Abstract Rationale Non-selective beta-blockers (BB) are the standard of care for variceal prophylaxis in patients with cirrhosis. It is unclear whether BB negatively affect exercise capacity in patients with portopulmonary hypertension (POPH) or hepatopulmonary syndrome (HPS). We hypothesize that BB use is associated with shorter six-minute walk distance (6MWD) in HPS and POPH than in patients without pulmonary vascular complications of liver disease. Methods The Pulmonary Vascular Complications of Liver Disease 2 (PVCLD2) Study enrolled patients evaluated for liver transplantation or pulmonary hypertension at eight U.S. centers (2013-2017). We conducted a retrospective analysis of 333 patients with HPS, POPH, and portal hypertension without lung complications to evaluate whether disease state modified the association of BB on 6MWD. Multivariable linear regression adjusted for a priori covariates including age, sex, body mass index (BMI), MELD-Na, and WHO functional class. An interaction term between disease category and BB use was included. Results We included 85 patients with HPS, 48 with POPH, and 200 patients with liver disease. Compared to liver disease controls, those with HPS were younger, had higher MELD-Na scores, and more often had worse WHO functional class. POPH patients were similar to controls in age and liver disease severity but had higher WHO functional class. Sex, BMI, and left ventricular ejection fraction did not differ significantly between groups. Higher age, BMI, MELD-Na, and WHO functional class were all significantly associated with lower 6MWD while male sex was associated with higher 6MWD. Adjusting for age, sex, BMI, MELD-Na score, and WHO functional class, there was a significant interaction between BB use and disease category (p = 0.024). Patients with HPS had a 53.4 m longer 6MWD with BB use (95% CI 4.21- 102.5, p = 0.03 for interaction) compared to liver disease controls, whereas patients with POPH had a 72.4 m longer 6MWD (95% CI 7.60- 137.2, p = 0.03 for interaction) compared to liver disease controls. Conclusion The association of BB with 6MWD in advanced liver disease appears to be modified by whether a person has a pulmonary vascular complication including HPS or POPH. The mechanisms for these differences and their clinical implications require further study. This abstract is funded by: NIH T32 Grant
Zou et al. (Fri,) studied this question.