Abstract

Intro: Recent World Symposium of Pulmonary Hypertension (WSPH) Group 1 data indicate significant racial and ethnic disparities in disease severity and mortality. It is unclear if these differences extend to other forms of PH and if they are a reflection of comorbidities. The PVDOMICS program incorporates deep phenotyping across all WSPH groups allowing for a first-time side-by-side comparison. The aims of this study are to evaluate inter-racial/ethnic factors of disease severity and comorbidities among patients with PH. Methods/Results: Participants in PVDOMICS prospectively underwent comprehensive testing for echocardiography, PFT, chest imaging, 6-minute walk, cardiac MRI, and hemodynamics with provocation. WSPH group assignment was assessed according to guideline recommendations. Race and ethnicity were self-reported. Statistical testing and sample sizes are described in the Table . In 692 PH participants, Non-Hispanic whites (NHW) were older and more often male than non-Hispanic African American (AA) and Hispanic patients. WSPH Group 1 was less but Groups 4 and 5 more common in AA than NHW. There were no inter-race/ethnicity differences in the percent of PH patients on PH therapy (range 53-63%, p=0.23). Comorbidities such as diabetes and lung disease were more common in AA vs. NHW. Hispanics showed lower left atrial (LA) volume on echo, LA filling pressures with exercise, as well as increased cardiac index relative to NHW. Right ventricular function on cardiac MRI was similar between groups ( Table ). When WSPH Group 1 was analyzed separately, inter-racial/ethnic comparisons were generally similar. Conclusions: Significant inter-racial/ethnic differences are evident across all WSPH groups. Comorbidities appear to drive part of the differences among AA patients while Hispanic patients exhibit factors that may prove beneficial. How these differences contribute to varying disease risk and outcomes across race and ethnicity remain to be seen.

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