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Plasma-Derived Hemopexin as a Candidate Therapeutic Agent for Acute Vaso-Occlusion in Sickle Cell Disease: Preclinical Evidence.

Thomas GentinettaJohn D BelcherValérie Brügger-VerdonJacqueline AdamTanja RuthsatzJoseph BainDaniel SchuLisa VentriciMonika EdlerHadi LioeKalpeshkumar PatelChunsheng ChenJulia NguyenFuad AbdullaPing ZhangAndreas WassmerMeena JainMarcel MischnikMatthias PelzingKirstee MartinRoslyn DavisSvetlana DidichenkoAlexander SchaubNathan BrinkmanEva HerzogAdrian ZürcherGregory M VercellottiGregory J KatoGerald Höbarth
Published in: Journal of clinical medicine (2022)
People living with sickle cell disease (SCD) face intermittent acute pain episodes due to vaso-occlusion primarily treated palliatively with opioids. Hemolysis of sickle erythrocytes promotes release of heme, which activates inflammatory cell adhesion proteins on endothelial cells and circulating cells, promoting vaso-occlusion. In this study, plasma-derived hemopexin inhibited heme-mediated cellular externalization of P-selectin and von Willebrand factor, and expression of IL-8, VCAM-1, and heme oxygenase-1 in cultured endothelial cells in a dose-responsive manner. In the Townes SCD mouse model, intravenous injection of free hemoglobin induced vascular stasis (vaso-occlusion) in nearly 40% of subcutaneous blood vessels visualized in a dorsal skin-fold chamber. Hemopexin administered intravenously prevented or relieved stasis in a dose-dependent manner. Hemopexin showed parallel activity in relieving vascular stasis induced by hypoxia-reoxygenation. Repeated IV administration of hemopexin was well tolerated in rats and non-human primates with no adverse findings that could be attributed to human hemopexin. Hemopexin had a half-life in wild-type mice, rats, and non-human primates of 80-102 h, whereas a reduced half-life of hemopexin in Townes SCD mice was observed due to ongoing hemolysis. These data have led to a Phase 1 clinical trial of hemopexin in adults with SCD, which is currently ongoing.
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