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Browsing by Author "Vanderpool, Rebecca R."
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Item Clinical Characteristics and Transplant-Free Survival Across the Spectrum of Pulmonary Vascular Disease(Elsevier, 2022) Hemnes, Anna R.; Leopold, Jane A.; Radeva, Milena K.; Beck, Gerald J.; Abidov, Aiden; Aldred, Micheala A.; Barnard, John; Rosenzweig, Erika B.; Borlaug, Barry A.; Chung, Wendy K.; Comhair, Suzy A. A.; Desai, Ankit A.; Dubrock, Hilary M.; Erzurum, Serpil C.; Finet, J. Emanuel; Frantz, Robert P.; Garcia, Joe G. N.; Geraci, Mark W.; Gray, Michael P.; Grunig, Gabriele; Hassoun, Paul M.; Highland, Kristin B.; Hill, Nicholas S.; Hu, Bo; Kwon, Deborah H.; Jacob, Miriam S.; Jellis, Christine L.; Larive, A. Brett; Lempel, Jason K.; Maron, Bradley A.; Mathai, Stephen C.; McCarthy, Kevin; Mehra, Reena; Nawabit, Rawan; Newman, John H.; Olman, Mitchell A.; Park, Margaret M.; Ramos, Jose A.; Renapurkar, Rahul D.; Rischard, Franz P.; Sherer, Susan G.; Tang, W. H. Wilson; Thomas, James D.; Vanderpool, Rebecca R.; Waxman, Aaron B.; Wilcox, Jennifer D.; Yuan, Jason X-J; Horn, Evelyn M.; PVDOMICS Study Group; Medicine, School of MedicineBackground: PVDOMICS (Pulmonary Vascular Disease Phenomics) is a precision medicine initiative to characterize pulmonary vascular disease (PVD) using deep phenotyping. PVDOMICS tests the hypothesis that integration of clinical metrics with omic measures will enhance understanding of PVD and facilitate an updated PVD classification. Objectives: The purpose of this study was to describe clinical characteristics and transplant-free survival in the PVDOMICS cohort. Methods: Subjects with World Symposium Pulmonary Hypertension (WSPH) group 1-5 PH, disease comparators with similar underlying diseases and mild or no PH and healthy control subjects enrolled in a cross-sectional study. PH groups, comparators were compared using standard statistical tests including log-rank tests for comparing time to transplant or death. Results: A total of 1,193 subjects were included. Multiple WSPH groups were identified in 38.9% of PH subjects. Nocturnal desaturation was more frequently observed in groups 1, 3, and 4 PH vs comparators. A total of 50.2% of group 1 PH subjects had ground glass opacities on chest computed tomography. Diffusing capacity for carbon monoxide was significantly lower in groups 1-3 PH than their respective comparators. Right atrial volume index was higher in WSPH groups 1-4 than comparators. A total of 110 participants had a mean pulmonary artery pressure of 21-24 mm Hg. Transplant-free survival was poorest in group 3 PH. Conclusions: PVDOMICS enrolled subjects across the spectrum of PVD, including mild and mixed etiology PH. Novel findings include low diffusing capacity for carbon monoxide and enlarged right atrial volume index as shared features of groups 1-3 and 1-4 PH, respectively; unexpected, frequent presence of ground glass opacities on computed tomography; and sleep alterations in group 1 PH, and poorest survival in group 3 PH. PVDOMICS will facilitate a new understanding of PVD and refine the current PVD classification.Item NHLBI-CMREF Workshop Report on Pulmonary Vascular Disease Classification: JACC State-of-the-Art Review(Elsevier, 2021) Oldham, William M.; Hemnes, Anna R.; Aldred, Micheala A.; Barnard, John; Brittain, Evan L.; Chan, Stephen Y.; Cheng, Feixiong; Cho, Michael H.; Desai, Ankit A.; Garcia, Joe G.N.; Geraci, Mark W.; Ghiassian, Susan D.; Hall, Kathryn T.; Horn, Evelyn M.; Jain, Mohit; Kelly, Rachel S.; Leopold, Jane A.; Lindstrom, Sara; Modena, Brian D.; Nichols, William C.; Rhodes, Christopher J.; Sun, Wei; Sweatt, Andrew J.; Vanderpool, Rebecca R.; Wilkins, Martin R.; Wilmot, Beth; Zamanian, Roham T.; Fessel, Joshua P.; Aggarwal, Neil R.; Loscalzo, Joseph; Xiao, Lei; Medicine, School of MedicineThe National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute and the Cardiovascular Medical Research and Education Fund held a workshop on the application of pulmonary vascular disease omics data to the understanding, prevention, and treatment of pulmonary vascular disease. Experts