Abstract

Chronic thromboembolic pulmonary hypertension (CTEPH) is characterized by pulmonary arterial obstructions that typically result from non-resolving fibrotic organized pulmonary thromboemboli, causing elevated pulmonary vascular resistance, progressive pulmonary hypertension and, eventually, right heart failure. In more than 50% of patients, particularly those with a history of venous thromboembolism, CTEPH is a ‘surgical disorder’ meaning that the treatment of choice is a pulmonary endarterectomy, which restores pulmonary hemodynamics in a great majority of patients. However, in a recent registry, 36.4% of patients in major European expert centers were classified as non-operable, mainly due to surgically inaccessible thrombi or unacceptably high risk for surgery in general. Because of the observation of a secondary pulmonary vascular disease in some patients, pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH)-targeted pharmacotherapies have been widely used in CTEPH patients – in up to 40% of patients in Europe – regar...

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