular remodelling and hypertension [1]. CTEPH is associated with significant morbidity and mortality, and with no intervention, prognosis is poor [2, 3]. In one study involving 76 patients, those with haemodynamic signs of right heart failure survived an average of 1.7 years after catheterisation. Patients without right heart failure survived an average of 4.3 years. In patients with mean pulmonary artery pressure >50 mmHg, 2-year survival was 20% [2].

All patients with CTEPH should receive life-long therapy with anticoagulants, mostly vitamin K antagonists. This is thought to prevent in situ pulmonary artery thrombosis and recurrent venous thromboembolism [4]; however, anticoagulation therapy has not been investigated as a treatment for CTEPH in randomised controlled trials (RCTs). Oxygen therapy and diuretics can also be given, yet there are no data on how they affect survival [5].

Pulmonary endarterectomy (PEA) to remove thromboembolic material has become the gold-standard treatment option for patients with CTEPH as it is potentially curative, is associated with a reduced mortality rate, and leads to sustained improvements in pulmonary haemodynamics and exercise capacity (reviewed by Jenkins [6] in this issue of the European Respiratory Review). Analysis of an international CTEPH registry found that the mortality rate post-PEA was 5% up to 1 year after surgery [7].

However, not all patients with CTEPH are suitable for PEA. For some, the blockage is not accessible by surgery; others may have comorbidities that make the operation a high risk, and a proportion of patients opt not to have the procedure. Furthermore, although PEA can cure CTEPH in some patients, up to 35% may have persistent/recurrent CTEPH following surgery. For these patients, there is a strong rationale for the consideration of targeted therapies, and current guidelines support this [8].

More recently, balloon pulmonary angioplasty (BPA) has emerged as an alternative intervention for patients ineligible for PEA. BPA was first described in 2001 [9], and several subsequent studies have shown that BPA can lead to haemodynamic improvements that are comparable to those typically seen following PEA [10–13]. However, current guidelines state that BPA requires further evaluation before it can be recommended for patients with CTEPH, due to concerns over potential complications such as vessel rupture and reperfusion lung injury, and a lack of data showing long-term outcomes [14].

Rationale for targeted medical therapy in CTEPH

Idiopathic pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) is a chronic condition resulting from a sustained elevated pulmonary artery pressure in the absence of a family history or known risk factors [15]. As summarised in a review by Berger et al. [16], there are many similarities in the vascular changes and haemodynamics observed in CTEPH and idiopathic PAH. Moreover, examination of the small pulmonary arteries in biopsies from patients with CTEPH found changes comparable to those observed in samples from patients with PAH, indicating that the two conditions could not be distinguished by histopathological findings alone [17]. These findings suggested that PAH and CTEPH may share common pathophysiological pathways [18].

Plasma levels of the vasoconstrictor endothelin (ET)-1 correlate with haemodynamics and clinical disease severity in both PAH and CTEPH. Patients with PAH have raised levels of ET-1, which plays a role in the pathobiology of the disorder, and ET-1 receptor antagonists have shown beneficial clinical effects in patients with PAH [19]. Likewise, two clinical studies showed that ET-1 levels were higher in patients with CTEPH compared with controls [20, 21].

NO is a key regulator of vasodilation in the lung. NO binds to soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC) [22, 23], which catalyses the synthesis of the vasoactive mediator cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP), which, via cGMP-dependent protein kinase and myosin light chain phosphatase, causes the dephosphorylation of contractile protein myosin in the vascular smooth muscle, resulting in relaxation of the vascular wall [24]. In pulmonary hypertension, endothelial dysfunction leads to impaired NO synthesis and insufficient stimulation of the NO–sGC–cGMP pathway [23]. Furthermore, reduced endogenous NO levels have been found in patients with PAH and CTEPH [23]. The sGC stimulator riociguat has shown beneficial effects in both PAH and CTEPH indications [25, 26].

