The importance of clinically relevant background therapy in cardioprotective studies.
Zhenhe HeSean M DavidsonDerek M YellonPublished in: Basic research in cardiology (2020)
Treatment of acute myocardial infarct patients (AMI) includes rapid restoration of coronary blood flow and pharmacological therapy aimed to prevent pain and maintain vessel patency. Many interventions have been investigated to offer additional protection. One such intervention is remote ischaemic conditioning (RIC) involving short-episodes of ischaemia of the arm with a blood pressure cuff, followed by reperfusion to protect the heart organs from subsequent severe ischaemia. However, the recent CONDI2-ERIC-PPCI multicentre study of RIC in STEMI showed no benefit in clinical outcome in low risk patients. It could also be argued that these patients were already in a partially protected state, highlighting the disconnect between animal- and clinical-based outcome studies. To improve potential translatability, we developed an animal model using pharmacological agents similar to those given to patients presenting with an AMI, prior to PPCI. Rats underwent MI on a combined background of an opioid agonist, heparin and a platelet-inhibitor thereby allowing us to assess whether additional cardioprotective strategies had any effect over and above this "cocktail". We demonstrated that the "background drugs" were protective in their own right, reducing MI from 57.5 ± 3.7% to 37.3 ± 2.9% (n = 11, p < 0.001). On this background of drugs, RIC did not add any further protection (38.0 ± 3.4%). However, using a caspase inhibitor, which acts via a different mechanistic pathway to RIC, we were able to demonstrate additional protection (20.6 ± 3.3%). This concept provides initial evidence to develop models which can be used to evaluate future animal-to-clinical translation in cardioprotective studies.
Keyphrases
- end stage renal disease
- blood pressure
- chronic kidney disease
- ejection fraction
- newly diagnosed
- acute myocardial infarction
- chronic pain
- heart failure
- randomized controlled trial
- type diabetes
- peritoneal dialysis
- adipose tissue
- physical activity
- cell death
- patient reported outcomes
- atrial fibrillation
- aortic stenosis
- brain injury
- bone marrow
- hepatitis b virus
- risk assessment
- liver failure
- hypertensive patients
- acute coronary syndrome
- skeletal muscle
- induced apoptosis
- current status
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- human health
- sensitive detection
- cell therapy
- extracorporeal membrane oxygenation
- acute respiratory distress syndrome
- quantum dots
- st elevation myocardial infarction