Login / Signup

Children and Adolescents with Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension: Baseline and Follow-Up Data from the Polish Registry of Pulmonary Hypertension (BNP-PL).

Joanna KwiatkowskaMalgorzata ZukAnna MigdalJacek KusaElzbieta SkibaKarolina ZygieloKinga PrzetockaPiotr WerynskiPawel BanaszakAlina Rzeznik-BieniaszewskaRafal SurmaczWaldemar BobkowskiBarbara Wojcicka-UrbanskaBozena WernerJoanna PluzanskaKatarzyna OstrowskaAnna WaldochGrzegorz Kopec
Published in: Journal of clinical medicine (2020)
We present the results from the pediatric arm of the Polish Registry of Pulmonary Hypertension. We prospectively enrolled all pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) patients, between the ages of 3 months and 18 years, who had been under the care of each PAH center in Poland between 1 March 2018 and 30 September 2018. The mean prevalence of PAH was 11.6 per million, and the estimated incidence rate was 2.4 per million/year, but it was geographically heterogeneous. Among 80 enrolled children (females, n = 40; 50%), 54 (67.5%) had PAH associated with congenital heart disease (CHD-PAH), 25 (31.25%) had idiopathic PAH (IPAH), and 1 (1.25%) had portopulmonary PAH. At the time of enrolment, 31% of the patients had significant impairment of physical capacity (WHO-FC III). The most frequent comorbidities included shortage of growth (n = 20; 25%), mental retardation (n = 32; 40%), hypothyroidism (n = 19; 23.8%) and Down syndrome (n = 24; 30%). The majority of children were treated with PAH-specific medications, but only half of them with double combination therapy, which improved after changing the reimbursement policy. The underrepresentation of PAH classes other than IPAH and CHD-PAH, and the geographically heterogeneous distribution of PAH prevalence, indicate the need for building awareness of PAH among pediatricians, while a frequent coexistence of PAH with other comorbidities calls for a multidisciplinary approach to the management of PAH children.
Keyphrases