The phosphodiesterase (PDE) superfamily of enzymes inactivates and degrades cGMP. PDE-5 is expressed abundantly in the vascular smooth muscle of the pulmonary vasculature and is also upregulated in PAH [27]. PDE-5 inhibitors have shown efficacy in patients with PAH [28, 29].

Prostacyclin is a potent pulmonary vasodilator synthesised in the pulmonary endothelium that has anti-thrombotic, anti-proliferative, anti-mitogenic and immunomodulatory properties [30, 31]. Prostacyclin binding to the IP receptor triggers synthesis of cyclic adenosine monophosphate (cAMP) via adenylate cyclase. cAMP causes dephosphorylation of myosin via protein kinase A and myosin light chain phosphatase [32]. Prostacyclin synthase and prostacyclin metabolites are reduced in the pulmonary vasculature and blood serum of patients with PAH [33]. Prostanoids are synthetic analogues of prostacyclin recommended for the treatment of patients with PAH [34]. In some historical cases, they have also been used off-label to treat patients with CTEPH [35].

As well as pathological parallels between PAH and CTEPH, clinical presentation can also be similar. The most common presenting symptoms in patients with CTEPH include dyspnoea, oedema, fatigue and chest pain [36]. The most common presenting symptom in patients with PAH is persistent dyspnoea when exercising, while chest pain, fatigue, weakness, light-headedness and syncope may also occur [37].

Based on this rationale, and prior to the recent approval of riociguat for inoperable and persistent/recurrent CTEPH, a considerable number of patients with CTEPH have been prescribed drugs approved for PAH off-label. An international CTEPH registry of 679 newly diagnosed patients found that 38% initiated treatment with drugs approved for PAH at the time of diagnosis. This figure was highly country dependent, ranging from 2.2% to 88.9% [36]. A recent retrospective study of six European countries reported that, between 2006 and 2009, 60% of patients with CTEPH had received an endothelin receptor antagonist, 34% a PDE-5 inhibitor and 6% a prostacyclin analogue [38].

Prescription rates for nonapproved agents in CTEPH have been increasing over time. In the USA, the proportion of patients with CTEPH who received a targeted therapy increased from 20% in 2005 to 37% in 2007 [39]. These therapies are generally offered to patients with CTEPH with poor haemodynamics prior to PEA, although data suggest that they do not have a significant impact on surgical outcomes and may even delay the potentially curative surgery [39]. A more dramatic rise was observed in the UK from 29% to 65% in patients undergoing PEA, and from 70% to 90% in patients with inoperable disease, between 2001 and 2006 [40].

Clinical evidence for pharmacological therapy in CTEPH

Large RCTs of pharmacological therapies in CTEPH

To date, the only large RCTs that have assessed the efficacy and safety of pharmacological treatments in patients with CTEPH are the Chronic Thromboembolic Pulmonary Hypertension Soluble Guanylate Cyclase–Stimulator Trial (CHEST)-1 [26] and the Bosentan Effects in Inoperable Forms of Chronic Thromboembolic Pulmonary Hypertension (BENEFiT) studies [41].

Riociguat: the CHEST study

Riociguat is the first member of a novel class of therapeutics known as the sGC stimulators. It has a dual mode of action, increasing the sensitivity of sGC to endogenous NO, and also increasing sGC activity independently of NO, resulting in vasodilation and other disease-modifying effects, such as anti-fibrotic, anti-proliferative and anti-inflammatory activity [23].

An open-label phase II study demonstrated favourable efficacy and safety results in 75 patients with inoperable CTEPH or PAH. Riociguat increased 6-min walking distance (6MWD) and reduced pulmonary vascular resistance (PVR) in patients with CTEPH or PAH compared with baseline (p<0.0001 for all). An improvement in World Health Organization functional class (WHO-FC) was observed in 31% of patients. Most drug-related adverse events (AEs) were mild to moderate and three patients discontinued the study. The most common AEs reported were dyspepsia, headache and hypotension [42].

