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Posts Tagged ‘Heart disease’

Heart Vasculature – Regeneration and Protection of Coronary Artery Endothelium and Smooth Muscle: A Concept-based Pharmacological Therapy of a Combination Three Drug Regimen including THYMOSIN 

Author & Curator: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

 

ABSTRACT

A concept-based original pharmacological therapy was developed for the research results presented in Cell by Wu, Fujiwara, Cibulsky et al. (2006), Moretti, Caron, Nakano, et al. (2006) and for the research results in Nature by Smart, Risebro, Melville, et al. (2007). We propose the following concept-based original pharmacological therapy design for Preoperative and Postoperative management of cardiac injury to heart tissue, smooth muscle, to aorta and coronary artery disease. This is a treatment for Coronary Vasculogenesis, Anti-hypertention (short-acting), Vascular Anti-inflammation (vasculitis), Neovascularization of ischemic tissue and release of adult epicardium from a quiescent state while restoring its pluripotency.

VIEW VIDEO

What are Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells? (iPS Cells)

 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i-QSurQWZo0

Lasker Lecture: Dr. Shinya Yamanaka, 2 of 3:

Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells? (iPS Cells)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DQNoyDwCPzM

Multipotent Embryonic Isl1^+ Progenitor Cells Lead to Cardiac, Smooth Muscle, and Endothelial Cell Diversification

Alessandra A MorettiLeslie L CaronAtsushi A NakanoJason T JT LamAlexandra A Bernshausen,Yinhong Y ChenYibing Y QyangLei L BuMika M SasakiSilvia S Martin-PuigYunfu Y SunSylvia M SM EvansKarl-Ludwig KL LaugwitzKenneth R KR Chien
Cell 127(6):15 (2006), PMID 17123592

Cardiogenesis requires the generation of endothelial, cardiac, and smooth muscle cells, thought to arise from distinct embryonic precursors. We use genetic fate-mapping studies to document that isl1^+ precursors from the second heart field can generate each of these diverse cardiovascular cell types in vivo. Utilizing embryonic stem (ES) cells, we clonally amplified a cellular hierarchy of isl1^+ cardiovascular progenitors, which resemble the developmental precursors in the embryonic heart. The transcriptional signature of isl1^+/Nkx2.5^+/flk1^+ defines a multipotent cardiovascular progenitor, which can give rise to cells of all three lineages. These studies document a developmental paradigm for cardiogenesis, where muscle and endothelial lineage diversification arises from a single cell-level decision of a multipotent isl1^+ cardiovascular progenitor cell (MICP). The discovery of ES cell-derived MICPs suggests a strategy for cardiovascular tissue regeneration via their isolation, renewal, and directed differentiation into specific mature cardiac, pacemaker, smooth muscle, and endothelial cell types.

http://pubget.com/paper/17123592/Multipotent_Embryonic_Isl1___Progenitor_Cells_Lead_to_Cardiac__Smooth_Muscle__and_Endothelial_Cell_Diversification

 

Thymosin beta 4 (Tβ4)

is a highly conserved, 43-amino acid acidic peptide (pI 4.6) that was first isolated from bovine thymus tissue over 25 years ago. It is present in most tissues and cell lines and is found in high concentrations in blood platelets, neutrophils, macrophages, and other lymphoid tissues. Tβ4 has numerous physiological functions, the most prominent of which being the regulation of actin polymerization in mammalian nucleated cells and with subsequent effects on actin cytoskeletal organization, necessary for cell motility, organogenesis, and other important cellular events.

Recently,

  • Tβ4 was shown to be expressed in the developing heart and found to stimulate migration of cardiomyocytes and endothelial cells, promote survival of cardiomyocytes (Nature, 2004), and most recently
  • to play an essential role in all key stages of cardiac vessel development: vasculogenesis, angiogenesis, and arteriogenesis (Nature 2006).
  • These results suggest that Tβ4 may have significant therapeutic potential in humans to protect myocardium and promote cardiomyocyte survival in the acute stages of ischemic heart disease.

RegeneRx Biopharmaceuticals, Inc. is developing Tβ4 for the treatment of patients with acute myocardial infarction (AMI). Such efforts presented will include the formulation, development, and manufacture of a suitable drug product for use in the clinic, the performance of nonclinical pharmacology and toxicology studies, and the implementation of a phase 1 clinical protocol to assess the safety, tolerability, and the pharmacokinetics of Tβ4 in healthy volunteers.

http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1196/annals.1415.051/abstract;jsessionid=BB7CC897572B7DDB60370EA64A81FC3F.d01t03?deniedAccessCustomisedMessage=&userIsAuthenticated=false

EXPLORATIONS with THYMOSIN beta4 for INDUCING ADULT EPICARDIAL PROGENETOR MOBILIZATION AND NEOVASCULARIZATION is presented in

Resident-cell-based Therapy in Human Ischaemic Heart Disease: Evolution in the PROMISE of Thymosin beta4 for Cardiac Repair

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/04/30/93/

EXPLORATIONS with THYMOSIN beta4 for INDUCTION of ARTERIOGENESIS, Prevention and repair of damaged cardiac tissue post MI and other CVD related research projects are presented in

Arteriogenesis and Cardiac Repair: Two Biomaterials – Injectable Thymosin beta4 and Myocardial Matrix Hydrogel

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/02/27/arteriogenesis-and-cardiac-repair-two-biomaterials-injectable-thymosin-beta4-and-myocardial-matrix-hydrogel/

Recent research results with THYMOSIN beta4 in use for Cardiovascular Disease

appeared in 2010:

Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, May 2010 Volume 1194 Pages ix–xi, 1–230

http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/nyas.2010.1194.issue-1/issuetoc

appeared in 2012:

  • Thymosins in Health and Disease II: 3rd International Symposium on The Emerging Clinical Applications of Tymosin beta 4 in Cardiovascular Disease

Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, October 2012 Volume 1270 Pages vii-ix, 1–121.

http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/nyas.2012.1270.issue-1/issuetoc

Allan L. Goldstein, Enrico Garaci, Editors, Thymosins in Cardiovascular Disease, November 2012, Wiley-Blackwell (paperback)

http://www.wiley.com/WileyCDA/WileyTitle/productCd-1573319104.html?cid=RSS_WILEY2_LIFEMED

Selected for this article are the abstracts of the following research projects, all were presented at the 2nd International Symposium, May 2010:

Thymosin β4: structure, function, and biological properties supporting current and future clinical applications

Published studies have described a number of physiological properties and cellular functions of thymosin β4 (Tβ4), the major G-actin-sequestering molecule in mammalian cells. Those activities include the promotion of cell migration, blood vessel formation, cell survival, stem cell differentiation, the modulation of cytokines, chemokines, and specific proteases, the upregulation of matrix molecules and gene expression, and the downregulation of a major nuclear transcription factor. Such properties have provided the scientific rationale for a number of ongoing and planned dermal, corneal, cardiac clinical trials evaluating the tissue protective, regenerative and repair potential of Tβ4, and direction for future clinical applications in the treatment of diseases of the central nervous system, lung inflammatory disease, and sepsis. A special emphasis is placed on the development of Tβ4 in the treatment of patients with ST elevation myocardial infarction in combination with percutaneous coronary intervention, pp.179-189, May 2010.

  

Thymosin β4 and cardiac repair

Hypoxic heart disease is a predominant cause of disability and death worldwide. As adult mammals are incapable of cardiac repair after infarction, the discovery of effective methods to achieve myocardial and vascular regeneration is crucial. Efforts to use stem cells to repopulate damaged tissue are currently limited by technical considerations and restricted cell potential. We discovered that the small, secreted peptide thymosin β4 (Tβ4) could be sufficiently used to inhibit myocardial cell death, stimulate vessel growth, and activate endogenous cardiac progenitors by reminding the adult heart on its embryonic program in vivo. The initiation of epicardial thickening accompanied by increase of myocardial and epicardial progenitors with or without infarction indicate that the reactivation process is independent of injury. Our results demonstrate Tβ4 to be the first known molecule able to initiate simultaneous myocardial and vascular regeneration after systemic administration in vivo. Given our findings, the utility of Tβ4 to heal cardiac injury may hold promise and warrant further investigation, pp. 87-96, May 2010.

 

Thymosin β4 facilitates epicardial neovascularization of the injured adult heart

Ischemic heart disease complicated by coronary artery occlusion causes myocardial infarction (MI), which is the major cause of morbidity and mortality in humans

http://www.who.int/cardiovascular_diseases/resources/atlas/en/index.html

After MI the human heart has an impaired capacity to regenerate and, despite the high prevalence of cardiovascular disease worldwide, there is currently only limited insight into how to stimulate repair of the injured adult heart from its component parts. Efficient cardiac regeneration requires the replacement of lost cardiomyocytes, formation of new coronary blood vessels, and appropriate modulation of inflammation to prevent maladaptive remodeling, fibrosis/scarring, and consequent cardiac dysfunction. Here we show that thymosin β4 (Tβ4) promotes new vasculature in both the intact and injured mammalian heart. We demonstrate that limited EPDC-derived endothelial-restricted neovascularization constitutes suboptimal “endogenous repair,” following injury, which is significantly augmented by Tβ4 to increase and stabilize the vascular plexus via collateral vessel growth. As such, we identify Tβ4 as a facilitator of cardiac neovascularization and highlight adult EPDCs as resident progenitors which, when instructed by Tβ4, have the capacity to sustain the myocardium after ischemic damage, pp. 97-104, May 2010.

 

Thymosin β4: a key factor for protective effects of eEPCs in acute and chronic ischemia

Acute myocardial infarction is still one of the leading causes of death in the industrial nations. Even after successful revascularization, myocardial ischemia results in a loss of cardiomyocytes and scar formation. Embryonic EPCs (eEPCs), retroinfused into the ischemic region of the pig heart, provided rapid paracrine benefit to acute and chronic ischemia in a PI-3K/Akt-dependent manner. In a model of acute myocardial ischemia, infarct size and loss of regional myocardial function decreased after eEPC application, unless cell pre-treatment with thymosin β4 shRNA was performed. Thymosin ß4 peptide retroinfusion mimicked the eEPC-derived improvement of infarct size and myocardial function. In chronic ischemia (rabbit model), eEPCs retroinfused into the ischemic hindlimb enhanced capillary density, collateral growth, and perfusion. Therapeutic neovascularization was absent when thymosin ß4 shRNA was introduced into eEPCs before application. In conclusion, eEPCs are capable of acute and chronic ischemia protection in a thymosin ß4 dependent manner, pp. 105-111, May 2010.

Clinical Study Data of Thymosin beta 4 Presented

Published on October 3, 2009 at 5:10 AM

REGENERX BIOPHARMACEUTICALS, INC. (NYSE Amex:RGN) today reported on several clinical studies with Thymosin beta 4 (Tβ4) presented the Second International Symposium on Thymosins in Health and Disease, in Catania, Italy. The following are synopses of the presentations:

Myocardial Development of RGN-352 (Injectable Tβ4 Peptide)

David Crockford, RegeneRx’s vice president for clinical and regulatory affairs presented an overview of the biological properties that support Tβ4’s near term and long term clinical applications. Mr. Crockford noted that special emphasis is being placed on the development of RGN-352 for the systemic (injectable) treatment of patients with ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) in combination with percutaneous coronary intervention, the current standard of care in most western countries for this common type of heart attack. The goal with RGN-352 is to prevent or repair continued damage to cardiac tissue post-heart attack, when such tissue around the damaged site remains at risk.

Dr. Dennis Ruff, vice president and medical director of ICON, and principal investigator, presented the most current results on the Phase I safety study with RGN-352 entitled, “A Randomized, Double-blind, Placebo-controlled, Dose-response Phase I Study of the Safety and Tolerability of the Intravenous Administration of Thymosin Beta 4 and its Pharmacokinetics After Single and Multiple Doses in Healthy Volunteers.” Dr. Ruff discussed key aspects of the study and concluded with, “There were no dose limiting or serious adverse events throughout the dosing period. Synthetic Tβ4 administered intravenously up to 1260 mg, and for up to 14 days, appears to be well tolerated with low incidence of adverse events and no evidence of serious adverse events.”

http://www.news-medical.net/news/20091003/Clinical-study-data-of-Thymosin-beta-4-presented.aspx

RegeneRx Receives Notice of Allowance from Chinese Patent Office for Treatment and Prevention of Heart Disease

RegeneRx Receives Notice of Allowance from Chinese Patent Office for Treatment and Prevention of Heart Disease

February 7, 2013 — Rockville, MD

RegeneRx Biopharmaceuticals, Inc. (OTC Bulletin Board: RGRX) (“the Company” or “RegeneRx”) today announced that it has received a Notice of Allowance of a Chinese patent application for uses of Thymosin beta 4 (TB4) for treating, preventing, inhibiting or reducing heart tissue deterioration, injury or damage in a subject with heart failure disease. Claims also include uses for restoring heart tissue in those subjects. The patent will expire July 26, 2026 http://www.regenerx.com/wt/page/pr_1360265259

Theoretical treatment protocol differential between the Preoperative which may be between 3 to 6 month, and the Postoperative which may prolong to one year.

Proposal for Preoperative Treatment – Three drug combination involves

  • Drug # 1: Thymosin fraction 5 (a sublingual composition)
  • Drug # 2: Indomethacin (Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAID))
  • Drug # 3: Clevidipine (blood pressure lowering drug, (no effect on heart rate))

 

Proposal for Postoperative Treatment – Three drug combination consists of

  • Drug # 1: Thymosin fraction 5 (a sublingual composition)
  • Drug # 4: ACEI (Captopril (50mg))
  • Drug # 5: Beta Blocker and Diuretic (Metoprolol and hydrochlorothiazide (50 mg/25 mg)) Lopressor HCT

Unprecedented novel paradigm development in the scientific understanding of the origin of

  • (a) myocardial cells
  • (b) smooth muscle cells
  • (c) endothelial cells
  • (d) pace maker cells and
  • (e) heart vasculature: aorta, pulmonary artery and coronary arteries, occurred in 2006.

In a seminal article in Cell, “Developmental Origin of a Bipotential Myocardial and Smooth Muscle Cell Precursor in the Mammalian Heart” Wu, et al., (2006), described their discovery as follows:

“Despite recent advances in delineating the mechanisms involved in cardiogenesis, cellular lineage specification remains incompletely understood.” To explore the relationship between developmental fate and potential.” They “isolated a cardiac-specific Nkx2.5+ cell population from the developing mouse embryo. The majority of these cells differentiated into cardiomyocytes and conduction system cells. Some, surprisingly, adopted a smooth muscle fate. To address the clonal origin of these lineages, we isolated Nkx2.5+ cells from in vitro differentiated murine embryonic stem cells and found ~28% of these cells expressed c-kit. These c-kit+ cells possessed the capacity for long-term in vitro expansion and differentiation into both cardiomyocytes and smooth muscle cells from a single cell.” They “confirmed these findings by isolating c-kit+Nkx2.5+ cells from mouse embryos and demonstrated their capacity for bipotential differentiation in vivo. Taken together, these results support the existence of a common precursor for cardiovascular lineages in the mammalian heart.”

Another breakthrough article in Cell, “Multipotent Embryonic Isl1+ Progenitor Cells Lead to Cardiac, Smooth Muscle, and Endothelial Cell Diversification” Moretti, et al., (2006) described their discovery as follows:

“Cardiogenesis requires the generation of endothelial, cardiac, and smooth muscle cells, thought to arise from distinct embryonic precursors.” They “use genetic fate-mapping studies to document that isl1+ precursors from the second heart field can generate each of these diverse cardiovascular cell types in vivo. Utilizing embryonic stem (ES) cells”, they “clonally amplified a cellular hierarchy of isl1+ cardiovascular progenitors, which resemble the developmental precursors in the embryonic heart. The transcriptional signature of isl1+/Nkx2.5+/flk1+ defines a multipotent cardiovascular progenitor, which can give rise to cells of all three lineages. These studies document a developmental paradigm for cardiogenesis, where muscle and endothelial lineage diversification arises from a single cell-level decision of a multipotent isl1+ cardiovascular progenitor cell (MICP). The discovery of ES cell-derived MICPs suggests a strategy for cardiovascular tissue regeneration via their isolation, renewal, and directed differentiation into specific mature cardiac, pacemaker, smooth muscle, and endothelial cell types.” (Moretti, et al., 2006).

