scholarly journals Bioactive Metabolomic Profiles of Scleroderma-PAH are different than idiopathic PAH and associated with worse clinical outcomes

Author(s):  
Mona Alotaibi ◽  
Junzhe Shao ◽  
Michael W. Pauciulo ◽  
William C. Nichols ◽  
Anna R. Hemnes ◽  
...  

The molecular signature in patients with systemic sclerosis (SSc)-associated pulmonary arterial hypertension (SSc-PAH) relative to idiopathic pulmonary arterial hypertension (IPAH) remain unclear. We hypothesize that patients with SSc-PAH exhibit unfavorable bioactive metabolite derangements compared to IPAH that contribute to their poor prognosis and limited response to therapy. We sought to determine whether circulating bioactive metabolites are differentially altered in SSc-PAH versus IPAH. Plasma biosamples from 415 patients with SSc-PAH (cases) and 1115 patients with IPAH (controls) were included in the study. Over 700 bioactive metabolites were assayed in plasma samples from independent discovery and validation cohorts using liquid chromatography - mass spectrometry (LC-MS) based approaches. Regression analyses were used to identify metabolites which exhibited differential levels between SSc-PAH and IPAH and associated with disease severity. From among hundreds of circulating bioactive molecules, twelve metabolites were found to distinguish between SSc-PAH and IPAH, as well as associate with PAH disease severity. SSc-PAH patients had increased levels of fatty acid metabolites including lignoceric acid and nervonic acid, as well as kynurenine, polyamines, eicosanoids/oxylipins and sex hormone metabolites relative to IPAH. In conclusion, SSc-PAH patients are characterized by an unfavorable bioactive metabolic profile that may explain the poor and limited response to therapy. These data provide important metabolic insights into the pathogenesis of SSc-PAH.

2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 204589402090878
Author(s):  
Jessica B. Badlam ◽  
David Badesch ◽  
Evan Brittain ◽  
Shannon Cordell ◽  
Tan Ding ◽  
...  

Pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) is a sexually dimorphic disease that for unknown reasons affects women more than men. The role of estrogens, both endogenous and exogenous, and reproductive factors in this female susceptibility is still poorly understood. It has been strongly suggested that sex hormones may influence the development and progression of the disease. We sought to determine whether sex hormone exposures and reproductive factors associate with PAH patients compared to control subjects, using a questionnaire and interview to obtain information regarding these potential risk factors. We conducted a single-center unmatched case–control study. Six hundred and thirty-four women and men with PAH, as well as 27 subjects with BMPR2 mutations but no PAH and 132 healthy population controls were enrolled from the Vanderbilt Pulmonary Hypertension Research Cohort and researchmatch.org. Questionnaires and nurse-led interviews were conducted to obtain information regarding sex hormone exposures and reproductive factors. Additional history was obtained on enrolled patients including disease severity variables and comorbidities. Responses to the questionnaires were analyzed to describe these exposures in this population as well as assess the association between disease severity variables and sex hormone exposures. Reproductive and endogenous factors that determine lifelong estrogen exposure were similar between PAH cases and controls. Patients with associated PAH were significantly more likely to be postmenopausal compared to controls. There were similar rates of “ever-use” and duration of use of oral contraceptive pills and hormone replacement therapy in patients when compared to controls. Disease severity variables were not significantly affected by any exposure after adjusting for PAH sub-group. In contrast to our hypothesis, that a greater exposure to exogenous sources of female sex hormones associates with PAH case status, we found similar rates of endogenous and exogenous sex hormone exposure between PAH patients and unmatched controls.


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