Based on the results from this trial, the phase III CHEST study was initiated in 261 patients with inoperable CTEPH or persistent/recurrent pulmonary hypertension after PEA [26]. Patients were randomised to receive placebo or riociguat, individually adjusted to a maximum dose of 2.5 mg three times daily. The primary end-point was mean change in 6MWD at week 16. The results showed that the 6MWD increased by 39 m in the riociguat group, versus a decrease of 6 m in the placebo group after 16 weeks of treatment (p<0.001). The secondary end-point of changes in PVR was also met (table 1). A decrease in PVR of 226 dyn·s·cm–5 was observed in the riociguat group, versus an increase of 23 dyn·s·cm–5 in the placebo group (p<0.001). Riociguat was also associated with significant improvements in N-terminal pro-brain natriuretic peptide (NT-proBNP) levels (p<0.001) and WHO-FC (p=0.003). There was no significant difference in the incidence of clinical worsening events between the riociguat group and the placebo group (2% and 6%, respectively).

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TABLE 1

Change from baseline in primary and selected secondary end-points with riociguat and placebo in the Chronic Thromboembolic Pulmonary Hypertension Soluble Guanylate Cyclase–Stimulator Trial (CHEST)-1 study

The improvements in primary and secondary end-points were similar in inoperable versus persistent/recurrent disease, although the effect on 6MWD was not significant in the persistent/recurrent group [43]. In general, there was a greater numerical effect in the inoperable patients.

AEs were mainly mild to moderate in nature and the most common were headache and dizziness. The most frequently occurring serious AEs were right ventricular failure (3% in both groups) and syncope (2% of the riociguat group and 3% of the placebo group).

An open-label extension study (CHEST-2) was offered to the 243 patients who completed the CHEST-1 study, and 237 (98%) enrolled. At 1 year, the improvement in 6MWD seen in the CHEST-1 study had been maintained (fig. 1), and survival was 97% (fig. 2) [44].

FIGURE 1
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FIGURE 1

Mean change from baseline in 6-min walking distance (6MWD) in the Chronic Thromboembolic Pulmonary Hypertension Soluble Guanylate Cyclase–Stimulator Trial (CHEST)-1 and CHEST-2 studies. Data are observed values; error bars represent sem. Reproduced from [44] with permission from the publisher.

FIGURE 2
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FIGURE 2

Kaplan–Meier plots for a) clinical worsening and b) survival in the overall population during the Chronic Thromboembolic Pulmonary Hypertension Soluble Guanylate Cyclase–Stimulator Trial (CHEST)-2 study. At 1 year, the estimated rate of clinical worsening-free survival was 88% and the estimated rate of survival was 97%. Reproduced from [44] with permission from the publisher.

As of March 2014, 72% had received riociguat for ≥2 years. The latest analysis showed that improvements in 6MWD and WHO-FC have been maintained for up to 2 years (mean±sd 6MWD had increased from CHEST-1 baseline by 50±68 m (n=162); WHO-FC had improved/stabilised/worsened compared with baseline by 39%/58%/3% (n=170)), with an estimated survival rate of 93%. The long-term safety profile was good, with only 5% of patients withdrawing due to AEs. Syncope was observed in seven (3%) patients. In the CHEST-1 study, seven patients in the riociguat group had haemoptysis or pulmonary haemorrhage, compared with zero in the placebo group. In the CHEST-2 study, there were eight additional events of haemoptysis or pulmonary haemorrhage [45]. A causal relationship between haemoptysis/pulmonary haemorrhage and riociguat has not been established, but the potentially increased risk of these events with riociguat is reflected by a warning on the label.

The findings from the CHEST study led to the approval of riociguat for the treatment of patients with inoperable CTEPH and persistent/recurrent CTEPH after PEA in the USA [46], Europe and several other countries [47]. Riociguat is currently the only therapeutic agent approved for the pharmacological treatment of CTEPH.