Third scientific breakthrough was reported in Nature on the roles that Thymosin beta4 play in

  • (a) coronary vessel development
  • (b) induction of adult epicardial cell migration
  • (c) cardiomyocyte survival by vascularization which is dependent on Thymosin beta4 and
  • (d) identification of the pro-angiogenic tetrapeptide AcSDKP which is produced by endoproteinase activity of Thymosin beta4 (Smart, et al., 2007).

That new level of understanding has the potential to generate new pharmaco therapies to upregulate biological processes that underlie the function of the various compartments of the cardiovascular system, as new scientific explanations became available in 2006.

We have developed a methodology for discovery of concept-based original pharmacological therapy designs for combination of several drug regimens. We carry out two types of research strategy. Methodology Strategy Type One: we develop an original pharmacological therapy design specialized in addressing medical problems identified in targeted follow up studies on mortality and morbidity of cardiovascular patients. Methodology Strategy Type One is implemented in Lev-Ari & Abourjaily (2006a, 2006b, 2006c). We designed a specialized pharmaco therapy for the research results presented in NEJM, on “Circulating Endothelial Progenitor Cells and Cardiovascular Outcomes” (Werner, Kosiol, Schiegl, et al., 2005a) and the editorial interpretation of these research results by Rosenzweig  (2005). We proposed the following concept-based original pharmacological therapy design for Endogenous Augmentation of circulating Endothelial Progenitor Cells for Reduction of Risk for Macrovascular Cardiac Events.

 

Proposal of Treatment – Three drug combination

  • Inhibition of ET-1, ETA and ETA-ETB (Bosentan)
  • Induction of NO production and stimulation of eNOS (Nebivolol)
  • Stimulation of PPAR-gamma (substitute to Rosiglitazone)

Our Methodology Strategy Type Two involves discovery of concept-based original pharmacological therapy design for combination of several drug regimens for underlying biological processes discovered in the pursuit of basic researchers conducted in wet lab experiments by vascular biologists and molecular cardiologists. Here, we developed a concept-based original pharmacological therapy for the research results presented in Cell by Wu, Fujiwara, Cibulsky et al. (2006), Moretti, Caron, Nakano, et al. (2006) and for the research results in Nature by Smart, Risebro, Melville, et al. (2007). We propose the following concept-based original pharmacological therapy design for Preoperative and Postoperative management of cardiac injury to heart tissue, smooth muscle and to aorta and coronary artery disease. This is a treatment for Coronary Vasculogenesis, Anti-hypertention (short-acting), Vascular Anti-inflammation (vasculitis), Neovascularization of ischemic tissue and release of adult epicardium from a quiescent state and restoring its pluripotency.

 

Proposal for Preoperative Treatment – Three drug combination

  • Drug # 1:

Thymosin fraction 5 (a sublingual composition)

  • Drug # 2:

Indomethacin (Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAID))

  • Drug # 3:

Clevidipine (blood pressure lowering drug, no effect on heart rate)

Proposal for Postoperative Treatment – Three drugs combination

  • Drug # 1:

Thymosin fraction 5 (a sublingual composition)

  • Drug # 4:

ACEI (Captopril (50mg))

  • Drug # 5:

HCTBeta Blocker and Diuretic (Metoprolol and hydrochlorothiazide (50 mg/25 mg)) Lopressor

 

Thymosin beta4 Induces Adult Epicardial Progenitor Mobilization and Neovascularization

 

Smart et al. (2007) implicate Thymosine beta4 (Tb4) with the following functions: (a) Tb4 in regulating all three key stages of cardiac vessel development: coronary vasculogenesis, angiogenesis and arteriogenesis – collateral growth; (b) identify the adult epicardium as a potential source of vascular progenitors which, when stimulated by Tb4, migrate and differentiate into smooth muscle and endothelial cells; (c) the ability of Tb4 to promote coronary vascularization both during development and in the adult, enhances cardiomyocyte survival and contributes significantly towards Tb4-induced cardioprotection.

The reaction in the scientific community to these investigative results was most favorable.

“These results are very exciting because most humans suffering from ischemic cardiac events, either acutely or chronically, do not develop the collateral vessel growth necessary to preserve and restore heart tissue. If, in humans, we see the same effects as seen in mice, TB4 would be the first drug to prevent loss of (heart) muscle cells and restore blood flow in this manner and provide a new and much needed treatment modality for these patients,”

commented Deepak Srivastava, M.D., Professor and Director, Gladstone Institute of Cardiovascular Disease, University of California San Francisco, CA. Dr. Srivastava and his colleagues published the first paper on TB4’s effects on myocardial infarction in Nature in November 2004.

http://phx.corporate-ir.net/phoenix.zhtml?c=144396&p=irol-newsArticle&ID=932573&highlight=

VIEW VIDEO

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vjj7LSuSMAo

 

Review of the Chemistry and the Mechanism of action supporting the process by which, N-acetyl-seryl-aspartyl-lysyl- proline (Ac-SDKP) stimulates endothelial cell differentiation from adult epicardium, is presented in

Resident-cell-based Therapy in Human Ischaemic Heart Disease: Evolution in the PROMISE of Thymosin beta4 for Cardiac Repair

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/04/30/93/

A Concept-based Pharmacologic Therapy of a Combined Three Drug Regimen for Regeneration and Protection of Coronary Artery Endothelium and Smooth Muscle.

This is a treatment for Coronary Vasculogenesis, Anti-hypertention (short-acting), Vascular Anti-inflammation (vasculitis), Neovascularization of ischemic tissue and release of adult epicardium from a quiescent state and restoring its pluripotency.

 

Preoperative Treatment – Three drugs

  • Drug # 1:
  • Thymosin fraction 5 (a sublingual composition)
  • Drug # 2:
  • Indomethacin (Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAID)) (25 mg PO bid)
  • Drug # 3:
  • Clevidipine (Blood pressure lowering drug, no effect on heart rate)

 

Postoperative Treatment – Three drugs

  • Drug # 1:
  • Thymosin fraction 5 (a sublingual composition)
  • Drug # 4:
  • ACEI (Captopril (50mg))
  • Drug # 5:
  • Beta Blocker and diuretic (Metoprolol and hydrochlorothiazide (50 mg/25 mg)) Lopressor HCT

Original Drug Therapy Combination Proposed

Drug # 1: Thymosin fraction 5

Drug # 2: Indomethacin

Drug # 3: Clevidipine

Drug # 1:

Sublingual compositions comprising Thymosin fraction 5

United States Patent:  6,733,791

http://www.pharmcast.com/Patents100/Yr2004/May2004/051104/6733791_Sublingual051104.htm

http://www.google.com/patents/US6733791

The compositions comprise a room temperature stable peptide or complex of peptides that may be administered in a dosage of between 0.0001 mg/ml or gm and 600 mg/ml or gm.

Thymosin beta4 is released from human blood platelets and attached by factor XIIIa (transglutaminase) to fibrin and collagen (Huff et al. 2002). They suggest that Thymosin beta4 cross-linking is mediated by factor XIIIa, a transglutaminase that is co-released from stimulated platelets. This provides a mechanism to increase the local concentration of Thymosin beta4 near sites of clots and tissue damage, where it may contribute to wound healing, angiogenesis and inflammatory responses (Al-Nedawi, et al., 2004). The beta-Thymosins constitute a family of highly conserved and extremely water-soluble 5 kDa polypeptides. Thymosin beta4 is the most abundant member; it is expressed in most cell types and is regarded as the main intracellular G-actin sequestering peptide. There is increasing evidence for extracellular functions of Thymosin beta4. For example, Thymosin beta4 increases the rate of attachment and spreading of endothelial cells on matrix components and stimulates the migration of human umbilical vein endothelial cells. They show that Thymosin beta4 can be cross-linked to proteins such as fibrin and collagen by tissue transglutaminase. Thymosin beta4 is not cross-linked to many other proteins and its cross-linking to fibrin is competed by another family member, Thymosin beta10 (Huff et al. 2002).

Rationale for selection of Sublingual compositions comprising Thymosin fraction 5

The actin binding motif of Thymosin beta4 is an essential site for its angiogenic activity (Philip, et al. (2003). Thymosin beta4 is presented in Smart, et al. (2007) in the Nature article as a single factor that can potentially couple myocardial and coronary vascular regeneration in failing mouse hearts. They have shown that cells in the heart’s outer layer can migrate deeper into a failing organ to carry out essential repairs. The migration of progenitor cells is controlled by the protein Thymosin beta 4, already known to help reduce muscle cell loss after a heart attack.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/health/6143286.stm

The discovery opens up the possibility of using the protein to develop more effective treatments for heart disease. Previously it was thought that cells within the adult heart are in a state of permanent rest and that any progenitor cells that can contribute to heart tissue repair travel into the heart from the bone marrow. See 150 references on that perspective on cEPCs origin and roles, which was the scientific frontier on this topic, prior to the publication of Smart et al., (2007), in Lev-Ari & Abourjaily (2006a, 2006b, 2006c).

However, researchers at University College London have demonstrated that beneficial cells actually reside in the heart itself (Smart et al. (2007). This approach would bypass the risk of immune system rejection, a major problem with the use of stem cell transplants from another source. Allogenic rejection was the main reason for the selection of an endogenous augmentation method for cEPCs using drug therapy by Lev-Ari & Abourjaily  (2006a, 2006b, 2006c). Closer examination revealed that without the Thymosin beta 4 protein, the progenitor cells failed to move deeper into the heart and change the cells needed to build healthy blood vessels and sustain muscle tissue.

http://www.irishhealth.com/clin/cholesterol/newsstory.php?id=10581

Drug # 2:

Indomethacin

Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) are widely used for their anti-inflammatory effects and have been shown to have chemopreventive effects as well. NSAIDs inhibit cyclooxygenase (COX) activity to exert their anti-inflammatory effects, but it is not clear whether their antitumorigenic ability is through COX inhibition. Using subtractive hybridization, Jain et al. (2004) identified a novel member of the transforming growth factor- superfamily that has antitumorigenic activity from Indomethacin-treated HCT-116 human colorectal cancer cells. On further investigation of this library, they now report the identification of a new cDNA corresponding to the Thymosin beta-4 gene. Thymosin beta-4 is a small peptide that is known for its actin-sequestering function, and it is associated with the induction of angiogenesis, accelerated wound healing, and metastatic potential of tumor cells. However, only selective NSAIDs induce Thymosin beta-4 expression in a time- and concentration-dependent manner. For example,

Indomethacin and SC-560 [5-(4-chlorophenyl)-1-(4-methoxyphenyl)-3-(trifluoromethyl)-1H-pyrazole] induce Thymosin beta-4 expression whereas sulindac sulfide does not.

They show that selective NSAIDs induce actin cytoskeletal reorganization, a precursory step to many dynamic processes regulating growth and motility including tumorigenesis. This is the first report to link Thymosin beta-4 induction with NSAIDs. These data suggest that NSAIDs alter the expression of a diverse number of genes and provide new insights into the chemopreventive and biological activity of these drugs (Jain et al. 2004).

Rationale for Indomethacin selection

 

Inhibitor of prostaglandin synthesis. Inhibits cyclooxygenase (COX) 1 selective.

Suggested dosage: 25 mg PO bid.

Jain et al. (2004) report a link between Thymosin beta-4 induction with NSAIDs. We selected both drugs (drug classes) and anticipate strong synergistic therapeutic effects.

Drug # 3:

Clevidipine

Clevidipine is the first third-generation calcium channel blocker, Dr. Papadakos said. It has what he called an “ultrashort” clinically relevant half-life of about one minute and then is rapidly metabolized. The effect on blood pressure is seen within one to two minutes.

http://www.medpagetoday.com/MeetingCoverage/SCCM/tb/5091

Clevidipine is an investigational agent undergoing late-stage clinical development to evaluate its potential as an innovative, targeted, fast acting intravenous product under investigation for lowering blood pressure before, during and after surgery.

http://www.themedicinescompany.com/products_Clevidipine.shtml

The Medicines Company entered into agreements with AstraZeneca PLC in March of 2002 for the development, licensing and commercialization of Clevidipine. If approved, the product could be an excellent fit with The Medicines Company’s emerging acute cardiovascular care franchise, which is led by Angiomax® (bivalirudin), an anticoagulant approved in the U.S. and other countries for use during coronary angioplasty procedures. If Clevidipine passes further clinical hurdles — phase III trials are under way — the drug may form a useful addition to the medications available to physicians in the perioperative setting

Mechanism of Action

Clevidipine belongs to a well-known class of drugs called dihydropyridine calcium channel antagonists. In vitro studies demonstrated that Clevidipine acts by selectively relaxing the smooth muscle cells that line small arteries, resulting in widening of the artery opening and reducing blood pressure within the artery (Levy, Huraux, Nordlander, 1997, 345-358).

Phase III Clinical Trials

The Medicines Company is currently sponsoring a Phase III clinical program of five studies to evaluate safety and efficacy of Clevidipine:

Early Development

The Medicines Company’s development program for Clevidipine follows upon the data sets generated by AstraZeneca, which completed clinical pharmacology, dose-finding and efficacy studies in almost 300 patients or volunteers. In clinical studies, Clevidipine has shown to provide the desired blood pressure lowering effect without causing an increase in heart rate (Kotrly, et al. 1984). Further studies demonstrate that reductions in blood pressure are dose-dependent, are not associated with an increase in heart rate and cease rapidly after stopping Clevidipine infusions (Ericsson, et al., 2000), (Schwieler, et al., 1999). In clinical studies Clevidipine was rapidly metabolized independent of the liver and the kidneys, allowing rapid clearance of the drug from the bloodstream (Ericsson, et al., 1999a), (Ericsson, et al., 1999b). Therefore, the effects of Clevidipine are short-lived, which translates into a rapid cessation of its effect on reducing blood pressure.

The two efficacy studies are known as ESCAPE-1 and ESCAPE-2. The primary objective of these studies is to determine the efficacy of Clevidipine injection versus placebo in treating pre-operative (ESCAPE-1) and post-operative (ESCAPE-2) high blood pressure. Three safety studies are collectively known as ECLIPSE. The primary objective is to establish the safety of Clevidipine in the treatment of perioperative high blood pressure, as measured by a comparison of the incidences of death, stroke, myocardial infarction and renal dysfunction between the Clevidipine and comparative treatment groups. The comparative treatments are nitroglycerin, sodium nitroprusside and nicardipine.  The ECLIPSE trial randomized 589 patients at 40 centers in the U.S. to get either sodium nitroprusside or Clevidipine. Sodium nitroprusside was administered according to institutional practice; Clevidipine was begun at 2 mg/kg and doubled every 90 seconds until blood pressure was lowered. The primary endpoint was the difference in major clinical events — death, myocardial infarction, stroke, and renal dysfunction 30 days after surgery. The secondary endpoint was blood pressure control during the first 24 hours after surgery.

The study showed no significant differences in the elements of the primary endpoint, except for mortality, Dr. Papadakos said, where 1.7% of Clevidipine patients died, compared with 4.7 of those getting sodium nitroprusside.  The difference was statistically significant at P<0.05, but Dr. Papadakos characterized the improvement as “slight.” On the other hand, the drug did show an important difference in blood pressure control over the first 24 hours, he said:

  • Patients on Clevidipine spent an average of 4.37 minutes per hour outside the desired blood pressure range.
  • Sodium nitroprusside patients spent, on average, 10.5 minutes per hour outside the desired range.
  • The difference was statistically significant at P<0.003.

