Successful Early Immunosuppressive Therapy for Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension Due to Takayasu arteritis: Two Case Reports and a Review of Similar Case Reports in the English Literature.

Journal: Internal Medicine (Tokyo, Japan)
Published:
Abstract

The efficacy of early immunosuppressive therapy without invasive therapy, such as endovascular or surgical revascularization, for pulmonary hypertension due to Takayasu arteritis (TAK-PH) remains to be elucidated. We herein report two cases of TAK-PH due to pulmonary arteritis successfully treated with early immunosuppressive therapy. A literature review of 42 cases of TAK-PH with pulmonary artery involvement showed that the cases treated with immunosuppressive therapy early after the onset (within 12 months) had a higher erythrocyte sedimentation rate and better outcome without invasive therapy than those treated later. TAK-PH may be successfully treated with immunosuppressive therapy without invasive therapy when diagnosed early with high disease activity.