in pulmonary vascular disease, omics, and data analytics met to identify knowledge gaps and formulate ideas for future research priorities in pulmonary vascular disease in line with National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute Strategic Vision goals. The group identified opportunities to develop analytic approaches to multiomic datasets, to identify molecular pathways in pulmonary vascular disease pathobiology, and to link novel phenotypes to meaningful clinical outcomes. The committee suggested support for interdisciplinary research teams to develop and validate analytic methods, a national effort to coordinate biosamples and data, a consortium of preclinical investigators to expedite target evaluation and drug development, longitudinal assessment of molecular biomarkers in clinical trials, and a task force to develop a master clinical trials protocol for pulmonary vascular disease.Item Recent advancements in pulmonary arterial hypertension and right heart failure research: overview of selected abstracts from ATS2020 and emerging COVID-19 research(Sage, 2021-07) Potus, Francois; Frump, Andrea L.; Umar, Soban; Vanderpool, Rebecca R.; Al Ghouleh, Imad; Lai, Yen-Chun; Medicine, School of MedicineEach year the American Thoracic Society (ATS) Conference brings together scientists who conduct basic, translational and clinical research to present on the recent advances in the field of respirology. Due to the Coronavirus Disease of 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, the ATS2020 Conference was held online in a series of virtual meetings. In this review, we focus on the breakthroughs in pulmonary hypertension research. We have selected 11 of the best basic science abstracts which were presented at the ATS2020 Assembly on Pulmonary Circulation mini-symposium “What’s New in Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension (PAH) and Right Ventricular (RV) Signaling: Lessons from the Best Abstracts,” reflecting the current state of the art and associated challenges in PH. Particular emphasis is placed on understanding the mechanisms underlying RV failure, the regulation of inflammation, and the novel therapeutic targets that emerged from preclinical research. The pathologic interactions between pulmonary hypertension, right ventricular function and COVID-19 are also discussed.Item Relaxin Inhibits Ventricular Arrhythmia and Asystole in Rats With Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension(Frontiers Media, 2021-07-06) Martin, Brian; Vanderpool, Rebecca R.; Henry, Brian L.; Palma, Joshua B.; Gabris, Beth; Lai, Yen-Chun; Hu, Jian; Tofovic, Stevan P.; Reddy, Rajiv P.; Mora, Ana L.; Gladwin, Mark T.; Romero, Guillermo; Salama, Guy; Medicine, School of MedicinePulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) leads to right ventricular cardiomyopathy and cardiac dysfunctions where in the clinical setting, cardiac arrest is the likely cause of death, in ~70% of PAH patients. We investigated the cardiac phenotype of PAH hearts and tested the hypothesis that the insulin-like hormone, Relaxin could prevent maladaptive cardiac remodeling and protect against cardiac dysfunctions in a PAH animal model. PAH was induced in rats with sugen (20 mg/kg), hypoxia then normoxia (3-weeks/each); relaxin (RLX = 0, 30 or 400 μg/kg/day, n ≥ 6/group) was delivered subcutaneously (6-weeks) with implanted osmotic mini-pumps. Right ventricle (RV) hemodynamics and Doppler-flow measurements were followed by cardiac isolation, optical mapping, and arrhythmia phenotype. Sugen-hypoxia (SuHx) treated rats developed PAH characterized by higher RV systolic pressures (50 ± 19 vs. 22 ± 5 mmHg), hypertrophy, reduced stroke volume, ventricular fibrillation (VF) (n = 6/11) and bradycardia/arrest (n = 5/11); both cardiac phenotypes were suppressed with dithiothreitol (DTT = 1 mM) (n = 0/2/group) or RLX (low or high dose, n = 0/6/group). PAH hearts developed increased fibrosis that was reversed by RLX-HD, but not RLX-LD. Relaxin decreased Nrf2 and glutathione transferases but not glutathione-reductase. High-dose RLX improved pulmonary arterial compliance (measured by Doppler