Dr. Papadakos concluded that Clevidipine is a new drug that is effective, safe, and easy to use. On 2/20/2007, Dr. Deutschman, who moderated the late-breaking session at which Dr. Papadakos spoke, said that a better comparison, would be intravenous nicardipine (Cardene IV), a second-generation calcium channel blocker that is also in wide use and is considered the standard of care. “We don’t know yet if this drug is going to be better than nicardipine,” he said.

http://www.medpagetoday.com/MeetingCoverage/SCCM/tb/5091

Rationale for Clevidipine selection

Clevidipine is an acute care product. Blood pressure management is a major component of care during the 13.4 million inpatient surgeries conducted in the U.S. each year. Blood pressure control, which is managed by an anesthesiologist, is often important in patients with both normal and high blood pressure undergoing surgery or other interventional procedures. Some of these patients require rapid, precise control of blood pressure to avoid compromising key organ function such as the heart, brain and kidney.

CONCLUSION 

This is the first study to design a novel combination drug treatment for Coronary Vasculogenesis, Anti-hypertention (short-acting), Vascular Anti-inflammation (vasculitis), Neovascularization of ischemic tissue and release of adult epicardium from a quiescent state and restoring its pluripotency. This treatment is based on the new three paradigms that were presented in Cell (2006) and Nature (2007). This combination drug therapy of three drugs, one in current use (Indomethacin), and two in clinical trials (Thymosin beta4 & Clevidipine), has not been proposed before. It represents an original concept drug combination design by Lev-Ari & Abourjaily (2007). This combination represents the cutting edge conceptualization of the field of treatment of cardiac injury based on a protein produced in the heart cells, Thymosin beta4, which function as a tissue and artery healer. Its upregulation by drug therapy will revolutionize cardiology and treatment for cardiovascular disease. The combination drug therapy consists of the following drugs:

  • Drug # 1:

Thymosin fraction 5 (a sublingual composition)

  • Drug # 2:

Indomethacin (Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAID)) (25 mg PO bid)

  • Drug # 3:

Clevidipine (Blood pressure lowering drug, (no effect on heart rate))

 

REFERENCES

Al-Nedawi, K.N.I., Malgorzata, C., Bednarek, R., Szemraj, J., Swiatkowska, M., Cierniewska-Cieslak, A., Wyczolkowska, J., Cierniewski, C.S. (2004, February) “Thymosin 4 induces the synthesis of plasminogen activator inhibitor 1 in cultured endothelial cells and increases its extracellular expression.” Blood, 103, (4), 1319-1324.

Ericsson, H., Fakt. C., Hoglund. L., et al. (1999a). “Pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of Clevidipine in healthy volunteers after intravenous infusion.” Eur J Clin Pharm., 55 (1), 61-67.

Ericsson, H., Fakt, C., Jolin-Mellgard A., et al. (1999b). “Clinical and pharmacokinetic results with a new ultrashort-acting calcium antagonist, Clevidipine, following gradually increasing intravenous doses to healthy volunteers.” Br J Clin Pharm., 47 (5), 531-538.

Ericsson, H., Bredberg, U., Eriksson, U., et al. (2000). “Pharmacokinetics and arteriovenous differences in Clevidipine concentration following a short and a long-term intravenous infusion in healthy volunteers.” Anesthesiology, 92 (4), 993-1001.

Fleming, I. (2006). “Signaling by the Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme” Circulation Research, 98, 887.

Heart can carry out own repairs, 16.11.2006

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http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/health/6143286.stm

Heart may be able to repair itself

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http://www.irishhealth.com/clin/cholesterol/newsstory.php?id=10581

Huff, T., Otto, A., Muller, C.S.G., Meier, M., Hannappel, E. (2002). “Thymosin ß4 is released from human blood platelets and attached by factor XIIIa (transglutaminase) to fibrin and collagen.”The FASEB Journal, 16, 691-696.

Jain, A.K., Moore, S.M., Yamaguchi, K., Eling, T.E., Baek, S.J. (2004, August). “Selective Nonsteroidal Anti-Inflammatory Drugs Induce Thymosin beta-4 and Alter Actin Cytoskeletal Organization in Human Colorectal Cancer Cells.” Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics, 311 (3) 885-891.

Kotrly, K. J., Ebert, T. J., Vucins, E. et al. (1984). “Baroreceptor reflex control of heart rate during isoflurane anesthesia in humans.” Anesthesiology,  60, 173-179.

Lev-Ari, A. & Abourjaily, P. (2006a) “An Investigation of the Potential of circulating Endothelial Progenitor Cells (cEPC) as a Therapeutic Target for Pharmacologic Therapy Design for Cardiovascular Risk Reduction.” Part I: Macrovascular Disease – Therapeutic Potential of cEPCs – Reduction methods for CV risk. Unpublished manuscript.

Lev-Ari, A. & Abourjaily, P. (2006b) “An Investigation of the Potential of circulating Endothelial Progenitor Cells (cEPC) as a Therapeutic Target for Pharmacologic Therapy Design for Cardiovascular Risk Reduction.” Part II: Therapeutic Strategy for cEPCs Endogenous Augmentation: A Concept-based Treatment Protocol for a Combined Three Drug Regimen. Unpublished manuscript.

Lev-Ari, A. & Abourjaily, P. (2006c) “An Investigation of the Potential of circulating Endothelial Progenitor Cells (cEPC) as a Therapeutic Target for Pharmacological Therapy Design for Cardiovascular Risk Reduction.” Part III: Biomarker for Therapeutic Targets of Cardiovascular Risk Reduction by cEPCs Endogenous Augmentation using New Combination Drug Therapy of Three Drug Classes and Several Drug Indications. A Theoretical Design for Quantification of the Endogenous EPCs Augmentation for Differential Level of CV Risk Reduction and Diagnostic Device Design for Drug Delivery. Unpublished manuscript.

Lev-Ari, A. & Abourjaily, P. (2007). Heart Vasculature – Regeneration and Protection of Coronary Artery Endothelium and Smooth Muscle: A Concept-based Pharmacological Therapy of a Combined Three Drug Regimen. Unpublished manuscript.

Levy, J. H., Huraux, C., Nordlander, M. (1997). “Treatment of perioperative hypertension.” In: Epstein M, Ed. Chapter in Calcium Antagonists in Clinical Medicine. Philadelphiea: Hanely & Belfus, pp. 345-358.

Liu, J-M, Lawrence, F., Kovacevic, M., Bignon, J., Papadimitriou, E., Lallemand, J-Y., Katsoris, P., Potier, P., Fromes, Y., Wdzieczak-Bakala, J. (2003, April) “The tetrapeptide AcSDKP, an inhibitor of primitive hematopoietic cell proliferation, induces angiogenesis in vitro and in vivo.” Blood, 101 (8), 3014-3020

Moretti, A., Caron, L., Nakano, A., Lam, J.T., Bernshausen, A., Chen, Y., Qyang, Y., Bu, L., Sasaki, M., Martin-Puig, S., Sun, Y., Evans, S.M., Laugwitz, K-L, Chien, K.R. (2006, December) “Multipotent Embryonic Isl1+ Progenitor Cells Lead to Cardiac, Smooth Muscle, and Endothelial Cell Diversification.” Cell, 127, 1151-1165.

Protein Discovered That Can Tell Human Heart to Heal Itself

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http://www.cathlabdigest.com/displaynews.cfm?newsid=1122065

Philp D, Huff T, Gho YS, Hannappel E, Kleinman HK. (2003). “The actin binding site on Thymosin beta4 promotes angiogenesis.” FASEB Journal, published on line 9/18/2003.

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Putting the art in heart research, 15 February 2007

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http://www.ich.ucl.ac.uk/pressoffice/pressrelease_00498

Rosenzweig A., (2005). Circulating Endothelial Progenitors – Cells as Biomarkers. NEJM, 353 (10), 1055-1057.

Schwieler, J.H., Ericsson, H., Lofdahl, P., et al. (1999). “Circulatory effects and pharmacology of Clevidipine, a novel ultra short acting and vascular selective calcium antagonist, in hypertensive humans.” J Cardiovasc Pharmacology, 34 (2), 268-274.

Smart, N., Risebro, C.A., Melville, A.D., Moses, K., Schwartz, R.J., Chien, K.R., Riley, P.R. (2007, January) “Thymosin Beta4 induces adult epicardial progenitor mobilization and neovascularization.” Nature, 445, 177-182.

 

Sublingual compositions comprising Thymosin fraction 5 and methods for administration

Retrieved 3/1/2007

http://www.pharmcast.com/Patents100/Yr2004/May2004/051104/6733791_Sublingual051104.htm

 

TMSB4X  Thymosin, beta 4, X-linked

Retrieved on 3/1/2007

http://www.ihop-net.org/UniPub/iHOP/gs/92756.html

Waeckel, L., Jérôme Bignon, J., Jian-Miao Liu, J-M., Markovits, D., Ebrahimian, T.G., Vilar, J., Mees, B., Blanc-Brude, O., Barateau, V., Sophie Le ricousse-Roussanne. S., Duriez, M. Tobelem, G.,  Wdzieczak-Bakala, J., Bernard I Lévy, B.I., Silvestre, J-S. (2006) “Tetrapeptide AcSDKP Induces Postischemic Neovascularization Through Monocyte Chemoattractant Protein-1 Signaling.” Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis, and Vascular Biology, 26, 773

Wang, D., Oscar A. Carretero, O.A.,Yang, X-Y., Rhaleb, N-E., Liu, Y-H., Liao, T-D., Yang, X-P. (2004). “N-acetyl-seryl-aspartyl-lysyl-proline stimulates angiogenesis in vitro and in vivo.” Am J Physiol Heart Circ Physiol., 287, H2099-H2105.

Werner N, Junk S, Laufs L, Link A, Walenta K, Bohm M, Nickenig G., (2003).  Intravenous transfusion of endothelial progenitor cells reduces neointima formation after vascular injury. Circ Res., 93, e17– e24.

Werner N, Kosiol S, Schiegl T, Ahlers P, Walenta K, Link A, Böhm M, Nickenig G. (2005a). Circulating Endothelial Progenitor Cells and Cardiovascular Outcomes, NEJM, 353, 999-1007

Werner, N. & Nickenig, G. (2005b). Authors Reply to Correspondence to the Editor on Circulating Endothelial Progenitor Cells. NEJM, 353 (24), 2613-2616

Wu, S.M., Fujiwara, Y., Cibulsky, S.M., Clapham, D.E., Lien, C., Schultheiss, T.M., Orkin, S.H. (2006, December). “Developmental Origin of a Bipotential Myocardial and Smooth Muscle Cell Precursor in the Mammalian Heart.” Cell, 127, 1137-1150.

Other related articles on this Open Access Online Scientific Journal, include the following:

Saha, S. (2012b) Innovations in Bio instrumentation for Measurement of Circulating Progenetor Endothelial Cells in Human Blood.
http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/07/08/innovations-in-bio-instrumentation-for-measurement-of-circulating-progenitor-endothelial-cells-in-human-blood/

 

Saha, S. (2012c) Endothelial Differentiation and Morphogenesis of Cardiac Precursor
http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/07/17/endothelial-differentiation-and-morphogenesis-of-cardiac-precursors/

Saha, S. (2012e). Human Embryonic-Derived Cardiac Progenitor Cells for Myocardial Repair

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/08/01/human-embryonic-derived-cardiac-progenitor-cells-for-myocardial-repair/

Lev-Ari, A. 12/29/2012. Coronary artery disease in symptomatic patients referred for coronary angiography: Predicted by Serum Protein Profiles

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/12/29/coronary-artery-disease-in-symptomatic-patients-referred-for-coronary-angiography-predicted-by-serum-protein-profiles/

 

Bernstein, HL and Lev-Ari, A. 11/28/2012. Special Considerations in Blood Lipoproteins, Viscosity, Assessment and Treatment

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/11/28/special-considerations-in-blood-lipoproteins-viscosity-assessment-and-treatment/

 

Lev-Ari, A. 11/13/2012 Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor (PPAR-gamma) Receptors Activation: PPARγ transrepression for Angiogenesis in Cardiovascular Disease and PPARγ transactivation for Treatment of Diabetes

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/11/13/peroxisome-proliferator-activated-receptor-ppar-gamma-receptors-activation-pparγ-transrepression-for-angiogenesis-in-cardiovascular-disease-and-pparγ-transactivation-for-treatment-of-dia/

 

Lev-Ari, A. 10/19/2012 Clinical Trials Results for Endothelin System: Pathophysiological role in Chronic Heart Failure, Acute Coronary Syndromes and MI – Marker of Disease Severity or Genetic Determination?

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/10/19/clinical-trials-results-for-endothelin-system-pathophysiological-role-in-chronic-heart-failure-acute-coronary-syndromes-and-mi-marker-of-disease-severity-or-genetic-determination/

 

Lev-Ari, A. 10/4/2012 Endothelin Receptors in Cardiovascular Diseases: The Role of eNOS Stimulation

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/10/04/endothelin-receptors-in-cardiovascular-diseases-the-role-of-enos-stimulation/

 

Lev-Ari, A. 10/4/2012 Inhibition of ET-1, ETA and ETA-ETB, Induction of NO production, stimulation of eNOS and Treatment Regime with PPAR-gamma agonists (TZD): cEPCs Endogenous Augmentation for Cardiovascular Risk Reduction – A Bibliography

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/10/04/inhibition-of-et-1-eta-and-eta-etb-induction-of-no-production-and-stimulation-of-enos-and-treatment-regime-with-ppar-gamma-agonists-tzd-cepcs-endogenous-augmentation-for-cardiovascular-risk-reduc/

 

Lev-Ari, A. 8/28/2012 Cardiovascular Outcomes: Function of circulating Endothelial Progenitor Cells (cEPCs): Exploring Pharmaco-therapy targeted at Endogenous Augmentation of cEPCs

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/08/28/cardiovascular-outcomes-function-of-circulating-endothelial-progenitor-cells-cepcs-exploring-pharmaco-therapy-targeted-at-endogenous-augmentation-of-cepcs/

 

Lev-Ari, A. 8/27/2012 Endothelial Dysfunction, Diminished Availability of cEPCs, Increasing CVD Risk for Macrovascular Disease – Therapeutic Potential of cEPCs

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/08/27/endothelial-dysfunction-diminished-availability-of-cepcs-increasing-cvd-risk-for-macrovascular-disease-therapeutic-potential-of-cepcs/

 

Lev-Ari, A. 8/24/2012 Vascular Medicine and Biology: CLASSIFICATION OF FAST ACTING THERAPY FOR PATIENTS AT HIGH RISK FOR MACROVASCULAR EVENTS Macrovascular Disease – Therapeutic Potential of cEPCs

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/08/24/vascular-medicine-and-biology-classification-of-fast-acting-therapy-for-patients-at-high-risk-for-macrovascular-events-macrovascular-disease-therapeutic-potential-of-cepcs/

 

Lev-Ari, A. 7/30/2012 Biosimilars: Intellectual Property Creation and Protection by Pioneer and by Biosimilar Manufacturers

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/07/30/biosimilars-intellectual-property-creation-and-protection-by-pioneer-and-by-biosimilar-manufacturers/

 

Lev-Ari, A. 7/29/2012 Biosimilars: Financials 2012 vs. 2008

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/07/30/biosimilars-financials-2012-vs-2008/

 

Lev-Ari, A. 7/29/2012 Biosimilars: CMC Issues and Regulatory Requirements

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/07/29/biosimilars-cmc-issues-and-regulatory-requirements/

 

Lev-Ari, A. 7/19/2012 Cardiovascular Disease (CVD) and the Role of agent alternatives in endothelial Nitric Oxide Synthase (eNOS) Activation and Nitric Oxide Production

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/07/19/cardiovascular-disease-cvd-and-the-role-of-agent-alternatives-in-endothelial-nitric-oxide-synthase-enos-activation-and-nitric-oxide-production/

 

Lev-Ari, A. 4/30/2012 Resident-cell-based Therapy in Human Ischaemic Heart Disease: Evolution in the PROMISE of Thymosin beta4 for Cardiac Repair

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/04/30/93/

Lev-Ari, A. 5/29/2012 Triple Antihypertensive Combination Therapy Significantly Lowers Blood Pressure in Hard-to-Treat Patients with Hypertension and Diabetes

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/05/29/445/

 

Lev-Ari, A. 7/2/2012 Macrovascular Disease – Therapeutic Potential of cEPCs: Reduction Methods for CV Risk

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/07/02/macrovascular-disease-therapeutic-potential-of-cepcs-reduction-methods-for-cv-risk/

 

Lev-Ari, A. 7/9/2012 Mitochondria Dysfunction and Cardiovascular Disease – Mitochondria: More than just the “powerhouse of the cell”

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/07/09/mitochondria-more-than-just-the-powerhouse-of-the-cell/

 

Lev-Ari, A. 7/16/2012 Bystolic’s generic Nebivolol – positive effect on circulating Endothelial Proginetor Cells endogenous augmentation

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/07/16/bystolics-generic-nebivolol-positive-effect-on-circulating-endothilial-progrnetor-cells-endogenous-augmentation/

Read Full Post »

Curator: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD. RN

UPDATED on 11/2/2013

 

Medscape Update on Calcium and Cardiovascular Risk

Curator and Reporter: Larry H. Bernstein, MD, FCAP

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/10/11/new-data-dispute-calcium-cardiovascular-risk-in-both-sexes/

Minerals and Cardiovascular Risk

Modern diet contains high sodium to potassium ratio, low omega-3-polyunsaturated acid. (PUFAs) increased omega-6-polyunstaureted, saturated fat and Trans fatty acids these have lead to higher incidence of cardiovascular disease, diabetes mellitus and hyperlipidemia.
Nutrient
Paleolithic diet
Modern diet
More than 10,000 mEq/day (256 Grm)
150mEq/day (6gram)
Less than 50 mmol/day 1.2 Grm
175 mmol/day (4Gram)
Na/K ratio
Less than 0.13 /day
More than 0.67/day
Fiber
More than 100gram/day
Less than 9 gram/day
Protein
37%
20%
Carbohydrate
41%
40-50%
Fat
22%
30-40%
Poly saturated to saturated ratio
1.4
0.4
Sodium
Increased intake of sodium is associated with hypertension and reduction of salt intake is associated with decrease in BP by 4-6/2-3mmhg in salt sensitive patients. Daily allowance of sodium is not more than 500mg/day.
Cardiovascular events are more common in salt sensitive patients than salt resistance patients, independent of BP reduction. Reduction of BP by salt restriction has benefit apart from BP reduction.
A balance of sodium with other nutrients is important not only for reduction of BP but also for reduction cardiovascular events.
 
