Metabolomic Differences in Connective Tissue Disease-Associated Versus Idiopathic Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension in the PVDOMICS Cohort

Arthritis Rheumatol. 2023 Dec;75(12):2240-2251. doi: 10.1002/art.42632. Epub 2023 Oct 30.

Abstract

Objective: Patients with connective tissue disease-associated pulmonary arterial hypertension (CTD-PAH) experience worse survival and derive less benefit from pulmonary vasodilator therapies than patients with idiopathic PAH (IPAH). We sought to identify differential metabolism in patients with CTD-PAH versus patients with IPAH that might underlie these observed clinical differences.

Methods: Adult participants with CTD-PAH (n = 141) and IPAH (n = 165) from the Pulmonary Vascular Disease Phenomics (PVDOMICS) study were included. Detailed clinical phenotyping was performed at cohort enrollment, including broad-based global metabolomic profiling of plasma samples. Participants were followed prospectively for ascertainment of outcomes. Supervised and unsupervised machine learning algorithms and regression models were used to compare CTD-PAH versus IPAH metabolomic profiles and to measure metabolite-phenotype associations and interactions. Gradients across the pulmonary circulation were assessed using paired mixed venous and wedged samples in a subset of 115 participants.

Results: Metabolomic profiles distinguished CTD-PAH from IPAH, with patients with CTD-PAH demonstrating aberrant lipid metabolism with lower circulating levels of sex steroid hormones and higher free fatty acids (FAs) and FA intermediates. Acylcholines were taken up by the right ventricular-pulmonary vascular (RV-PV) circulation, particularly in CTD-PAH, while free FAs and acylcarnitines were released. In both PAH subtypes, dysregulated lipid metabolites, among others, were associated with hemodynamic and RV measurements and with transplant-free survival.

Conclusions: CTD-PAH is characterized by aberrant lipid metabolism that may signal shifted metabolic substrate utilization. Abnormalities in RV-PV FA metabolism may imply a reduced capacity for mitochondrial beta oxidation within the diseased pulmonary circulation.

Publication types

  • Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural
  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Connective Tissue Diseases* / complications
  • Familial Primary Pulmonary Hypertension
  • Humans
  • Hypertension, Pulmonary* / complications
  • Phenomics
  • Pulmonary Arterial Hypertension* / complications
  • Vasodilator Agents / therapeutic use

Substances

  • Vasodilator Agents