Science and Research

Intravenous treprostinil via an implantable pump in pediatric pulmonary arterial hypertension

Intravenous prostacyclin-based therapy improves survival in children with pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH), but is typically administered via an external infusion pump, which places a considerable burden on the patient. Implanted pumps may overcome some of the limitations of external pumps. We describe the first long-term use of an implanted pump for intravenous treprostinil delivery in a pediatric patient with PAH. Our patient was experiencing marked dyspnea on exertion despite triple combination therapy with bosentan, sildenafil, and inhaled iloprost. Parenteral prostacyclin-based therapy was discussed and the patient rejected options involving external pumps; she finally chose intravenous treprostinil delivery via an implanted pump (LENUS Pro(R); fixed flow rate; 20 ml reservoir). The patient underwent pump implantation in July 2012 (aged 14 years) under general anesthesia with no peri- or postoperative complications. She showed marked improvements in fatigue and dyspnea over the subsequent weeks, and her inhaled iloprost regimen was slowly decreased and stopped after six months. During follow-up, the pump showed an unexpected, progressive increase in flow rate that allowed a treprostinil dose of 170 ng/kg/min to be achieved, but at the cost of shortened intervals between refills. The pump was therefore replaced in August 2017 with a newer model with an adjustable flow rate (Siromedes(R)). A catheter dislocation was corrected under local anesthesia one week after the replacement surgery. The patient is currently receiving treprostinil 170 ng/kg/min with percutaneous refills every 12-13 days. Thus, implantable pumps might be a valuable alternative to external pumps for treprostinil infusion in pediatric PAH.

  • Desole, S.
  • Richter, M. J.
  • Heine, A.
  • Ewert, R.

Keywords

  • bridge to lung transplantation
  • implantable pump
  • pediatric pulmonary arterial hypertension
  • prostacyclin therapy
  • treprostinil
Publication details
DOI: 10.1177/2045894018788846
Journal: Pulm Circ
Pages: 2045894018788846 
Number: 1
Work Type: Original
Location: UGMLC
Disease Area: ROR, PH
Partner / Member: JLU
Access-Number: 29944075
See publication on PubMed

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