Background: The continuous infusion of prostacyclin has been shown to improve exercise capacity and survival in patients with primary pulmonary hypertension (PPH). Inhalation of iloprost, a stable analog of prostacyclin, might be an alternative therapy for PPH, selectively acting on the pulmonary vascular bed through ventilation-matched alveolar deposition of the drug. We investigated the short-term effects of iloprost inhalation on exercise capacity and gas exchange in patients with PPH.
Methods and results: In 11 patients with PPH, we performed 2 consecutive cardiopulmonary exercise tests before and after the inhalation of 17 microgram of iloprost. Patients had marked pulmonary hypertension (mean pulmonary artery pressure 65 mm Hg), and inhalation resulted in a decrease in pulmonary vascular resistance (1509 versus 1175 dyne. s(-1). cm(-5), P<0.05). Arterial blood gases remained unchanged (PaO(2) 69.3 versus 66.8 mm Hg; PaCO(2) 29.6 versus 28.8 mm Hg). Iloprost significantly (P<0.05) improved exercise duration (379 versus 438 seconds), peak oxygen uptake (12.8 versus 14.2 mL. kg(-1). min(-1)), VE-versus-V CO(2) slope (58 versus 51.4).
Conclusions: The present data show that iloprost inhalation exerts pulmonary vasodilatation and improves symptoms and exercise capacity in patients with PPH. The data also suggest that iloprost inhalation is a suitable treatment for PPH. Whether these effects are maintained during long-term treatment and are paralleled by improvement in prognosis remains to be determined.