Potassium
Increased intake of potassium is associated with BP reduction. Recommended daily intake of potassium is 650mEq/day with Na/k ratio of 5:1.
Supplements of 120 mEq/day of potassium reduce BP by 4.4/2.5mmhg in hypertensive patients.
Higher Na/K ratio reduces not only BP but also cardiovascular events.
 
Magnesium
Intake of 500mg/day to 1000mg/day reduces BP by 5.6/2.8mmhg. Reducing intracellular sodium and calcium and increasing intracellular magnesium and potassium improves BP response.
Insulin sensitivity, LVH and dyslipidemia can be improved with magnesium supplementation.
Oral magnesium acts like natural calcium channel blocker, increases nitric oxide, and improves endothelial dysfunction, and induces vasodilatation.
 
Calcium
Studies show link between calcium and hypertension. But trials supplementing calcium do not show benefit. Below we present results of a recent study on Calcium supplementation citing >1400 mg/day been associated with increased cardiovascular risk and mortality.
 
Zinc
Low serum zinc levels are associated with hypertension.

Authors of the BMJ of 2/13/2013 article reported, below offer the following Possible Explanations and Implications

Calcium levels in serum are under tight homeostatic control, and calcium intake is not normally correlated with calcium serum levels.

  • Diets that are low or very high in calcium can, however, override normal homeostatic control causing changes in blood levels of calcium or calciotropic hormones.52
  • Calcium enriched meals can reduce calcitriol, the active vitamin D metabolite, by inhibition of 1α hydroxylase53and also increase serum levels of fibroblast growth factor 23.54
  • Higher levels of circulating fibroblast growth factor 23 are associated with an increased risk of cardiovascular events and all cause mortality.55 56 57 In addition,
  • fibroblast growth factor 23 downregulates calcitriol levels.58
  • Vitamin D suppression leads to an upregulation of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system and hypertension, higher levels of proinflammatory cytokines involved in the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis:

–  increased carotid artery intima medial thickness,

–  decreased endothelial function,

–  hypertrophy of cardiac and vascular muscle cells, and a

–  possible increase in serum triglycerides.59 Finally,

  • high serum calcium levels can increase the risk of cardiovascular mortality60 by induction of a hypercoagulable state.61

Vascular calcification and plaque rupture

There are two types of vascular calcification,  intimal calcification of atherosclerosis and medial calcification. Both are associated with increased incidence of ischemic heart disease. Plaque rupture is manly restricted to intimal plaques fibrous cap calcification. Calcification of this fibrous cap is associated with increased incidence of ischemic heart disease. Below discussion is about controversy associated with fibrous cap calcification.

Whether intimal calcification stabilizes the plaque or makes it prone for rupture is a matter debate. Calcified and fibrotic lesions are more hypo-cellular, they are stiffer than cellular lesions, and further more biomechanical data suggest calcification reduces the “stresses” in a plaque does not cause rupture.  Plaques with heavily calcified are 5 times stiffer that non-calcified lesions.
Calcium crystal have shown to aggravate inflammation
Above observation are contradictory to each other. If calcium induces inflammation than plaque should get destabilize?
Under mechanical stress produced by balloon angioplasty, calcified plaque is more likely to rupture than non-calcified plaque, and the rupture occurs along the interface between the calcium deposit and soft tissue. So this suggest that plaque rupture may occur at these week points
Conclusion
It has been stated that when entire plaque is calcified it protects against rupture unlike focal calcification
The ratio of surface area to volume in calcium deposits may determine whether they are harmful or protective

Lipoprotein a (Lp(a)) genetic variant doubles the causal risk of Aortic valvular calcification.

In the last 15 to 20 years our understanding of aortic valve calcification has changed from just simple degenerative disease to disease secondary to an active process involving endothelial dysfunction, lipid accumulation, an inflammatory infiltrate. With this understanding many potential therapeutic approach have been considered. Statins showed promise in prevention of calcification in retrospective trials but prospective trials did not show benfit. Rennin angiotensin inhibitors have given discordant results in retrospective trials and no randomized control trial is there to prove their efficacy.

Aortic Valvular Calcification

new potential therapeutic  target for prevention aortic valve calcification i.e. Lp(a).Article published in NEJM Feb 7 2013 from Johns Hopkins, Harvard University, McGill University, the University of Iceland and the National Institutes of Health says, there is variant of Lp(a) which is associated with aortic valve calcification. In this publication genomewide association was evaluated for 6942 participants of aortic valvular calcification and 3795 participants of mitral valve calcification, detected by CT scanning.

Previous studies showed association of Lp(a) with calcification of aortic valve. Causal or just marker of calcification was not confirmed, present study shows causal relationship of Lp(a) and aortic valve calcification.
From this causal relationship one may think of targeting Lp(a) for preventing aortic valve calcification. Niacin reduces Lp(a) levels. Although  HPS-2 THRIVE trial (with niacin/laropiprant) which was done for coronary artery disease did not show clinical benfit, still one may keep hope for prevention of aortic valve calcification. Time may tell about us this in future.

Types of Vascular Calcification

  • Artery Medial Calcification (AMC) – Concentric Vessel – Stiffening
  • Atherosclerotic Intimal Calcification (AIC)

Long term calcium intake and rates of all cause and cardiovascular mortality: community based prospective longitudinal cohort study

BMJ 2013; 346 doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.f228 (Published 13 February 2013)

Cite this as: BMJ 2013;346:f228

  1. Karl Michaëlsson, professor1,
  2. Håkan Melhus, professor2,
  3. Eva Warensjö Lemming, researcher1,
  4. Alicja Wolk, professor3,
  5. Liisa Byberg, associate professor1

Author Affiliations

  1. 1Department of Surgical Sciences, Section of Orthopedics, Uppsala University, SE-751 85 Uppsala, Sweden

  2. 2Department of Medical Sciences, Section of Clinical Pharmacology, Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden

  3. 3Division of Nutritional Epidemiology, Institute of Environmental Medicine, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden
  1. Correspondence to: K Michaëlsson karl.michaelsson@surgsci.uu.se
  • Accepted 28 December 2012

Abstract

Objective To investigate the association between long term intake of dietary and supplemental calcium and death from all causes and cardiovascular disease.

Design Prospective longitudinal cohort study.

Setting Swedish mammography cohort, a population based cohort established in 1987-90.

Participants 61 433 women (born between 1914 and 1948) followed-up for a median of 19 years.

Main outcome measures Primary outcome measures, identified from registry data, were time to death from all causes (n=11 944) and cause specific cardiovascular disease (n=3862), ischaemic heart disease (n=1932), and stroke (n=1100). Diet was assessed by food frequency questionnaires at baseline and in 1997 for 38 984 women, and intakes of calcium were estimated. Total calcium intake was the sum of dietary and supplemental calcium.

Results The risk patterns with dietary calcium intake were non-linear, with higher rates concentrated around the highest intakes (≥1400 mg/day). Compared with intakes between 600 and 1000 mg/day, intakes above 1400 mg/day were associated with higher death rates from all causes (hazard ratio 1.40, 95% confidence interval 1.17 to 1.67), cardiovascular disease (1 49, 1.09 to 2.02), and ischaemic heart disease (2.14, 1.48 to 3.09) but not from stroke (0.73, 0.33 to 1.65). After sensitivity analysis including marginal structural models, the higher death rate with low dietary calcium intake (<600 mg/day) or with low and high total calcium intake was no longer apparent. Use of calcium tablets (6% users; 500 mg calcium per tablet) was not on average associated with all cause or cause specific mortality but among calcium tablet users with a dietary calcium intake above 1400 mg/day the hazard ratio for all cause mortality was 2.57 (95% confidence interval 1.19 to 5.55).

Conclusion High intakes of calcium in women are associated with higher death rates from all causes and cardiovascular disease but not from stroke.

Introduction

Calcium is one of the most abundant minerals in the human body and plays a pivotal role in human physiology. The serum levels of calcium are strictly regulated and an insufficient calcium intake is met by a more efficient intestinal absorption and renal conservation of calcium. Calcium is also mobilised from the skeleton, which can lead to bone loss1 and subsequent risk of fractures. Consequently, to prevent fractures in elderly people previous and existing guidelines2 recommend avoidance of low calcium intake. Fractures are common, especially in women, and are associated with high disability, healthcare costs, and mortality.3 Insufficient calcium intakes might also lead to secondary hyperparathyroidism, which is associated with higher mortality.1 4 5 Supplemental use of calcium has become common, and more than 60% of middle aged and older women in the United States are regular users of calcium supplements.6 7 Worryingly, three recent reanalyses of randomised trials in women have indicated a higher risk of both ischemic heart disease and stroke with calcium supplements,8 9 10 a pattern not observed in a reanalysis of another randomised trial.11 Few cohort studies in women have examined the association between dietary and supplemental intake of calcium with risk of cardiovascular incidence and mortality; instead,12 13 14 15 16 the focus has been on the incidence of stroke, with both contrary and inconsistent findings.12 13 14 16

We hypothesised that long term intake of low or high calcium increases the risk of cardiovascular mortality. We investigated associations between long term dietary and supplemental intake of calcium with all cause mortality as well as with cardiovascular mortality in a large population based prospective study of Swedish women.

Methods

The Swedish mammography cohort

The Swedish mammography cohort was established in 1987-90. All women (n=90 303) residing in two Swedish counties (Uppsala and Västmanland) and born between 1914 and 1948 received a mailed invitation to a routine mammography screening. Enclosed with this invitation was a questionnaire covering diet (food frequency questionnaire) and lifestyle, which was completed by 74% of the women. In 1997, a second, expanded questionnaire was distributed to those who were still living in the study area (response rate 70%). The study sample with exclusions has been described previously.17 18 In all, 61 433 women with baseline data (1987-90) and 38 984 with data from 1997 were available for analysis in the present study (fig 1).

Fig 1 Study samples in Swedish mammography cohort

Outcomes

Follow-up was through the Swedish cause of death registry. Complete linkage with the register is rendered by the personal identity number provided to all Swedish residents. Since 1952 the National Board of Health and Welfare has collected information on the causes of death for all Swedish residents in the cause of death registry. We used the underlying cause of death in the registry to define the outcomes of death from all causes, cardiovascular disease (international classification of diseases, ninth and 10th revisions; ICD-9 codes 390-459 or ICD-10 codes I00-I99), ischaemic heart disease (ICD-9 codes 410-414 or ICD-10 codes I20-I25), and stroke (ICD-9 codes 430-436 or ICD-10 codes I60-I64).

Dietary assessment

The food frequency questionnaires have been described previously.17 19 20 The participants reported their average frequency of consumption of up to 96 foods and beverages during the past year. For most food items, eight categories for frequency of consumption were provided, ranging from never to three or more times daily. For some commonly consumed foods such as milk, sour milk/yogurt, and cheese, participants could fill in the exact number of servings they consumed daily or weekly. We estimated nutrient intakes by multiplying the consumption frequency of each food item by the nutrient content of age specific portion sizes. Nutrient data were obtained from the Swedish National Food Administration database.21 We adjusted nutrient intakes for total energy intake (7.1 MJ or 1700 kcal, mean in the study population) using the residual method.22 To better account for changes in diet during follow-up and to better represent long term dietary intake we treated calcium intake as cumulative average intake.23 In the second questionnaire the lifetime use of dietary supplements and multivitamins was reported. In Sweden one calcium dose contains 500 mg if from calcium supplements and 120 mg if from multivitamins. Total calcium intake included supplemental calcium from any source. Even if supplement use was absent in the first food frequency questionnaire (baseline questionnaire), the frequency of calcium containing supplement use (with or without vitamin D) within the cohort during the first years of follow-up was low (6%),24 and this proportion was similar across the whole range of dietary calcium intake. Calcium intake in the 1997 food frequency questionnaire correlated well with estimates from 14 repeated 24 hour recalls over one year (r=0.77).25 Furthermore, a second validation of calcium intake was carried out with four seven day food records every third month in 104 of the women (r=0.72). Bland-Altman plots revealed only small systematic errors related to intake level between the methods, and the average difference with 95% confidence interval between the 1997 food frequency questionnaire and seven day food record was 56.4 mg/day (95% confidence interval −4.4 to 108.4 mg/day)—that is, as previously reported,25 a tendency of higher estimates for calcium intake with the food frequency method. Similar estimates were achieved for the baseline questionnaire.24

Comorbidity and other additional information

Lifestyle information was obtained from the questionnaires. This information included the use of postmenopausal oestrogen therapy and menopausal status, parity, weight and height, smoking habits, and leisure time physical activity during the past year, with five predefined levels ranging from one hour weekly to more than five hours weekly. Physical activity, collected in the 1997 questionnaire, is valid compared with activity records and accelerometer data.26 We divided educational level into four categories: up to 9 years, 10-12 years, more than 12 years, and other (such as vocational). Diagnosis codes were collated from the national patient registry (ICD codes 8, 9, and 10) to calculate Charlson comorbidity scores.27 28 The Charlson comorbidity index predicts the 10 year mortality for a patient who may have a range of comorbid conditions (up to 22 diseases). Each condition is assigned a score of 1 to 6 depending on the risk of dying associated with this condition.

