From the Journals

Phosphodiesterase-5 inhibitors often prescribed inappropriately


 

FROM ANNALS OF THE AMERICAN THORACIC SOCIETY


The 1,711 PH patients classified as being treated inappropriately in the study translated into a cost of over $20 million, if each patient were treated for only 1 year, but many of the patients were treated for a longer period of time.

The researchers suggested that there were several reasons why clinicians might choose to deviate from the guidelines, including lacking familiarity with them or disagreeing with them.

“While guidelines do allow trials of PDE5i in treatment for groups 2 or 3 PH on a case-by-case basis after consultation with a PH expert and a confirmatory [right heart catheterization], even PH experts disagree about whether a trial of PDE5i therapy is reasonable and appropriate for patients with group 3 PH,” they wrote.

They may also overestimate the potential benefits of treatment and/or underestimate potential harm.

Clinicians may believe that guidelines developed for a general population do not apply to the patients they are treating.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Pharmacomechanical thrombolysis does not reduce post-thrombotic syndrome risk
MDedge Cardiology
Phrenic-nerve stimulator maintains benefits for 18 months
MDedge Cardiology
Pulmonary hypertension treatment gets under the skin
MDedge Cardiology
Acute kidney injury linked with doubled inpatient VTEs
MDedge Cardiology
First month of LABA/LAMA ups cardiovascular risk
MDedge Cardiology
Influenza: All that and MI too
MDedge Cardiology
FDA approves implantable therapy for PAH
MDedge Cardiology
OSA may provide cardioprotection
MDedge Cardiology
Adenotonsillectomy reduced hypertension in OSA subgroup
MDedge Cardiology
NIAID proposes 3-pronged plan for universal influenza vaccine
MDedge Cardiology