Does sotatercept improve clinical outcomes in patients with pulmonary arterial hypertension?
Sotatercept represents a major advance as a first-in-class disease-modifying therapy for PAH that targets vascular remodeling to improve hemodynamics and clinical outcomes.
Pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) is a progressive disease characterized by pulmonary vascular remodeling, right ventricular overload, and premature death. Despite advances achieved through endothelin receptor antagonists, phosphodiesterase type 5 inhibitors, and prostacyclin analogs, these agents primarily act as vasodilators and do not reverse underlying vascular pathology. Sotatercept, a first-in-class activin signaling modulator, restores the balance between pro- and antiproliferative signaling within the pulmonary vasculature via the TGF-β/activin-BMPR2 pathway, offering a novel disease-modifying mechanism. Following encouraging preclinical data, a series of clinical trials, PULSAR, SPECTRA, STELLAR, ZENITH, and HYPERION, demonstrated consistent efficacy across diverse PAH populations. Sotatercept significantly reduced pulmonary vascular resistance, improved exercise capacity, and decreased morbidity and mortality, including in patients receiving maximal background therapy. Across studies, adverse events were generally mild to moderate, with epistaxis, telangiectasia, and increased hemoglobin being the most common treatment-related events. Collectively, these findings establish sotatercept as a major advance in PAH therapy, marking a transition from purely vasodilatory approaches toward targeted modulation of vascular remodeling. By improving pulmonary hemodynamics and right ventricular function, sotatercept represents a new therapeutic option for improving clinical outcomes across different stages of PAH.
Salibe-Filho et al. (Mon,) studied this question.