Authors
Michael D McGoon, Raymond L Benza, Pilar Escribano-Subias, Xin Jiang, Dave P Miller, Andrew J Peacock, Joanna Pepke-Zaba, Tomas Pulido, Stuart Rich, Stephan Rosenkranz, Samy Suissa, Marc Humbert
Publication date
2013/12/24
Source
Journal of the American College of Cardiology
Volume
62
Issue
25S
Pages
D51-D59
Publisher
American College of Cardiology Foundation
Description
Registries of patients with pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) have been instrumental in characterizing the presentation and natural history of the disease and provide a basis for prognostication. Since the initial accumulation of data conducted in the 1980s, subsequent registry databases have yielded information about the demographic factors, treatment, and survival of patients and have permitted comparisons between populations in different eras and environments. Inclusion of patients with all subtypes of PAH has also allowed comparisons of these subpopulations. We describe herein the basic methodology by which PAH registries have been conducted, review key insights provided by registries, summarize issues related to interpretation and comparison of the results, and discuss the utility of data to predict survival outcomes. Potential sources of bias, particularly related to the inclusion of incident and/or …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
MD McGoon, RL Benza, P Escribano-Subias, X Jiang… - Journal of the American College of Cardiology, 2013