Statistical analysis

For each participant, follow-up time was accrued from baseline (1987-90) until the first date of death, date of leaving the study regions, or the end of the study period (31 December 2008), whichever occurred first. In secondary analyses we considered time to incidence of cardiovascular disease, ischaemic heart disease, and stroke. To improve the validity of our exposure estimate, we used a calibrated calcium intake obtained by usage of linear regression coefficients between food records (FR) and the food frequency questionnaire (FFQ): (RiFRFR+ βFR* FFQi, (R reported calcium in the food records, i in the individual)).29 Using Cox proportional hazards regression we estimated age adjusted and multivariable adjusted hazard ratios and their 95% confidence intervals for prespecified categories of calcium intake: <600, 600-999, 1000-1399, and ≥1400 mg/day. To facilitate comparisons of the estimates we used the same category cut-offs in the analysis of dietary and total calcium intake. We estimated the risk with use of calcium containing supplements from the date of the second questionnaire survey (from 1 January 1998). The proportional hazard assumptions in the Cox models were confirmed graphically by comparing Nelson-Aalen plots. Non-linear trends of risk were additionally analysed using restricted cubic-spline Cox regression. We used four “knots” placed at centiles 5, 35, 65, and 95 of the cumulative average calcium intake.30 The reference level was set to 800 mg of calcium, which corresponds to the recommended daily intake for Swedish women aged more than 50 years.31

To minimise potential bias we used the directed acyclical graph approach to identify a suitable multivariable model. The model included age, total energy and vitamin D intake, body mass index, height (all continuous), educational level (≤9, 10-12, >12 years, other), living alone (yes or no), use of supplements containing calcium (yes or no), a healthy dietary pattern (fifths), physical activity (five categories), smoking status (never, former, current), and score on the Charlson comorbidity index (continuous, 1-16).27 28 A healthy dietary pattern was defined by using a validated method.3233 Briefly, we used factor analysis to derive the dietary pattern empirically. Factor analysis reduces dietary data to a few composite factors (one being a healthy dietary pattern) that describe the eating pattern in the population. Other potential covariates (such as menopausal status; hormone replacement therapy; intakes of total fat, retinol, alcohol, potassium, phosphorous, and protein; nulliparity; and previous fracture of any type) in the multivariable models only marginally changed the relations and were therefore not included in the models. We treated covariates as cumulative averages.28 The Markov chain Monte Carlo multiple imputation method was used to impute covariates not assessed in the baseline questionnaire in 1987-90 (for example, smoking habits and physical activity). Restriction to non-missing data did not alter our interpretation of the results (data not shown). Moreover, in an attempt to examine whether calcium supplement use modified the association between dietary calcium intake and mortality, we performed stratified analysis by calcium supplement use (no use, use of any type of calcium containing supplements, and specific use of calcium tablets). Additionally, we estimated the synergy index between dietary calcium intake and calcium tablet use.34 We performed sensitivity analysis, limiting the analysis to baseline data using ordinary Cox’s regression without time updated information. In an attempt to validate the robustness of the Cox’s regression model using information updated over time, we used marginal structural modelling.35 The categorical exposure in the marginal structural models was treated as described previously.36 We calculated an additional inverse probability weight for having time varying data, and we gave a weight of zero to those without time varying data.

In addition to ultraviolet radiation and genes, vitamin D intake is a determinant of vitamin D status,37 38 39 and vitamin D insufficiency is related to cardiovascular disease mortality and incidence.40 We therefore investigated effect measure modification between dietary calcium and vitamin D intake by including a product interaction term in the multivariable models and performing likelihood ratio tests of its contribution in nested models. We further calculated the relative excess risk that is due to interaction.34 When analysing cause specific mortality, we considered the potential competing risk problem from other causes of mortality41 and cumulative incidence curves.42 The subhazard ratios were similar to the hazard ratios from the ordinary Cox regression, suggesting no major effect of competing risks, which is also the conclusion drawn after analysis of cumulative incidence curves (data not shown).

The statistical analyses were performed with STATA 11 and SAS, version 9.2.

Results

Table 1 lists the characteristics of the study participants by categories of calcium intake. The average total cumulative calcium intake in the lowest category was 572 mg/day and in the highest was 2137 mg/day. With increasing categories of energy standardised calcium intake, the reported intake for most other nutrients also increased, although alcohol intake tended to decrease. There were small differences in calcium supplement use, comorbidity, educational level, smoking status, and physical activity level between categories of calcium intake.

Vitamin D intake did not significantly modify the associations between calcium intake and the rate of deaths from all causes, cardiovascular disease, or ischaemic heart disease (results not shown).

Discussion

In this study of women in the Swedish mammography cohort, a high calcium intake (>1400 mg/day) was associated with an increased rate of mortality, including death from cardiovascular disease. The increase was moderate with a high dietary calcium intake without supplement use, but the combination of a high dietary calcium intake and calcium tablet use resulted in a more pronounced increase in mortality. For most women with lower intakes we observed only modest differences in risk.

Strengths and weaknesses of the study

Strengths of our study include the population based prospective design, study size, and repeated measurements of calcium intake, as well as a large number of potential covariates. Date and cause of death were traced through national healthcare registries and deterministic record linkage, permitting complete ascertainment of the outcomes. The accuracy of classification of causes of death in the cause of death registry and diagnoses in the national patient registry are high.43 Furthermore, we adjusted for several important covariates (for example, smoking, socioeconomic status, physical activity, nutrients other than calcium, educational level, and comorbidity), but residual confounding remains a possible limitation. The lower age adjusted rates of death from all causes and cardiovascular disease among women with a high total calcium intake were largely explained by their use of dietary supplements (table 2), a variable considered in the multivariable models. Other health related covariates, including a healthy diet and level of physical activity contributed to a lesser degree. People who use dietary supplements have, on average, a healthier lifestyle and a lower risk factor profile for cardiovascular disease44 and not considering this might distort the risk estimates. Moreover, the low proportion of women who took prescription calcium tablets (6%), containing a four times higher dose of calcium than in regular multivitamin dietary supplements, made it difficult to detect modestly strong associations with calcium tablet use specifically. Dietary assessment methods are prone to several limitations, affecting both the precision and accuracy of the measurement. In larger studies, a food frequency questionnaire is used to assess the habitual intake of diet, and a recent review concluded that it was a valid method for assessing dietary mineral intake, particularly for calcium.45 The food frequency questionnaire may, to some extent, overestimate calcium intake,25 which was also indicated by our validation. A further limitation in our study is the use of age standardised portion sizes and not actual individual portion sizes. By use of our calibrated analysis of calcium intake, we none the less tried to avoid some misclassification of study participants. By using repeated measurements on dietary intake we increased the accuracy of the measurement but may also have introduced bias using time dependent Cox regression models. Indeed, after using only baseline data and also after performing the marginal structural model analyses, we no longer observed an increased mortality for women with low calcium intakes or a high total calcium intake. Without being causally linked to death, a low calcium intake could therefore be viewed as a marker of frailty or a less healthy behaviour associated with a higher mortality. There are, however, also theoretical drawbacks of our causal inference model. It is sensitive to correct model specifications and indeed renders estimates with lower precision than ordinary Cox’s regression.46 47 It is worth emphasising that traditionally obtained estimates, such as those from Cox’s regression, would not generally agree with estimates from marginal structural models even when there is no confounding.48 Irrespective of analytical approach, the observational study design precludes conclusions about causality, and cautious interpretations of the results are therefore recommended. The results for women with a high calcium intake are, however, compatible with results from previous randomised studies,8 9 10 and by fitting the marginal structural model we obtained similar risk estimates although with wider confidence intervals. Our results might also not apply to people of different ethnic origins or to men.

Strengths and weaknesses in relation to other studies

Calcium intake in adulthood and all cause mortality in women has not been previously investigated. In an analysis including 387 deaths within the Iowa Women’s Health Study cohort15 a total calcium intake below 700 mg/day but not above 1400 mg/day was associated with higher mortality from ischaemic heart disease. Furthermore, a recent reanalysis of the same cohort showed that use of calcium supplements was inversely related to the total and cardiovascular mortality rate, although the benefit was lost at the highest doses of dietary calcium intake.49In contrast, use of calcium supplements in a Finnish cohort increased the risk of cardiovascular disease.50 Intriguingly, three reanalyses of randomised trials have consistently shown a higher rate of both myocardial infarction and stroke by 25% to 30% and by 15% to 20%, respectively, with calcium supplementation.8 9 10These results were not confirmed in a reanalysis of another randomised trial using a broad composite endpoint of different cardiovascular events.11 Interestingly, the higher risk of cardiovascular events with calcium supplements in a meta-analysis8was only observed in women with a dietary calcium intake higher than 800 mg/day and not in women with lower intake levels.

The results from the few prospective cohort studies that have examined the relation between calcium intake and incidence of cardiovascular disease in women are contradictory or not conclusive. In the Nurses’ Health Study cohort there was a higher risk of stroke in women with a calcium intake below 600 mg/day.12 Similarly, in a Japanese setting with a comparably low average calcium intake, women with an intake below about 500 mg/day had a higher rate of stroke but not of coronary heart disease.13 14 None the less, calcium intake was not related to stroke incidence in a previous analysis in our cohort,16 concordant with the results of the present investigation. We have recently shown that calcium intakes above 700 mg/day do not further reduce the risk of fracture and osteoporosis.18

Vitamin D enhances, directly or indirectly, renal conservation and intestinal absorption of calcium.51 Our results suggest that vitamin D intake did not modify the association of calcium intake and mortality rate. In comparison with exposure to ultraviolet radiation and genetic constitution, vitamin D intake contributes only modestly to vitamin D status,37 38 39 which is determined by serum calcidiol levels, a metabolite not measured in the present investigation.

Possible explanations and implications

Calcium levels in serum are under tight homeostatic control, and calcium intake is not normally correlated with calcium serum levels. Diets that are low or very high in calcium can, however, override normal homeostatic control causing changes in blood levels of calcium or calciotropic hormones.52 Calcium enriched meals can reduce calcitriol, the active vitamin D metabolite, by inhibition of 1α hydroxylase53and also increase serum levels of fibroblast growth factor 23.54 Higher levels of circulating fibroblast growth factor 23 are associated with an increased risk of cardiovascular events and all cause mortality.55 56 57 In addition, fibroblast growth factor 23 downregulates calcitriol levels.58 Vitamin D suppression leads to an upregulation of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system and hypertension, higher levels of proinflammatory cytokines involved in the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis, increased carotid artery intima medial thickness, decreased endothelial function, hypertrophy of cardiac and vascular muscle cells, and a possible increase in serum triglycerides.59 Finally, high serum calcium levels can increase the risk of cardiovascular mortality60 by induction of a hypercoagulable state.61

Our present data together with previous observations suggest that for the prevention of fractures in elderly people18 and simultaneous avoidance of possible serious adverse events related to a high calcium intake (such as higher risk of hip fracture,18 62 cardiovascular disease,63 renal stones,64 and, as observed in the current study, mortality) emphasis should be placed on people with a low intake of calcium rather than increasing the intake of those already consuming satisfactory amounts.

Conclusion

When looking at the totality of our data, high calcium intakes were associated with higher rates of death from all causes and cardiovascular disease. Mortality was not increased between 600 and 1400 mg/day of total calcium intake, the most customary levels of intake in this setting. The suggestion of an increased risk of mortality by a low calcium intake in our study seemed to be biased by time varying confounding factors.

What is already known on this topic

  • A low calcium intake is associated with higher fracture rates in elderly people and a higher risk of stroke and fatal ischaemic heart disease
  • Meta-analyses of some randomised studies have, however, shown a higher risk of incident ischaemic heart disease and stroke with calcium supplement use
  • In observational studies, use of calcium supplements has been associated with both lower overall and cardiovascular mortality rate, as well as higher incidence of cardiovascular disease

What this study adds

  • In this Swedish cohort study of women, high intakes of calcium (>1400 mg/day) were associated with higher mortality
  • The increase was moderate with a high dietary calcium intake without supplement use, but more pronounced with a high dietary calcium intake with calcium tablet use
  • For most women with lower calcium intakes only modest differences in risk were observed

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Special Considerations in Blood Lipoproteins, Viscosity, Assessment and Treatment

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/11/28/special-considerations-in-blood-lipoproteins-viscosity-assessment-and-treatment/

Artherogenesis: Predictor of CVD – the Smaller and Denser LDL Particles

Artherogenesis: Predictor of CVD – the Smaller and Denser LDL Particles

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CRACKING THE CODE OF HUMAN LIFE: Recent Advances in Genomic Analysis and Disease – Part IIC

CRACKING THE CODE OF HUMAN LIFE: Recent Advances in Genomic Analysis and Disease – Part IIC

Author: Larry H. Bernstein, MD, FCAP, Triplex Medical Science

 

Part I: The Initiation and Growth of Molecular Biology and Genomics – Part I From Molecular Biology to Translational Medicine: How Far Have We Come, and Where Does It Lead Us?

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/wp-admin/post.php?post=8634&action=edit&message=1

Part II: CRACKING THE CODE OF HUMAN LIFE is divided into a three part series.

Part IIA. “CRACKING THE CODE OF HUMAN LIFE: Milestones along the Way” reviews the Human Genome Project and the decade beyond.

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/02/12/cracking-the-code-of-human-life-milestones-along-the-way/

Part IIB. “CRACKING THE CODE OF HUMAN LIFE: The Birth of BioInformatics & Computational Genomics” lays the manifold multivariate systems analytical tools that has moved the science forward to a groung that ensures clinical application.

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/02/13/cracking-the-code-of-human-life-the-birth-of-bioinformatics-and-computational-genomics/

Part IIC. “CRACKING THE CODE OF HUMAN LIFE: Recent Advances in Genomic Analysis and Disease “ will extend the discussion to advances in the management of patients as well as providing a roadmap for pharmaceutical drug targeting.

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/02/14/cracking-the-code-of-human-life-recent-advances-in-genomic-analysis-and-disease/

To be followed by:
Part III will conclude with Ubiquitin, it’s role in Signaling and Regulatory Control.

 

Part IIC of series on CODE OF HUMAN LIFE
CRACKING THE CODE OF HUMAN LIFE: Recent Advances in Genomic Analysis and Disease

This final paper of Part II concludes a thorough review of the scientific events leading to the discovery of the human genome, the purification and identification of the components of the chromosome and the DNA structure and role in regulation of embryogenesis, and potential targets for cancer.

The first two articles, Part IIA, Part IIB,  go into some depth to elucidate the problems and breakthoughs encountered in the Human Genome Project, and the construction of a 3-D model necessary to explain interactions at a distance.

Part IIC, the final article, is entirely concerned with clinical application of this treasure trove of knowledge to resolving diseases of epigenetic nature in the young and the old, chronic inflammatory diseases, autoimmune diseases, infectious disease, gastrointestinal disorders, neurological and neurodegenerative diseases, and cancer.

 

CRACKING THE CODE OF HUMAN LIFE: Recent Advances in Genomic Analysis and Disease – Part IIC

 

1. Gene Links to Heart Disease

 

Recently, large studies have identified some of the genetic basis for important common diseases such as heart disease and diabetes, but most of the genetic contribution to them remains undiscovered. Now researchers at the University of Massachusetts Amherst led by biostatistician Andrea Foulkes have applied sophisticated statistical tools to existing large databases to reveal substantial new information about genes that cause such conditions as high cholesterol linked to heart disease.

Foulkes says, “This new approach to data analysis provides opportunities for developing new treatments.” It also advances approaches

  • to identifying people at greatest risk for heart disease. Another important point is that our method is straightforward to use with freely
  • available computer software and can be applied broadly to advance genetic knowledge of many diseases.

The new analytical approach she developed with cardiologist Dr. Muredach Reilly at the University of Pennsylvania and others is called “Mixed modeling of Meta-Analysis P-values” or MixMAP. Because it makes use of existing public databases, the powerful new method

  • represents a low-cost tool for investigators.
  • MixMAP draws on a principled statistical modeling framework and the vast array of summary data now available from genetic association
  • studies to formally test at a new, locus-level, association.

While that traditional statistical method looks for one unusual “needle in a haystack” as a possible disease signal, Foulkes and colleagues’

  • new method uses knowledge of DNA regions in the genome that are likely to
  • contain several genetic signals for disease variation clumped together in one region.
  • Thus, it is able to detect groups of unusual variants rather than just single SNPs, offering a way to “call out” gene
  • regions that have a consistent signal above normal variation.

http://Science.com/Science News/Identify Genes Linked to Heart Disease/

2. Apolipoprotein(a) Genetic Sequence Variants

The LPA gene codes for apolipoprotein(a), which, when linked with low-density lipoprotein particles, forms lipoprotein(a) [Lp(a)] —

  • a well-studied molecule associated with coronary artery disease (CAD). The Lp(a) molecule has both atherogenic and thrombogenic effects in vitro , but the extent to which these translate to differences in how atherothrombotic disease presents is unknown.