Bosentan: the BENEFiT study

The BENEFiT study compared bosentan, an orally active dual endothelin receptor antagonist, with placebo in 157 patients with inoperable or persistent/recurrent CTEPH over 16 weeks [41]. The study had independent co-primary end-points: change from baseline in PVR and change from baseline in 6MWD after 16 weeks of therapy. Secondary end-points included WHO-FC and time to clinical worsening. NT-proBNP was evaluated as an exploratory end-point.

Results demonstrated a significant decrease in PVR (p<0.0001) and an increase in cardiac index (p=0.0007) for bosentan-treated patients versus placebo. There was also a significant decrease in NT-proBNP levels (p=0.0034). However, bosentan therapy did not significantly improve 6MWD, WHO-FC or time to clinical worsening (table 2). Bosentan had similar effects on 6MWD and PVR in patients with inoperable versus persistent/recurrent CTEPH.

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TABLE 2

Change from baseline in primary and selected secondary end-points with bosentan and placebo in the Bosentan Effects in Inoperable Forms of Chronic Thromboembolic Pulmonary Hypertension (BENEFiT) study

Generally, bosentan was well tolerated. The three most common side-effects were peripheral oedema, abnormal liver function and headache. Hepatic events are known to occur with bosentan and, in this study, elevated levels of liver function enzymes (>3× upper limit of normal) were observed in 14.5% of bosentan-treated patients versus 3.8% of placebo.

Based on the absence of demonstrable clinical benefits, bosentan is not currently approved for use in patients with CTEPH.

Ongoing RCT with macitentan in CTEPH

MERIT-1 (NCT02021292) is a phase II, placebo-controlled study investigating macitentan in 78 patients with inoperable CTEPH over 24 weeks. The primary end-point is change in PVR. An open-label extension study is planned (MERIT-2; NCT02060721).

Smaller studies of pharmacological therapies in CTEPH

Smaller trials of various pharmacological therapies for CTEPH are summarised in table 3. Their divergent results are likely to be due to the different drugs and populations, their uncontrolled nature and small sample sizes.

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TABLE 3

Findings from smaller clinical studies of pharmacological therapies in patients with chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension (CTEPH)

Endothelin receptor antagonists

An open-label multicentre trial involving 19 patients with inoperable CTEPH reported significant decreases in PVR, increases in 6MWD but no change in WHO-FC at 3 months [48]. Two other studies (16 and 47 patients, respectively) found improvements in New York Heart Association functional class (NYHA-FC)/WHO-FC and an increase in mean 6MWD with bosentan [49, 50].

Seyfarth et al. [51] reported that improvements in 6MWD recorded at 6 months were maintained over 24 months. In a second study, 77 patients treated with bosentan for >2 years in Japan experienced significant decreases in PVR [53]. In a third study, in the Netherlands, >2 years of bosentan treatment led to stable NYHA-FC levels, but 6MWD had decreased slightly from the improved short-term value (although not to baseline levels) [52]. Finally, a report from a single centre in Japan demonstrated better long-term survival in patients with CTEPH receiving bosentan, or other “modern treatment” (bosentan, sildenafil and new oral drugs being trialled), than those taking conventional therapy for CTEPH (5-year survival 89% versus 60%, p=0.047) [63].

Prostacyclin analogues

Several studies have investigated prostacyclin analogues in patients with CTEPH, but most of the analyses have been performed retrospectively and the patient numbers were small [54–59].

Two studies with epoprostenol found an increase in exercise capacity [54, 55]; one also demonstrated an improvement in NYHA-FC [54], while the other showed enhanced haemodynamic measurements [55]. Moreover, an open-label study of beraprost and conventional therapy versus conventional therapy found a significant decrease in PVR, and half the patients saw an improvement in NYHA-FC. Fewer deaths were recorded in the beraprost-treated group, resulting in improved survival rates at 1, 3 and 5 years [57]. Additionally, a long-term study of treprostinil in patients with PAH and CTEPH showed improvements in NYHA-FC, exercise capacity and survival when compared with historical data for untreated patients [58].

