Proposed Algorithm For Screening and Treatment of Pulmonary Hypertension in Thalassemia. Represents candidate pulmonary arterial hypertension guidelines informed by the WebThal data. The risk of pulmonary hypertension increases with age and splenectomy, as well as the severity of anemia and ineffective erythropoiesis (which is impacted by genotype). The frequency of echocardiogram screening should reflect these apriori risks, as well as previous echocardiogram results. TRV results <2.5 meters per second are normal and require no change in monitoring or therapy. TRV results between 2.5 and 2.9 meters per second indicate an abnormal physiology that could potentially progress to pulmonary arterial hypertension. The hematologist must carefully examine potential underlying factors and try to ameliorate them, using serial TRV assessment as the biomarker of success. Regardless of apriori pulmonary hypertension risk, a documented abnormal TRV above 2.5 meters per second suggests a high-risk phenotype and annual follow-up. A TRV of 3.0 meters per second or higher demarcates a patient at significant risk for catheter-proven pulmonary artery hypertension. A first, critical, step is initiation or intensification of chronic transfusion therapy to completely suppress endogenous erythropoiesis. In early disease, this can be sufficient to normalize pulmonary artery pressures. If unsuccessful, the patient should be referred to a pulmonary hypertension specialist for right heart catheterization and aggressive titration of pulmonary hypertension therapies to a target goal of 25% reduction in pulmonary artery systolic pressure.

Proposed Algorithm For Screening and Treatment of Pulmonary Hypertension in Thalassemia. Represents candidate pulmonary arterial hypertension guidelines informed by the WebThal data. The risk of pulmonary hypertension increases with age and splenectomy, as well as the severity of anemia and ineffective erythropoiesis (which is impacted by genotype). The frequency of echocardiogram screening should reflect these apriori risks, as well as previous echocardiogram results. TRV results <2.5 meters per second are normal and require no change in monitoring or therapy. TRV results between 2.5 and 2.9 meters per second indicate an abnormal physiology that could potentially progress to pulmonary arterial hypertension. The hematologist must carefully examine potential underlying factors and try to ameliorate them, using serial TRV assessment as the biomarker of success. Regardless of apriori pulmonary hypertension risk, a documented abnormal TRV above 2.5 meters per second suggests a high-risk phenotype and annual follow-up. A TRV of 3.0 meters per second or higher demarcates a patient at significant risk for catheter-proven pulmonary artery hypertension. A first, critical, step is initiation or intensification of chronic transfusion therapy to completely suppress endogenous erythropoiesis. In early disease, this can be sufficient to normalize pulmonary artery pressures. If unsuccessful, the patient should be referred to a pulmonary hypertension specialist for right heart catheterization and aggressive titration of pulmonary hypertension therapies to a target goal of 25% reduction in pulmonary artery systolic pressure.

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