Journal article

Tadalafil Therapy for Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension


Authors listGalie, Nazzareno; Brundage, Bruce H.; Ghofrani, Hossein A.; Oudiz, Ronald J.; Simonneau, Gerald; Safdar, Zeenat; Shapiro, Shelley; White, R. James; Chan, Melanie; Beardsworth, Anthony; Frumkin, Lyn; Barst, Robyn J.

Publication year2009

Pages2894-2U65

JournalCirculation

Volume number119

Issue number22

ISSN0009-7322

eISSN1524-4539

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.108.839274

PublisherLippincott, Williams & Wilkins


Abstract

Background-Treatment options for pulmonary arterial hypertension target the prostacyclin, endothelin, or nitric oxide pathways. Tadalafil, a phosphodiesterase type-5 inhibitor, increases cGMP, the final mediator in the nitric oxide pathway.

Methods and Results-In this 16-week, double-blind, placebo-controlled study, 405 patients with pulmonary arterial hypertension (idiopathic or associated), either treatment-naive or on background therapy with the endothelin receptor antagonist bosentan, were randomized to placebo or tadalafil 2.5, 10, 20, or 40 mg orally once daily. The primary end point was the change from baseline to week 16 in the distance walked in 6 minutes. Changes in World Health Organization functional class, clinical worsening, and health-related quality of life were also assessed. Patients completing the 16-week study could enter a long-term extension study. Tadalafil increased the distance walked in 6 minutes in a dose-dependent manner; only the 40-mg dose met the prespecified level of statistical significance (P<0.01). Overall, the mean placebo-corrected treatment effect was 33 m (95% confidence interval, 15 to 50 m). In the bosentan-naive group, the treatment effect was 44 m (95% confidence interval, 20 to 69 m) compared with 23 m (95% confidence interval, -2 to 48 m) in patients on background bosentan therapy. Tadalafil 40 mg improved the time to clinical worsening (P=0.041), incidence of clinical worsening (68% relative risk reduction; P=0.038), and health-related quality of life. The changes in World Health Organization functional class were not statistically significant. The most common treatment-related adverse events reported with tadalafil were headache, myalgia, and flushing.

Conclusions-In patients with pulmonary arterial hypertension, tadalafil 40 mg was well tolerated and improved exercise capacity and quality of life measures and reduced clinical worsening. (Circulation. 2009; 119: 2894-2903.)




Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleGalie, N., Brundage, B., Ghofrani, H., Oudiz, R., Simonneau, G., Safdar, Z., et al. (2009) Tadalafil Therapy for Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension, Circulation, 119(22), pp. 2894-2U65. https://doi.org/10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.108.839274

APA Citation styleGalie, N., Brundage, B., Ghofrani, H., Oudiz, R., Simonneau, G., Safdar, Z., Shapiro, S., White, R., Chan, M., Beardsworth, A., Frumkin, L., & Barst, R. (2009). Tadalafil Therapy for Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension. Circulation. 119(22), 2894-2U65. https://doi.org/10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.108.839274



Keywords


AMBRISENTANBOSENTANCONTROLLED-TRIALDOUBLE-BLINDhypertension, pulmonaryINHALED ILOPROSTPHOSPHODIESTERASE INHIBITORSPROSTACYCLINSILDENAFILSITAXSENTANTADALAFIL

Last updated on 2025-21-05 at 18:43