LPA contains many single-nucleotide polymorphisms, and 2 have been identified by previous groups as being strongly associated with

  • levels of Lp(a) and, as a consequence, strongly associated with CAD.

However, because atherosclerosis is thought to be a systemic disease, it is unclear to what extent Lp(a) leads to atherosclerosis in other arterial beds (eg, carotid, abdominal aorta, and lower extremity),

  • as well as to other thrombotic disorders (eg, ischemic/cardioembolic stroke and venous thromboembolism).

Such distinctions are important, because therapies that might lower Lp(a) could potentially reduce forms of atherosclerosis beyond the coronary tree.

To answer this question, Helgadottir and colleagues compiled clinical and genetic data on the LPA gene from thousands of previous

  • participants in genetic research studies from across the world. They did not have access to Lp(a) levels, but by knowing the genotypes for
  • 2 LPA variants, they inferred the levels of Lp(a) on the basis of prior associations between these variants and Lp(a) levels. [1]

Their studies included not only individuals of white European descent but also a significant proportion of black persons, in order to

  • widen the generalizability of their results.

Their main findings are that LPA variants (and, by proxy, Lp(a) levels) are associated with

  • CAD,
  • peripheral arterial disease,
  • abdominal aortic aneurysm,
  • number of CAD vessels,
  • age at onset of CAD diagnosis, and
  • large-artery atherosclerosis-type stroke.

They did not find an association with

  • cardioembolic or small-vessel disease-type stroke;
  • intracranial aneurysm;
  • venous thrombosis;
  • carotid intima thickness; or,
  • in a small subset of individuals, myocardial infarction.

Apolipoprotein(a) Genetic Sequence Variants Associated With Systemic Atherosclerosis and Coronary Atherosclerotic Burden but Not With Venous Thromboembolism. Helgadottir A, Gretarsdottir S, Thorleifsson G, et al.    J Am Coll Cardiol. 2012;60:722-729

English: Structure of the LPA protein. Based o...

English: Structure of the LPA protein. Based on PyMOL rendering of PDB 1i71. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Micrograph of an artery that supplies the hear...

Micrograph of an artery that supplies the heart with significant atherosclerosis and marked luminal narrowing. Tissue has been stained using Masson’s trichrome. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Genomic Blueprint of the Heart

Scientists at the Gladstone Institutes have revealed the precise order and timing of hundreds of genetic “switches” required to construct a fully

  • functional heart from embryonic heart cells — providing new clues into the genetic basis for some forms of congenital heart disease.

In a study being published online today in the journal Cell, researchers in the laboratory of Gladstone Senior Investigator Benoit Bruneau, PhD,

  • employed stem cell technology, next-generation DNA sequencing and computing tools to piece together the instruction manual, or “genomic
  • blueprint” for how a heart becomes a heart. These findings offer renewed hope for combating life-threatening heart defects such as arrhythmias (irregular heart beat) and ventricular septal defects (“holes in the heart”).

ScienceDaily (Sep. 13, 2012)

They approach heart formation with a wide-angle lens by

  • looking at the entirety of the genetic material that gives heart cells their unique identity.

The news comes at a time of emerging importance for the biological process called “epigenetics,” in which a non-genetic factor impacts a cell’s genetic

  • makeup early during development — but sometimes with longer-term consequences. All of the cells in an organism contain the same DNA, but the
  • epigenetic instructions encoded in specific DNA sequences give the cell its identity. Epigenetics is of particular interest in heart formation, as the
  • incorrect on-and-off switching of genes during fetal development can lead to congenital heart disease — some forms of which may not be apparent until adulthood.

the scientists took embryonic stem cells from mice and reprogrammed them into beating heart cells by mimicking embryonic development in a petri dish. Next, they extracted the DNA from developing and mature heart cells, using an advanced gene-sequencing technique called ChIP-seq that lets scientists “see” the epigenetic signatures written in the DNA.

Map of Heart Disease Death Rates in US White M...

Map of Heart Disease Death Rates in US White Males from 2000-2004 (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Estimated propability of death or non-fatal my...

Estimated propability of death or non-fatal myocardial-infarction over one year corresponding ti selectet values of the individual scores. Ordinate: individual score, abscissa: Propability of death or non-fatal myocardial infarction in 1 year (in %) (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

simply finding these signatures was only half the battle — we next had to decipher which aspects of heart formation they encoded

To do that, we harnessed the computing power of the Gladstone Bioinformatics Core. This allowed us to take the mountains of data collected from

  • gene sequencing and organize it into a readable, meaningful blueprint for how a heart becomes a heart.”

http://ScienceDaily.org/Scientists Map the Genomic Blueprint of the Heart.  ScienceDaily.

Performance of transcription factor identification tools from differential gene expression data

A three step process is a clear way to establish belief in the performance of transcription factor identification tools

  • from differential gene expression data.
  • identify several types of differential gene expression data sets where the stimulus or trigger is clearly know
  • identify the transcription factors most likely associated with the sets expression data.
  • perform an upstream analysis from the identified transcription factor.

If the transcription factor and upstream analysis tools can trace the signal cascade back to the stimulus, the tools are

  • clearly producing relevant results, and belief in the performance of the analysis tools is established.

At this point, the tools can be directed with confidence to more challenging analyses such as

  • developed resistance or pathway elucidation.

The performance of IPA‘s new Transcription Factor and Upstream analysis tools was evaluated on the following datasets (processing details below):

  • TGFb stimulation, 1 hour, A549 lung adenocarcinoma cell line
  • BMP2 stimulation, 1 hour, Mouse Embryonic Stem Cell E14Tg2A.4
  • TNFa stimulation, 1 hour primary murine hepatocytes

For each of the above datasets, an upstream analysis from the identified transcription factors correctly identified the stimulus. IPA’s tools were very

  • easy to use and the
  • analysis time for the above experiments was less than one minute.

The performance, speed, and ease of use can only be characterized as very good, perhaps leading to breakthroughs when extended and used creatively. Ingenuity’s new transcription factor analysis tool in IPA, coupled with Ingenuity’s established upstream grow tools,  should be strongly considered for every lab analyzing differential expression data.

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/query/acc.cgi?acc=GSE17896

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/projects/geo/query/acc.cgi?acc=GSE2639

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/geo/query/acc.cgi?acc=GSE19272

Differential expression data was obtained from CEL files using the Matlab functions:

affyrma, genelowvalfilter, genevarfilter, mattest, and mavolcanoplot.

Rick Stanton, Pathway Analysis Consultant Ingenuity.com

3. miR-200a regulates Nrf2 activation by targeting Keap1 mRNA in breast cancer cells.

Eades G, Yang M, Yao Y, Zhang Y, Zhou Q. J Biol Chem. 2011 Nov 25;286(47):40725-33. Epub 2011 Sep 16.
http://JBiolChem.com/miR-200a regulates Nrf2 activation by targeting Keap1 mRNA in breast cancer cells.

NF-E2-related factor 2 (Nrf2) is an important transcription factor that

  • activates the expression of cellular detoxifying enzymes.

Nrf2 expression is largely regulated through the association of Nrf2 with Kelch-like ECH-associated protein 1 (Keap1), which

  • results in cytoplasmic Nrf2 degradation.

Conversely, little is known concerning the regulation of Keap1 expression. Until now, a regulatory role for microRNAs (miRs) in controlling Keap1 gene expression had not been characterized. By using miR array-

  • based screening, we observed miR-200a silencing in breast cancer cells and
  • demonstrated that upon re-expression, miR-200a
  • targets the Keap1 3′-untranslated region (3′-UTR), leading to Keap1 mRNA degradation. Loss of this regulatory mechanism may
  • contribute to the dysregulation of Nrf2 activity in breast cancer. Previously, we have identified epigenetic repression of miR-200a

in breast cancer cells. Here, we find that treatment with epigenetic therapy, the histone deacetylase inhibitor suberoylanilide hydroxamic acid, restored miR-200a expression and reduced Keap1 levels. This reduction in Keap1 levels corresponded with

  • Nrf2 nuclear translocation
  • and activation of Nrf2-dependent NAD(P)H-quinone oxidoreductase 1 (NQO1) gene transcription.

Moreover, we found that Nrf2 activation inhibited the anchorage-independent growth of breast cancer cells. Finally, our in vitro observations were confirmed in a model of carcinogen-induced mammary hyperplasia in vivo. In conclusion, our study demonstrates

  • that miR-200a regulates the Keap1/Nrf2 pathway in mammary epithelium, and we find that epigenetic therapy can restore miR-200a
  • regulation of Keap1 expression,
  • reactivating the Nrf2-dependent antioxidant pathway in breast cancer.

Nuclear factor-like 2  (erythroid-derived 2, also known as NFE2L2 or Nrf2, is a transcription factor that in humans is encoded by the NFE2L2 gene.[1])  NFE2L2 induces the expression of various genes including those that encode for several antioxidant enzymes, and it may play a physiological role in the regulation of oxidative stress. Investigational drugs that target NFE2L2 are of interest as potential therapeutic interventions for

  • oxidative-stress related pathologies.

4. Highly active zinc finger nucleases by extended modular assembly

MS Bhakta, IM Henry, DG Ousterout, KT Das, et al.  Corresponding author; email: djsegal@ucdavis.edu
http://CSHNLpress.com/Highly active zinc finger nucleases by extended modular assembly

Zinc finger nucleases (ZFNs) are important tools for genome engineering. Despite intense interest by many academic groups,

  • the lack of robust non-commercial methods has hindered their widespread use. The modular assembly (MA) of ZFNs from
  • publicly-available one-finger archives provides a rapid method to create proteins that can recognize a very broad spectrum of DNA sequences.

However, three- and four-finger arrays often fail to produce active nucleases. Efforts to improve the specificity of the one-finger archives have not increased the success rate above 25%, suggesting that the MA method might

  • be inherently inefficient due to its insensitivity to context-dependent effects.

Here we present the first systematic study on the effect of array length on ZFN activity.  ZFNs composed of six-finger MA arrays produced mutations at 15 of 21 (71%) targeted

  • loci in human and mouse cells. A novel Drop-Out Linker scheme was used to rapidly assess three- to six-finger combinations,
  • demonstrating that shorter arrays could improve activity in some cases. Analysis of 268 array variants revealed that half of

MA ZFNs of any array composition that exceed an ab initio

  • B-score cut-off of 15 were active.
  • MA ZFNs are able to target more DNA sequences with higher success rates than other methods.

This article is distributed exclusively by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press for the first six months after the full-issue publication date http://genome.cshlp.org/site/misc/terms.xhtml
After six months, it is available under a Creative Commons License (Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 Unported License), as described at
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/Highly_active_zinc_finger_nucleases_by_extended_ modular_assembly/

PERSONALIZED MEDICINE in the Pipeline

These insightful reviews are based on the strategic data and insights from Thomson Reuters Cortellis™ for Competitive Intelligence.  (A Review of April-June 2012).

http://ThomsonReuters.com/DIFFERENTIATED INNOVATION: PERSONALIZED MEDICINE IN THE PIPELINE/ Cortellis™ for Competitive Intelligence/APRIL-JUNE 2012

The majority of diseases are complex and multi-factorial, involving multiple genes interacting with environmental factors. At the genetic level,

  • information from genome-wide association studies that elucidate common patterns of genetic variation across various human populations,
  • in addition to profiling, technologies can be utilized in discovery research to provide snapshots of genes and expression profiles that are controlled
  • by the same regulatory mechanism and are altered between healthy and diseased states.

The characterization of genes that are abnormally expressed in disease tissues could further be employed as

  • diagnostic markers,
  • prognostic indicators of efficacy and/or toxicity, or as
  • targets for therapeutic intervention.

As the defining catalyst that exponentially paved the way for personalized medicine, information from the published genome sequence revealed that much of the genetic variations in humans are concentrated in about 0.1 percent of the over 3 billion base pairs in the haploid DNA. Most of these variations involve substitution of a single nucleotide for another at a given location in the genetic sequence, known as single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP).

  • Combinations of linked SNPs aggregate together to form haplotypes and
  • together these serve as markers for locating genetic variations in DNA sequences.

SNPs located within the protein-coding region of a gene or within the control regions of DNA that regulate a gene’s activity could

  • have a substantial effect on the encoded protein and thus influence phenotypic outcomes.

Analyzing SNPs between patient population cohorts could highlight specific genotypic variations which can be correlated with specific phenotypic variations in disease predisposition and drug responses.

Prior to the genomic revolution, many of the established therapies were directed against less than 500 drug targets, with many of the top selling drugs acting on well defined protein pathways. However, the sequencing of the human genome has massively expanded the pool of molecular targets that could be exploited in unmet medical needs and currently, of the approximately 22,300 protein-coding genes in the human code, it has been estimated that up to 3000 are druggable. Furthermore, genomic technologies such as

  • high-throughput sequencing
  • and transcription profiling,

can be used to identify and validate biologically relevant target molecules, or can be applied to cell-based and mice disease models or directly to in vivo human tissues,

  • helping to correlate gene targets with phenotypic traits of complex diseases.

This is particularly important, as

  • insufficient validation of target gene/proteins in complex diseases may be a contributing factor in the decline in R&D productivity.

Personalized medicine no doubt is already having a tremendous impact on drug development pipelines. According to a study conducted by the Tufts Center for the Study of Drug Development, more than 90 percent of biopharmaceutical companies now utilize at least some

  • genomics-derived targets in their drug discovery programs.

However, pipeline analysis from Cortellis for Competitive Intelligence suggests that there is still a scientific gap that has resulted in difficulty optimizing these novel genomic targets into the clinical R&D portfolios of major pharmaceutical companies, particularly outside the oncology field. Selected examples of personalized medicine product candidates in clinical development include (see TABLE 4).

Table 4: Selected Personalized Medicines in Clinical Development
(DATA are Derived from Cortellis for Competitive Intelligence & Thomson Reuters IntegritySM)
http://Thomson Reuters.com/Cortellis for Competitive Intelligence/IntegritySM/Table_4_Selected_Personalized_Medicines_in_Clinical_Development/

PHARMA MATTERS | SPOTLIGHT ON… PERSONALIZED MEDICINE

The paucity of actual targeted therapy examples, especially outside oncology, suggest

  • that integration of the personalized medicine paradigm into biopharmaceutical R&D is still fraught with challenges.

Despite the fact that the Human genome Project has been completed for over ten years, the broader application of genomics with drug development

  • still remains unrealized, and is hampered by a number of scientific challenges. One of the major obstacles stems from
  • incomplete association of genomic alterations with complex disease pathways and the phenotypic consequences.

As the modality of most complex diseases are multi-factorial, understanding how each genomic driver event plays a role in disease and the

  • interaction/interdependence with other genetic and environmental factors is important for
  • determining the rationale for targeted prevention or treatment of the disease.

Mutations found in Melanomas may shed light on Cancer Growth

Gina Kolata. New York Times.
http://NewYorkTimes.com/mutations_found_in_melanomas_may_shed-light_on_how_cancers_grow/

Mutations in Melanoma are in regions that control genes, not in the genes themselves. The mutations are exactly the type caused by exposure to ultraviolet light.  The findings are reported in two papers in http://Science.com/ScienceExpress/

The findings do not suggest new treatments, but they help explain how melanomas – and possibly – other cancers – develop and what drives their growth. This is a modification found in the “dark matter”, according to Dr. Levi A. Garraway,  the 99 percent of DNA in a region that regulates genes. A small control region was mutated in 7 out of 10 of the tumors, commonly of one or two tiny changes.
A German Team led by Rajiv Kumar (Heidelberg) and Dirk Schadendorf (Essen) looked at a family whose members tended to get melanomas.  Their findings indicate that those inherited with the mutations might be born with cells that have taken the first step toward cancer.
The mutations spur cells to make telomerase, that keeps the cells immortal by preventing them from losing the ends of their chromosome, the telomere. Abundant telomerase occurs in 90 percent of cancers, according to Immaculata De Vivo at Harvard Medical School.
The importance of the findings is that the mechanism of telomerase involvement in cancer is now within view. But it is not clear how to block the telomerase production in cancer cells.
 
