4.2 Review

Novel methods in pulmonary hypertension phenotyping in the age of precision medicine (2015 Grover Conference series)

Journal

PULMONARY CIRCULATION
Volume 6, Issue 4, Pages 439-447

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1086/688847

Keywords

phenotyping; peripheral circulation; metabolism; exhaled breath; precision medicine

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health: Pathway to Independence Award [K99/R00, 1K99HL131866]
  2. Mentored Patient-Oriented Research grant [K23HL125697]
  3. R01 grant [1R01HL130307]
  4. National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute [1R01HL130209, 1P01HL10714]
  5. Center of Excellence in Pulmonary Vascular Disease Lerner Research Institutional grant

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Among pulmonary vascular diseases, pulmonary hypertension (PH) is the best studied and has been the focus of our work. The current classification of PH is based on a relatively simple combination of patient characteristics and hemodynamics. This leads to inherent limitations, including the inability to customize treatment and the lack of clarity from a more granular identification based on individual patient phenotypes. Accurate phenotyping of PH can be used in the clinic to select therapies and determine prognosis and in research to increase the homogeneity of study cohorts. Rapid advances in the mechanistic understanding of the disease, improved imaging methods, and innovative biomarkers now provide an opportunity to define novel PH phenotypes. We have recently shown that altered metabolism may affect nitric oxide levels and protein glycosylation, the peripheral circulation (which may provide insights into the response to therapy), and exhaled-breath analysis (which may be useful in disease evaluation). This review is based on a talk presented during the 2015 Grover Conference and highlights the relevant literature describing novel methods to phenotype pulmonary arterial hypertension patients by using approaches that involve the pulmonary and systemic (peripheral) vasculature. In particular, abnormalities in metabolism, the pulmonary and peripheral circulation, and exhaled breath in PH may help identify phenotypes that can be the basis for a precision-medicine approach to PH management. These approaches may also have a broader scope and may contribute to a better understanding of other diseases, such as asthma, diabetes, and cancer.

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