Practice Point

Nature Clinical Practice Cardiovascular Medicine (2006) 3, 536-537
doi:10.1038/ncpcardio0675  
Received 13 June 2006 | Accepted 5 July 2006

Is sitaxsentan a safe and efficacious treatment for pulmonary arterial hypertension?

Marius M Hoeper

Correspondence Department of Respiratory Medicine, Hannover Medical School, 30623 Hannover, Germany

Email
 hoeper.marius@mh-hannover.de

This article has no abstract so we have provided the first paragraph of the full text.

Two decades ago, PAH was considered an untreatable disease. Today, endothelin-receptor antagonists (ERAs) together with prostanoids and phosphodiesterase-5 inhibitors are the mainstays of PAH treatment.1 So far only one ERA, bosentan, has been approved for clinical use, but at least two novel ERAs, sitaxsentan and ambrisentan, are expected to receive approval soon. A brief look into the biology of the endothelin system is required to understand the arguments surrounding the selectivity, superiority, and safety of these agents.

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