A slight mutation in the matched nucleotides c...

A slight mutation in the matched nucleotides can lead to chromosomal aberrations and unintentional genetic rearrangement. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Comment

This discussion addresses the issues raised about the direction to follow in personalized medicine. Despite the amount of work necessary to bring the clarity that is sought after, the experiments and experimental design is most essential.

  • The arrest of ciliogenesis in ovarian cancer cell lines compared to wild type (WT) ovarian epithelial cells, and
  •  The link to suppressing ciliogenesis by AURA protein and CHFR at the base of the cilium, which disappears at mitosis or with proliferation.
  •  There is no accumulation by upregulation of PDGF under starvation by the cancer cells compared to the effect in WT OSE.

Here we have a systematic combination of signaling events tied to changes in putative biomarkers that occur synchronously in Ov cancer cell lines.

These changes are identified with changes in

  • proliferation,
  • loss of ciliary structure, and
  • proliferation.

In this described scenario,

  • WT OSE cells would be arrested, and
  • it appears that they would take the path to apoptosis (under starvation).

Even without more information, this cluster is what one wants to have in a “syndromic classification”. The information used to form the classification entails the identification of strong ‘signaling-related’ biomarkers. The Gli2 peptide has to be part of this.

In principle, a syndromic classification would be ideally expected to have no less than 64 classes. If the classification is “weak”, then the class frequencies would be close to what one would expect in the WT OSE. In this case, in reality,

  • several combinatorial classes would have low frequency, and
  • others would be quite high.

This obeys the classification rules established by feature identification, and the information gain described by Solomon Kullback and extended by Akaike.

Does this have to be the case for all different cancer types? I don’t think so. The cells are different in ontogenesis.  In this case, even the WT OSE have mesenchymal features and so, are not fully directed to epithelial expression.  This happens to be the case in actual anatomic expression of the ovary.  On the other hand, one would expect shared features of the

  • ovary,
  • testes,
  • thyroid,
  • adrenals, and
  • pituitary.

There is biochemical expression in terms of their synthetic function – TPN organs. I would have to put the liver into that broad class. Other organs – skeletal muscle & heart – transform substrate into energy or work.  (Where you might also put intestinal smooth muscle).

They have to have different biomarker expressions, even though they much less often don’t form neoplasms. (Bone is not just a bioenergetic force. It is maintained by muscle action. It forms sarcomas. But there has to be a balance between bone removal by osteoclasts and refill by osteoblasts.)

Viewpoint: What we have learned

  1. The Watson-Crick model proposed in 1953 is limited for explaining fully genome effects
  2. The Pauling triplex model may have been prescient because of a more full anticipation of molecular bonding variants
  3. A more adequate triple-helix model has been proposed and is consistent with a compact genome in the nucleus

The structure of the genome is not as we assumed – based on the application of Fractal Geometry.  Current body of evidence is building that can reveal a more complete view of genome function.

  • transcription
  • cell regulation
  • mutations

Summary

I have just completed a most comprehensive review of the Human Genome Project. There are key research collaborations, problems in deciphering the underlying structure of the genome, and there are also both obstacles and insights to elucidating the complexity of the final model.

This is because of frequent observations of molecular problems in folding and other interactions between nucleotides that challenge the sufficiency of the original DNA model proposed by Watson and Crick. This has come about because of breakthrough innovation in technology and in computational methods.

Radoslav Bozov •

Molecular biology and growth was primarily initiated on biochemical structural paradigms aiming to define functional spatial dynamics of molecules via assignation of various types of bondings – covalent and non-covalent – hydrogen, ionic , dipole-dipole, hydrophobic interactions.

  • Lab techniques based on z/m paradigm allowed separation, isolation and identification of bio substances with a general marker identity finding correlation between physiological/cellular states.
  • The development of electronic/x-ray technologies allowed zooming in nano space without capturing time.
  • NMR technology identified the existence of space topology of initial and final atomic states giving a highly limited light on time – energy axis of atomic interactions.
  • Sequence technology and genomic perturbations shed light on uncertainty of genomic dynamics and regulators of functional ever expanding networks.
  • Transition state theory coupled to structural complexity identification and enzymatic mechanisms ran up parallel to work on various phenomena of strings of nucleotides (oligomers and polymers) – illusion/observation of constructing models on the dynamics of protein-dna-rna interference.
  • The physical energetic constrains of biochemistry were inapplicable in open biological systems. Biologists have accepted observation as a sole driver towards re-evaluating models.
  • The separation of matter and time constrains emerged as deviation of energy and space constrains transforming into the full acceptance of code theory of life. One simple thing was left unnoticed over time –
  • the amount of information of quantum matter within a single codon is larger than that of a single amino acid. This violated all physical laws/principles known to work with a limited degree of certainty.
  • The limited amount of information analyzed by conventional sequence identity led to the notion of applicability of statistical measures of and PCR technology. Mutations were identified over larger scale of data.
  • Quantum chemistry itself is being limited due discrete space/energy constrains, thus it transformed into concepts/principles in biology that possess highly limited physical values whatsoever.
  • The central dogma is partially broken as a result of
  1. regulatory constrains
  2. epigenetic phenomena and
  3. iRNA.

Large scale code computational data run into uncertainty of the processes of evolution and its consequence of signaling transformation. All drugs were ‘lucky based’ applicability and/or discovery with largely unpredictable side effect over time.

Other Related articles on this Open Access Online Sceintific Journal include the following:

Big Data in Genomic Medicine  lhb

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/12/17/big-data-in-genomic-medicine/

BRCA1 a tumour suppressor in breast and ovarian cancer – functions in transcription, ubiquitination and DNA repair S Saha    http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/12/04/brca1-a-tumour-suppressor-in-breast-and-ovarian-cancer-functions-in-transcription-ubiquitination-and-dna-repair/

Computational Genomics Center: New Unification of Computational Technologies at Stanford A Lev-Ari  http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/12/03/computational-genomics-center-new-unification-of-computational-technologies-at-stanford/

Personalized medicine gearing up to tackle cancer ritu saxena     http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/01/07/personalized-medicine-gearing-up-to-tackle-cancer/

Differentiation Therapy – Epigenetics Tackles Solid Tumors sj Williams     http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/01/03/differentiation-therapy-epigenetics-tackles-solid-tumors/

Mechanism involved in Breast Cancer Cell Growth: Function in Early Detection & Treatment A Lev-Ari   http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/01/17/mechanism-involved-in-breast-cancer-cell-growth-function-in-early-detection-treatment/

The Molecular pathology of Breast Cancer Progression tilde barliya      http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/01/10/the-molecular-pathology-of-breast-cancer-progression/

Gastric Cancer: Whole-genome reconstruction and mutational signatures A Lev-Ari     http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/12/24/gastric-cancer-whole-genome-reconstruction-and-mutational-signatures-2/

Paradigm Shift in Human Genomics – Predictive Biomarkers and Personalized Medicine – Part 1 (pharmaceuticalintelligence.com) A Lev-Ari                  http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/01/13/paradigm-shift-in-human-genomics-predictive-biomarkers-and-personalized-medicine-part-1/

LEADERS in Genome Sequencing of Genetic Mutations for Therapeutic Drug Selection in Cancer Personalized Treatment: Part 2 A Lev-Ari
http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/01/13/leaders-in-genome-sequencing-of-genetic-mutations-for-therapeutic-drug-selection-in-cancer-personalized-treatment-part-2/

Personalized Medicine: An Institute Profile – Coriell Institute for Medical Research: Part 3 A Lev-Ari   http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/01/13/personalized-medicine-an-institute-profile-coriell-institute-for-medical-research-part-3/

Harnessing Personalized Medicine for Cancer Management, Prospects of Prevention and Cure: Opinions of Cancer Scientific Leaders @ http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com ALA    http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/01/13/7000/Harnessing Personalized Medicine for Cancer Management, Prospects of Prevention and Cure: Opinions of Cancer Scientific Leaders/

GSK for Personalized Medicine using Cancer Drugs needs Alacris systems biology model to determine the in silico effect of the inhibitor in its “virtual clinical trial” A Lev-Ari     http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/11/14/gsk-for-personalized-medicine-using-cancer-drugs-needs-alacris-systems-biology-model-to-determine-the-in-silico-effect-of-the-inhibitor-in-its-virtual-clinical-trial/

Recurrent somatic mutations in chromatin-remodeling and ubiquitin ligase complex genes in serous endometrial tumors S Saha   http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/11/19/recurrent-somatic-mutations-in-chromatin-remodeling-and-ubiquitin-ligase-complex-genes-in-serous-endometrial-tumors/

Personalized medicine-based cure for cancer might not be far away ritu saxena   http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/11/20/personalized-medicine-based-cure-for-cancer-might-not-be-far-away/

Human Variome Project: encyclopedic catalog of sequence variants indexed to the human genome sequence A Lev-Ari
http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/11/24/human-variome-project-encyclopedic-catalog-of-sequence-variants-indexed-to-the-human-genome-sequence/

Prostate Cancer Cells: Histone Deacetylase Inhibitors Induce Epithelial-to-Mesenchymal Transition sjwilliams
http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/11/30/histone-deacetylase-inhibitors-induce-epithelial-to-mesenchymal-transition-in-prostate-cancer-cells/

Inspiration From Dr. Maureen Cronin’s Achievements in Applying Genomic Sequencing to Cancer Diagnostics A Lev-Ari
http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/01/10/inspiration-from-dr-maureen-cronins-achievements-in-applying-genomic-sequencing-to-cancer-diagnostics/

The “Cancer establishments” examined by James Watson, co-discoverer of DNA w/Crick, 4/1953 A Lev-Ari
http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/01/09/the-cancer-establishments-examined-by-james-watson-co-discover-of-dna-wcrick-41953/

Directions for genomics in personalized medicine lhb    http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/01/27/directions-for-genomics-in-personalized-medicine/

How mobile elements in “Junk” DNA promote cancer. Part 1: Transposon-mediated tumorigenesis. Sjwilliams
http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/10/31/how-mobile-elements-in-junk-dna-prote-cancer-part1-transposon-mediated-tumorigenesis/

Mitochondria: More than just the “powerhouse of the cell” eritu saxena   http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/07/09/mitochondria-more-than-just-the-powerhouse-of-the-cell/

Mitochondrial fission and fusion: potential therapeutic targets? Ritu saxena    http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/10/31/mitochondrial-fission-and-fusion-potential-therapeutic-target/

Mitochondrial mutation analysis might be “1-step” away ritu saxena     http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/08/14/mitochondrial-mutation-analysis-might-be-1-step-away/

mRNA interference with cancer expression lhb    http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/10/26/mrna-interference-with-cancer-expression/

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Introducing Dr. Tim Wu – Interventional Cardiologist, Inventor and Entrepreneur

 

Author: Ed Kislauskis, PhD

Article ID #18: Introducing Dr. Tim Wu – Interventional Cardiologist, Inventor and Entrepreneur. Published on 1/14/2013

WordCloud Image Produced by Adam Tubman

 

Welcome readers to the first in a series of interviews with future scientific leaders in biotechnology and medicine.  In this post I interview a close colleague and clinical scientist who appears to be on a fast-track to achieving his vision for the future of interventional cardiology – at the very vanguard of applied nanotechnology.

Tim (Tiangen) Wu, M.D has graciously accepted my invitation to answer a few questions about how his career path and primary goal to develop and commercialize his first product, a fully-biodegradable drug-eluting stent he calls the PowerStent® Absorb (see insert).  This technology combines three especially innovations:  a unique balloon-expandable stent design (PowerStent®), a bioabsorbable nanoparticle composition (BioDe®), and a formulation of two commercially-available anti-restenosis drugs (Combo®).

Stent

About the Subject

Dr. Wu received his clinical education in China and research training in the USA. In 1988, he graduated with an MD from the prestigious Linyli Medical School and completed a fellowship in clinical cardiology at the Tonji Medical University.  In 1993, presented with an opportunity to travel to the US, he uprooted to accept a position as visiting scholar, and ultimately post-doctoral fellow,in Jeffrey Isner’s lab at St. Elizabeth Hospital (Tufts University) and the Beth Israel Medical Center (Harvard Medical).  There he investigated the biology of stenosis, and directed sponsored research projects to evaluate the safety and efficacy of the latest commercially-developed drug-coated stents (DES) in animals.

After  a decade in academia, Dr. Wu made the successful transition to industry and joined Nitromed Inc. as a Research Scientist.  His next stop was as a Research Director at Biomedical Research Models, Inc (2000-2006) where we met and collaborated on developing and characterizing macrovascular disease in an inbred, type 2 diabetic rat model.  After a 20 year career, and upon gaining additional qualification in Mechanical Engineering (Wentworth Institute), Business Administration (MIT), Clinical Research Affairs (Mass. Biotech Council), and Medical Device Regulatory Affairs (North Eastern Univ.), he was ready to take the entrepreneurial leap.  His first company, VasoTech would aim to re-engineer the clinical standards of stent design and drug delivery.

In 2007, Dr. Wu founded VasoTech, Inc. from inside his home garage. Less than a year later, VasoTech received a $1.5M SBIR fast-track grant award from the NIH.  With funding, VasoTech joined the newly announced M2D2 facility on the University of Massachusetts Lowell campus, and expanded operations in China.  With the support of one of his closest advisors, Dr. Stephen McCarthy and other research faculty, Dr. Wu was appointed as an adjunct faculty in the Dept. of BioMedical Engineering at the UMass/Lowell where he mentored a number of talented graduate students.  Dr. Wu is recognized as a senior reviewer on the NIH Bioengineering, Surgical Science and Technology Study Section, and Biomaterials, Delivery Systems and Nanotechnology Special Emphasis Panels servicing the  Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) grant program.

Dr. Wu’s work at Vasotech is devoted to developing a 3rd generation of fully biodegradable DES coronary stents to solve two major complications associated with stenting, restenosis and late-stage thrombosis. Thusfar, his ideas have attracted well over $1.5 Million (USD) in Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) grant awards from the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, and $1million (USD) from China Innovative Talent Leadership Program.  Through his efforts VasoTech is well positioned to attract the strategic partnerships and venture capital investments necessary to translate his research through clinical stages of development both in China and the US.

The Interview

Kislauskis:  Please help our readers understand the current clinical approach to CAD.

Wu:  Most patients with advanced atherosclerosis diseases are at risk for occlusive coronary arterial disease and stroke. Consequently, it is recommended they undergo a percutaneous intervention (PCI); essentially, balloon angioplasty followed by instillation of one or more expandable metal stents. A properly expanded stent will dilate the vessel and increase blood flow to cardiac muscle tissue. Current 2nd generation drug-eluting-stents (DES) release drugs to inhibit the process of vascular remodeling leading to restenosis. Because the DES approach is remarkably successful and lowers the rate of restenosis to < 10%, DESs is now performed in 85% of the 2 million percutaneous coronary interventions (PCI) procedures annually in the U.S.

Kislauskis:  What is your impression of the recent 5 yr update of the FREEDOM trial comparing effectiveness of coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG) to PCI among diabetics? 1

Wu:  It makes perfect sense. There are other reports evaluating PCI in patients within high risk categories, including those with small diameter vessels, diabetes, and extensive, systemic vascular disease, showing unacceptably high rates of restenosis with bare metal stents (30%-60%) and DESs (6%-18%) 2-4.  We also know first-hand using an inbred rat strain that develops macrovascular disease 4 months after onset of spontaneous diabetes.  In our experiment model, just 4weeks following balloon-induced injury to the coratid artery (PTCA),  we observed 2x greater restenosis in female obese rats, and 4x greater stenosis in obese, diabetic rats  littermates (syndrome X) relative to the non-obese, non-diabetic littermates.  These results predicted that obesity (dyslipidemia) and diabetes (severe hyperglycemia) were major risk factors promoting the complication of restenosis (Wu and Kislauskis, unpublished).

Kislauskis: Can you tell our readers a bit more about the significance of restenosis and thrombosis and the concept behind your approach.

