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Effects of Inhaled Treprostinil on Exercise Performance in Exercise Induced Pulmonary Hypertension

University of California San Diego logo

University of California San Diego

Status and phase

Not yet enrolling
Early Phase 1

Conditions

Pulmonary Hypertension

Treatments

Drug: Inhaled treprostinil

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other
Industry

Identifiers

NCT07116681
ISS-2025-0061 (Other Grant/Funding Number)
813050

Details and patient eligibility

About

This study aims to investigate therapies for exercise induced pulmonary hypertension (EiPH). This is a condition that effects the blood vessels in the lungs and causes shortness of breath with activity. Currently, there are very limited treatment options for this condition. Inhaled treprostinil, also known as Tyvaso, is a medication used to treat other forms of lung disease and is safe and well tolerated. This study will measure the ability of Tyvaso to improve symptoms related to EiPH and improve performance on exercise testing.

Full description

Exercise-induced pulmonary hypertension (EiPH) is defined by the presence of normal resting pulmonary hemodynamics with an abnormal elevation in mean pulmonary artery pressure (mPAP) for a given cardiac output with exercise. EiPH is typically characterized by exertional dyspnea, with the absence of other features of resting pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) such as elevated right atrial pressure at rest or lower extremity peripheral edema. Since patients with EiPH have normal resting echocardiograms, the disease is often underdiagnosed. Exercise right-heart catheterization remains the gold standard in diagnosing EiPH.

Aside from subjective markers of clinical improvement with therapy, assessment for physiological improvement is challenging since most measures of PAH severity, including echocardiograms, biomarkers and risk calculators, are normal at baseline in this population with EiPH. The investigators have pioneered the use of non-invasive cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPET) to assess patients with cardiopulmonary limitations during exercise. Changes in oxygen pulse (O2 pulse) during exercise on CPET have previously been validated as an accurate predictor of stroke volume augmentation, which is an important physiological adaptation to exercise, and may serve as an objective marker of improvement in patients with EiPH.

While the guidelines agree that EiPH is real and under-diagnosed, there is no consensus on the management since these patients have not been included in high-quality clinical trials for PAH treatment. Given the lack of treatment guidelines for EiPH, many providers use PAH-targeted therapy off-label in EiPH. Specifically, generic phosphodiesterase-5 inhibitors are the typical first line agent due to insurance barriers to accessing other therapies. Inhaled treprostinil (Tyvaso DPI) would be an ideal medication for this population. Tyvaso DPI is a convenient, inhaled medication with quick onset. The favorable pharmacokinetic profile raises the potential of this medication for dosing prior to exertion for patients with EiPH.

Enrollment

8 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Provision of signed and dated informed consent form

  • Stated willingness to comply with all study procedures and availability for the duration of the study

  • Persons, aged 18 years of older

  • Established diagnosis of exercise induced pulmonary hypertension defined by the following:

    1. Invasive cardiopulmonary exercise testing demonstrating a mean pulmonary artery pressure to cardiac output (P/Q slope) greater than 3 mmHg/L/min
    2. Symptoms of exertional dyspnea
  • Ability to perform non-invasive cardiopulmonary exercise testing, either on upright bicycle or treadmill

  • If childbearing age, patient must agree to use of effective contraception during the trial

Exclusion criteria

  • Diagnosis of pulmonary hypertension as defined by resting mean pulmonary arterial pressure of ≥ 20 mmHg, PVR > 3
  • Severe underlying chronic lung disease (e.g. COPD, interstitial lung disease)
  • Underlying chronic left ventricular disease (e.g. heart failure with reduced ejection fraction)
  • Chronic thromboembolic disease
  • Pregnancy
  • Acute infectious symptoms including fevers within the last week
  • Inability or unwillingness to discontinue any phosphodiesterase 5 inhibitors or other off-label
  • Known allergic reactions to inhaled treprostinil
  • Inability to comply with study protocols

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

8 participants in 1 patient group

Treatment group
Experimental group
Description:
Single arm, every participant will receive inhaled treprostinil
Treatment:
Drug: Inhaled treprostinil

Trial contacts and locations

0

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Central trial contact

Matthew D Rockstrom, MD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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