» Articles » PMID: 22247353

Warfarin in Systemic Sclerosis-associated and Idiopathic Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension. A Bayesian Approach to Evaluating Treatment for Uncommon Disease

Overview
Journal J Rheumatol
Specialty Rheumatology
Date 2012 Jan 17
PMID 22247353
Citations 29
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Objective: Warfarin is recommended in systemic sclerosis-associated pulmonary arterial hypertension (SSc-PAH) and idiopathic PAH (IPAH) to improve survival. There is no evidence to support this in SSc-PAH and the evidence in IPAH is conflicting. We evaluated the ability of warfarin to improve survival using 2 large SSc-PAH and IPAH cohorts.

Methods: The effect of warfarin on all-cause mortality was evaluated. Bayesian propensity scores (PS) were used to adjust for baseline differences between patients exposed and not exposed to warfarin, and to assemble a matched cohort. Bayesian Cox proportional hazards models were constructed using informative priors based on international PAH expert elicitation.

Results: Review of 1138 charts identified 275 patients with SSc-PAH (n = 78; 28% treated with warfarin) and 155 patients with IPAH (n = 91; 59% treated with warfarin). Baseline differences in PAH severity and medications were resolved using PS matching. In the matched cohort of 98 patients with SSc-PAH (49 treated with warfarin), the posterior median hazard ratio (HR) was 1.06 [95% credible interval (CrI) 0.70, 1.63]. In the matched cohort of 66 patients with IPAH (33 treated with warfarin), the posterior median HR was 1.07 (95% CrI 0.57, 1.98). The probability that warfarin improves median survival by 6 months or more is 23.5% in SSc-PAH and 27.7% in IPAH. Conversely, there is a > 70% probability that warfarin provides no significant benefit or is harmful.

Conclusion: There is a low probability that warfarin improves survival in SSc-PAH and IPAH. Given the availability of other PAH therapies with demonstrable benefits, there is little reason to use warfarin to improve survival for these patients.

Citing Articles

Systemic Sclerosis-Associated Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension: From Bedside to Bench and Back Again.

Bahi M, Li C, Wang G, Korman B Int J Mol Sci. 2024; 25(9).

PMID: 38731946 PMC: 11084945. DOI: 10.3390/ijms25094728.


Risk Factors for Pulmonary Embolism in Individuals Infected with SARS-CoV2-A Single-Centre Retrospective Study.

Herlo A, Marinescu A, Cut T, Laza R, Oancea C, Manolescu D Biomedicines. 2024; 12(4).

PMID: 38672130 PMC: 11048050. DOI: 10.3390/biomedicines12040774.


Control-Relevant Adaptive Personalized Modeling From Limited Clinical Data for Precise Warfarin Management.

Affan A, Zurada J, Inanc T IEEE Open J Eng Med Biol. 2023; 3:242-251.

PMID: 36846361 PMC: 9955254. DOI: 10.1109/OJEMB.2023.3240072.


Efficacy evaluation of pulmonary hypertension therapy in patients with portal pulmonary hypertension: A systematic review and meta-analysis.

Zhang R, Li T, Shao Y, Bai W, Wen X Front Pharmacol. 2022; 13:991568.

PMID: 36467076 PMC: 9709250. DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2022.991568.


Novel clinical trial design and analytic methods to tackle challenges in therapeutic development in rare diseases.

Li Y, Izem R Ann Transl Med. 2022; 10(18):1034.

PMID: 36267797 PMC: 9577738. DOI: 10.21037/atm-21-5496.