flow), suppressed VF even after burst-pacing, n = 2/6). Relaxin suppressed VF and asystole through electrical remodeling and by reversing thiol oxidative stress. For the first time, we showed two cardiac phenotypes in PAH animals and their prevention by RLX. Relaxin may modulate maladaptive cardiac remodeling in PAH and protect against arrhythmia and cardiac arrest.Item Transcriptomic profiles in pulmonary arterial hypertension associate with disease severity and identify novel candidate genes(Sage, 2020-12-07) Romanoski, Casey E.; Qi, Xinshuai; Sangam, Shreya; Vanderpool, Rebecca R.; Stearman, Robert S.; Conklin, Austin; Gonzalez-Garay, Manuel; Rischard, Franz; Ayon, Ramon J.; Wang, Jian; Simonson, Tatum; Babicheva, Aleksandra; Shi, Yinan; Tang, Haiyang; Makino, Ayako; Kanthi, Yogendra; Geraci, Mark W.; Garcia, Joe G.N.; Yuan, Jason X.-J.; Desai, Ankit A.; Medicine, School of MedicineUsing RNAseq, we identified a 61 gene-based circulating transcriptomic profile most correlated with four indices of pulmonary arterial hypertension severity. In an independent dataset, 13/61 (21%) genes were differentially expressed in lung tissues of pulmonary arterial hypertension cases versus controls, highlighting potentially novel candidate genes involved in pulmonary arterial hypertension development.Item Treatment With Treprostinil and Metformin Normalizes Hyperglycemia and Improves Cardiac Function in Pulmonary Hypertension Associated With Heart Failure With Preserved Ejection Fraction(American Heart Association, 2020-06) Wang, Longfei; Halliday, Gunner; Huot, Joshua R.; Satoh, Taijyu; Baust, Jeff J.; Fisher, Amanda; Cook, Todd; Hu, Jian; Avolio, Theodore; Goncharov, Dmitry A.; Bai, Yang; Vanderpool, Rebecca R.; Considine, Robert V.; Bonetto, Andrea; Tan, Jiangning; Bachman, Timothy N.; Sebastiani, Andrea; Mora, Ana L.; Machado, Roberto F.; Goncharova, Elena A.; Gladwin, Mark T.; Lai, Yen-Chun; Surgery, School of MedicineObjective: Pulmonary hypertension (PH) due to left heart disease (group 2), especially in the setting of heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF), is the most common cause of PH worldwide; however, at present, there is no proven effective therapy available for its treatment. PH-HFpEF is associated with insulin resistance and features of metabolic syndrome. The stable prostacyclin analog, treprostinil, is an effective and widely used Food and Drug Administration-approved drug for the treatment of pulmonary arterial hypertension. While the effect of treprostinil on metabolic syndrome is unknown, a recent study suggests that the prostacyclin analog beraprost can improve glucose intolerance and insulin sensitivity. We sought to evaluate the effectiveness of treprostinil in the treatment of metabolic syndrome-associated PH-HFpEF. Approach and Results: Treprostinil treatment was given to mice with mild metabolic syndrome-associated PH-HFpEF induced by high-fat diet and to SU5416/obese ZSF1 rats, a model created by the treatment of rats with a more profound metabolic syndrome due to double leptin receptor defect (obese ZSF1) with a vascular endothelial growth factor receptor blocker SU5416. In high-fat diet-exposed mice, chronic treatment with treprostinil reduced hyperglycemia and pulmonary hypertension. In SU5416/Obese ZSF1 rats, treprostinil improved hyperglycemia with similar efficacy to that of metformin (a first-line drug for type 2 diabetes mellitus); the glucose-lowering effect of treprostinil was further potentiated by the combined treatment with metformin. Early treatment with treprostinil in SU5416/Obese ZSF1 rats lowered pulmonary pressures, and a late treatment with treprostinil together with metformin improved pulmonary artery acceleration time to ejection time ratio and tricuspid annular plane systolic excursion with AMPK (AMP-activated protein kinase) activation in skeletal muscle and the right ventricle. Conclusions: Our data suggest a potential use of treprostinil as an early treatment for mild metabolic syndrome-associated PH-HFpEF and that combined treatment with treprostinil and metformin may improve hyperglycemia and cardiac function in a more severe disease.