While some of these results with prostacyclin analogues are promising, large RCTs with epoprostenol, beraprost and treprostinil are lacking. However, a European multicentre RCT of inhaled iloprost versus placebo in a mixed population of patients with PAH or CTEPH has been published. A total of 203 patients were enrolled, 57 of whom were diagnosed with CTEPH. The primary end-points were improvements in 6MWD and NYHA-FC at 12 weeks, and significant increases were observed in the overall population (p=0.004 and p=0.03, respectively) [56]. In the group with CTEPH, there was no significant difference for treatment response to the combined study end-point of a 10% increase from baseline in 6MWD and an improvement of one functional class (iloprost group 12.5%, placebo 8.3%) [64].

PDE-5 inhibitors

Sildenafil, a PDE-5 inhibitor, is licensed for the treatment of PAH and is often prescribed off-label for patients with CTEPH. In a small randomised, placebo-controlled trial with sildenafil in 19 patients with CTEPH, significant decreases in PVR and improvements in WHO-FC were recorded, but no difference was seen in the primary end-point, 6MWD at 12 weeks [62]. An open-label extension to this study found no significant increase in 6MWD after 12 months of treatment [62]. In two further open-label studies, sildenafil has been reported to improve exercise capacity and haemodynamics [60, 61], with one reporting persistence of benefit at 12 months [61]. To date, large long-term controlled trials with sildenafil or other PDE-5 inhibitors in CTEPH are lacking.

Conclusions

PEA is the first choice of treatment for patients with CTEPH and is potentially curative; therefore, all patients should be examined and assessed for operability at an expert centre. For those patients not suitable for PEA, pharmacological therapy should be considered. Although BPA has shown promise as an alternative to PEA in a limited number of patients, further evaluation is required before this procedure can be recommended in patients with CTEPH. To date, riociguat is the only pharmacological agent approved in CTEPH, and the only one that has demonstrated robust clinical efficacy in terms of both exercise capacity and haemodynamics in a large, well-designed RCT. Furthermore, these benefits have been sustained for up to 2 years in the long-term extension study. However, more controlled long-term data are required.

Given the availability and approval of riociguat, several new questions have now arisen in the management of CTEPH. First, will regulators accept placebo-controlled trials in the future, or will RCTs of investigational medical therapies versus riociguat (noninferiority trials) be expected? To date, there are no registered trials using riociguat as a comparator. Second, will combination studies be performed in patients with CTEPH? Combination therapies have been used successfully in PAH, as reviewed by Montani et al. [37]. However, the limited data available and lack of long-term studies mean there is no consensus on the use of combination strategies for CTEPH. Moreover, care is needed to avoid events such as hypotension, and for this reason PDE-5 inhibitors are contraindicated with the use of riociguat [46, 47]. Further research and long-term data are needed.

Acknowledgements

Editorial assistance was provided by Adelphi Communications Ltd (Bollington, UK), supported by Bayer Pharma AG.

Footnotes

  • Conflict of interest: Disclosures can be found alongside the online version of this article at err.ersjournals.com

  • Provenance: Publication of this peer-reviewed article was sponsored by Bayer Pharma AG, Berlin, Germany (principal sponsor, European Respiratory Review issue 136).

  • Received February 6, 2015.
  • Accepted March 19, 2015.
  • Copyright ©ERS 2015.

ERR articles are open access and distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial Licence 4.0.

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Pharmacological therapy for patients with chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension
Marius M. Hoeper
European Respiratory Review Jun 2015, 24 (136) 272-282; DOI: 10.1183/16000617.00001015

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Pharmacological therapy for patients with chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension
Marius M. Hoeper
European Respiratory Review Jun 2015, 24 (136) 272-282; DOI: 10.1183/16000617.00001015
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  • Article
    • Abstract
    • Abstract
    • Introduction
    • Rationale for targeted medical therapy in CTEPH
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  • Pulmonary pharmacology and therapeutics
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