Abstract

The aim of this study was to evaluate New York Heart Association (NYHA) class and systolic pulmonary artery pressure (sPAP) as survival predictors in major interstitial lung diseases (ILD) including idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF), non-specific interstitial pneumonia (NSIP) and hypersensitivity pneumonitis (HP) and in other ILD like granulomatosis with polyangiitis (GPA). We analyzed survival, NYHA class, sPAP, and Octreoscan uptake index (UI) in 104 ILD patients (59 IPF, 19 NSIP, 10 HP and 16 GPA; median age 60.5 years) all referred to a single centre. Median survival was 68 months, with 1- and 2-year survival of 91% and 78%, respectively. Survival was lower among IPF and NSIP vs. HP and GPA patients (p=0.01). NYHA class 3-4 was more frequent among IPF (76.3%) vs. NSIP patients (31.6%; p<0.001). HP and GPA had NYHA class 1-2. NYHA class was negatively associated with survival (class 1=90.3 months vs. class 3=18.3 months and class 4=5.1 months; p=0.001). sPAP was >55 mmHg in 76.3% of patients with IPF and 35-55 mmHg in 63.2% of patients with NSIP. Patients with HP and GPA had sPAP < 55 mmHg. Among patients with IPF, NYHA and sPAP were negatively associated with survival (p<0.01) both showed a parallel trend. High-resolution computed tomography and survival were worse among IPF and NSIP vs. HP and GPA patients (p<0.001). Octreoscan UI was <10, 10-12, and >12 in IPF, NSIP, HP and GPA, respectively. Octreoscan UI was negatively associated with survival (p=0.002). NYHA class and sPAP are comparable ILD survival predictors. NYHA class is correlated with worse prognosis for IPF and NSIP vs. HP and GPA patients.

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