Wu: Two significant drawbacks to conventional PCI are the need for costly, long-term anti-platelet therapy; and having a metal artifact within the coronary vessel. In fact, once installed, the purpose of DES is to maintain patency and provide a scaffold until remodeling is complete, maybe 6 months.  The period of drug elution is typically shorter in duration.  In the event of restenosis, a second DES procedure is recommended and performed with satisfactory results.  However, leaving another metal artifact is problematic.

Most concerning to PCI patients, however, should be an increased risk of sudden death from heart attack from a clot (thrombosis) and tissue ischemia (myocardial infarction).  No available DES technology (eg. Cypher®or Taxus® DES) demonstrates any advantage over bare metal stents in this regard 5-7.  So the thinking is a metal artifact create an irregular vessel surface and micro-eddys in blood flow which ultimately result in late-stage thrombosis, particularly in patients who go off anti-their platelet therapy too soon 8.  Therefore and conceptually, by combining potent DES technology with a fully-biodegradable scaffold, designed to be absorbed fully into the tissue, likely will reduce the rate in-stent stenosis and prevents late-stage thrombosis.

Kislauskis: How did you come up with your unique polymer formulation?

Wu: It turns out that through a process of trial and error in the lab I was able to identify a biodegradable formulation which reduces the local inflammatory response common to all DES formulations while improving the stent’s radial strength.  With a stable drug delivery platform (BioDe®), the process of remodeling will contribute far less to restenosis.  Furthermore, and unlike all prior art, my BioDe® formulation can neutralize acidic intermediates generated during stent degradation that induce inflammation.  The combination of anti-restenosis drugs (Combo®) also is effective at inhibiting signaling pathways that contribute to restenosis.

Kislauskis:  How did you come to design the PowerStent®?

Wu: Again, a long process of trial and error, initially using computer applied design (CAD) principals I learned while earning attending a mechanical engineering certificate program at Wentworth Institute of Technology in Boston. Elements behind my concept for BioDe® came to me while I was involved in a home renovation project, working with grout.  Although the formulation is simple and may be duplicated, the process of manufacturing is complicated.

Kislauskis: So it’s your trade secret.

Wu: Absolutely.

Kislauskis: Can you summary its other advantages and your plans to commercialize the PowerStent®?

Wu: Preclinical, short duration (30 day) studies in porcine models with the PowerStent® Absorb deployed indicate that it will be non-inferior to the current metal DES and competing biodegradable stent technologies. Important functional attributes of the BioDe® polymer include better biocompatibility (less inflammatory), excellent radial strength, potent anti-restenosis activity, and a unique microporous surface that promotes integration into neointimal layer of stented vessel.  Ongoing and much longer duration studies may also support our contention that this design can reduce risks of late-stage in-stent thrombosis.

Kislauskis: What path and difficulties to you foresee in obtaining a regulatory approval to conduct clinical trials with the PowerStent® Absorb?

Wu:  FDA Guidance to commercialize conventional DES technology is available. Unfortunately, no guidance is published for a fully-biodegradable stent.  Therefore, I anticipate seeking advice from the regulatory bodies prior to petitioning for approval to perform clinical trials.  It will no doubt be a complicated process as this technology involves a novel drug combination (albeit FDA-approved drugs), and a novel formulation (albeit FDA-approved components), and a novel indwelling and bioabsorbable medical device (stent).  We are presently completing several required engineering studies for the final phase of pre-clinical safety and efficacy testing, in China. The goals are to obtain FDA pre-market and NDA approvals, and to receive a CE mark from major international markets including Europe and the BRICK nations.

Kislauskis: How will you commercialize this 3rd generation, fully-biodegradable stent?

Wu: There are likely 3 scenarios to complete development and commercialization.  One involves securing bridge funding from the NIH SBIR program, supplemented with angel financing to complete preclinical program. I project that a minimum of $6 Million (USD) will be required to complete regulatory approval and pivotal clinical trials.  Therefore, it is conceivable that a Series A round of equity financing from venture capitalists, in either US or China, will be required. A third scenario is to partner or sell the technology to a major player in this space to complete clinical testing and commercialization. Potential partners include Boston Scientific Company, J&J, etc. Any of these partners could facilitate the processes of regulatory approval, manufacturing, global distribution and marketing.  Discussions are underway with one such prospective partner and with several VC groups.

Kislauskis: What is its likely impact of this product on patient care and the field of interventional cardiology?

Wu: According to US statistics, approximately 14 million Americans suffer from CAD, and 500,000 people die from acute myocardial infarction. One million more survive but with a 1.5 to 15 times greater risk of mortality or morbidity than the rest of the population each year.  In the U.S., the annual health care costs of CAD are estimated to be in excess of $112 billion, and the estimated annual total direct cost associated with PCI with stents is over $2 billion.  I anticipate that our PowerStent® Absorb stent will be competitive in a marketplace estimated to be over $5 billion in 2010. Although CAD patients are the primary market, other related applications for our PowerStent Absorb technology include peripheral arteries, intracerebral vascular and small vessels which are also significant.

Kislauskis:  Thank you for your contribution to this site.  For more information about MMG, LLC and Dr. Wu’s technology please refer to his publications 9-13 or contact him directly at tiangenwu@yahoo.com.

REFERENCES

1.   Mark A. Hlatky, M.D. Compelling Evidence for Coronary-Bypass Surgery in Patients with Diabetes.   N Engl J Med 2012; 367:2437-2438.

2.  Stamler, J. (1989) Epidemiology.  Established major risk factors, and the primary prevention of coronary heart disease. In: Chatterjee K, Karliner J, Rapaport E, Cheitlin MD, Parmlee WW, Sheinman, M eds. Cardiology, Philadelphia Penn: JB Lippincott, 1991, 7.2-7.35. (volume 2).

3. Tanabe, K, Regar, E et al.  Sirolimus-eluting stent for treatment of in-stentrestenosis: One-year angiographic and intravascular ultrasound follow-up. J. Am Col.Cardi.   (2003) 41: 12A.

4. Grube, Eberhard;  Silber, Sigmund.  Six- and twelve-month results from a randomized, double-blind trial on a slow-release paclitaxel-eluting stent for de novo coronary lesions. Circulation 2003: 107, 38-42.

5.  Iakovou I, Schmidt T, Bonizzoni E, et al. Incidence, predictors, and outcome of thrombosis after successful implantation of drug-eluting stents. JAMA 2005;293:2126–2130.

6.  Ong AT, McFadden EP, Regar E, et al. Late angiographic stent thrombosis (LAST) events with drug-eluting stents. J Am Coll Cardiol 2005;45:2088–2092.

7. Wang F, Stouffer GA, Waxman S, et al. Late coronary stent thrombosis: Early vs late stent thrombosis in the stent era. Catheter Cardiovasc Interven 2002;55:142–147.

8. McFadden EP, Stabile E, Regar E, et al. Late thrombosis in drug-eluting coronary stents after discontinuation of antiplatelet therapy. Lancet 2004;364:1519–1521.

9. Ma X, Oyamada S, Wu T, Robich MP, Wu H, Wang X, Buchholz B, McCarthy S, Bianchi CF, Sellke FW, Laham R. In vitro and in vivo degradation of poly(D, L-lactide-co-glycolide)/amorphous calcium phosphate copolymer coated on metal stents. J Biomed Mater Res A. 2011 Mar 15;96(4):632-8. doi: 10.1002/jbm.a.33016. Epub 2011 Jan 25.

10. Oyamada S, Ma X, Wu T, Robich MP, Wu H, Wang X, Buchholz B, McCarthy S, Bianchi CF, Sellke FW, Laham R. Trans-iliac rat aorta stenting: a novel high throughput preclinical stent model for restenosis and thrombosis. J Surg Res. 2011 Mar;166(1):e91-5. Erratum in: J Surg Res. 2012 May 1;174(1):184.

11. Ma X, Oyamada S, Gao F, Wu T, Robich MP, Wu H, Wang X, Buchholz B, McCarthy S, Gu Z, Bianchi CF, Sellke FW, Laham R Paclitaxel/sirolimus combination coated drug-eluting stent: in vitro and in vivo drug release studies. J Pharm Biomed Anal. 2011 Mar 25;54(4):807-11. Erratum in: J Pharm Biomed Anal. 2012 Feb 5;59:217.

12. Ma X, Wu T, Robich MP, Wang X, Wu H, Buchholz B, McCarthy S. Drug-eluting stents. Int J Clin Exp Med. 2010 Jul 15;3(3):192-201.

Other articles related to this subject were published in this Open Access OnlIne Scientific Journal:

Lev-Ari, A. (2012aa). Renal Sympathetic Denervation: Updates on the State of Medicine

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/12/31/renal-sympathetic-denervation-updates-on-the-state-of-medicine/

 

Lev-Ari, A. (2012U). Imbalance of Autonomic Tone: The Promise of Intravascular Stimulation of Autonomics

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/09/02/imbalance-of-autonomic-tone-the-promise-of-intravascular-stimulation-of-autonomics/

Lev-Ari, A. (2012R). Coronary Artery Disease – Medical Devices Solutions: From First-In-Man Stent Implantation, via Medical Ethical Dilemmas to Drug Eluting Stents http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/08/13/coronary-artery-disease-medical-devices-solutions-from-first-in-man-stent-implantation-via-medical-ethical-dilemmas-to-drug-eluting-stents/

 

Lev-Ari, A. (2012K). Percutaneous Endocardial Ablation of Scar-Related Ventricular Tachycardia

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/07/18/percutaneous-endocardial-ablation-of-scar-related-ventricular-tachycardia/

 

Lev-Ari, A. (2012C). Treatment of Refractory Hypertension via Percutaneous Renal Denervation

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/06/13/treatment-of-refractory-hypertension-via-percutaneous-renal-denervation/

Lev-Ari, A. (2012D). Competition in the Ecosystem of Medical Devices in Cardiac and Vascular Repair: Heart Valves, Stents, Catheterization Tools and Kits for Open Heart and Minimally Invasive Surgery (MIS)

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/06/22/competition-in-the-ecosystem-of-medical-devices-in-cardiac-and-vascular-repair-heart-valves-stents-catheterization-tools-and-kits-for-open-heart-and-minimally-invasive-surgery-mis/

Lev-Ari, A. (2012E). Executive Compensation and Comparator Group Definition in the Cardiac and Vascular Medical Devices Sector: A Bright Future for Edwards Lifesciences Corporation in the Transcatheter Heart Valve Replacement Market

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/06/19/executive-compensation-and-comparator-group-definition-in-the-cardiac-and-vascular-medical-devices-sector-a-bright-future-for-edwards-lifesciences-corporation-in-the-transcatheter-heart-valve-replace/

 

Lev-Ari, A. (2012F). Global Supplier Strategy for Market Penetration & Partnership Options (Niche Suppliers vs. National Leaders) in the Massachusetts Cardiology & Vascular Surgery Tools and Devices Market for Cardiac Operating Rooms and Angioplasty Suites

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/06/22/global-supplier-strategy-for-market-penetration-partnership-options-niche-suppliers-vs-national-leaders-in-the-massachusetts-cardiology-vascular-surgery-tools-and-devices-market-for-car/

 

Lev-Ari, A. (2012G).  Heart Remodeling by Design: Implantable Synchronized Cardiac Assist Device: Abiomed’s Symphony

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/07/23/heart-remodeling-by-design-implantable-synchronized-cardiac-assist-device-abiomeds-symphony/

 

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Cardiac Surgery Theatre in China vs. in the US: Cardiac Repair Procedures, Medical Devices in Use, Technology in Hospitals, Surgeons’ Training and Cardiac Disease Severity”

 Interviewer: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

Article ID #11: Cardiac Surgery Theatre in China vs. in the US: Cardiac Repair Procedures, Medical Devices in Use, Technology in Hospitals, Surgeons’ Training and Cardiac Disease Severity”. Published on 1/8/2013

WordCloud Image Produced by Adam Tubman

 

First segment: Interview with Dr. LCR, Cardiac Surgeon,

Interviews with Scientific Leaders Series

This is the first segment on this subject, in the Interviews with Scientific Leaders Series on our Open Access Online Scientific Journal.

This Segment and the following to be published in this Open Access Online Scientific Journal, are based on an e-mail exchange with a prominent Cardiac Surgeon who worked in the US and in China in Cardiac Surgery Theatres. The identity of the surgeon, I shall conceal. The opening segment provides background, the volume of procedures and the general overview of the medical devices in use.

Following segments will be based on an exchange of Question and Answers (Q&A) which I will be presenting to our Surgeon interviewee and his answers to these specific questions.

I plan to cover the following topics:

  • Cardiac Repair Procedures
  • Medical Devices in Use
  • Technology in Hospitals
  • Surgeons’ Training and
  • Cardiac Disease Severity

Background

Dr. LCR, M.D., F.R.C.S.(C), F.A.C.S., Cardiothoracic & Vascular Surgery is the Cardiac Surgeon in this Interview with Scientific Leaders.

Dr. LCR was born in Hong Kong, SAR, China and came to the US in 1972 for higher education and became a US citizen since 1979.  He is a US medical school graduate, trained general surgeon (ABS re-certified till 12/2014) and Canadian trained cardiothoracic surgeon (ABTS re-certified till 12/2021). Dr. LCR is also a Fellow of The American College of Surgeons (F.A.C.S.) and an active member of The Society of Thoracic Surgeons (STS) since 1996. He practiced cardiothoracic and vascular surgery in the US between 1992 and 2007 when he accepted the invitation of the Foreign Experts Bureau of the Chinese government to teach/work cardiovascular surgery in China and has just returned to the US two month ago.

During those five and a half years in China, Dr. LCR worked at some of the top and largest cardiovascular programs (West China Hospital of Sichuan University at the city of Chengdu, 1,700 cardiac cases/year.

Dr. LCR worked in Guangdong Provincial Cardiovascular Institute at the city of Guangzhou, the third or fourth largest cardiac program in China, with 3,792 cardiac cases in 2011).

Dr. LCR has also authored or co-authored at least 6 scientific articles when he was in China, all published in the US cardiac journals.

Dr. LCR speaks two Chinese dialects fluently and read and write Chinese at an advanced level.

Below, we present the personal observation and opinions regarding “How the Operating Rooms (OR) are equipped and run in China and the US.”

Dr. LCR was professor of thoracic surgery at West China Hospital of Sichuan University from 06/2007 to 04/2008), the largest hospital in China, with 4,200 beds on one campus (there are three other campuses).

The hospital has 80 some OR’s and the out-patient department saw 2.5 million out-patients the year he was there.  The department of Cardiac Surgery performed 1,700 cardiac surgical cases in 2007, with 4 OR’s.

All the major US cardiac surgery vendors were represented, prosthetic heart valves, sutures,etc.. For some “Reason” we only used St. Jude Medical‘s mechanical valves, and we must have put in more than 1,200 to 1,400 valves. They were sold to the Chinese patients the same price as they were sold in the US, about US$ 3,000 each (or 21,00 CNY), about 3.6 million USD of biz for St. Jude, just from a division of the hospital.

The top two heart surgery centers are located in Beijing. Fuwei hospital did 9,700 heart surgery, and the other Aszhen hospital did close to 6,000 in 2011.

The last hospital Dr. LCR worked for as an attending/consultant surgeon until September 2012, The Guangdong Provincial General Hospital (2,400 beds)-The Guangdong Provincial Cardiovascular Institute (480 beds) is probably the third or fourth largest heart surgery center in China, did 3,782 cardiac surgical cases in 2011, most likely exceeded 4,000 in 2012.

If you add the coronary stents put in by the cardiologists in China , the biz for the medical device vendors is immense. For every one coronary bypass we did, the cardiologists must have inserted 20 or more stents. Without a doubt — China is and will be the biggest market for a lot of things, including medical devices, and you are going to the right place. Good luck.

The Next segment will present Dr. LCR’s answers to specific questions I will be e-mailing him of the following topics:

  • Cardiac Repair Procedures
  • Medical Devices in Use
  • Technology in Hospitals
  • Surgeons’ Training and
  • Cardiac Disease Severity

 

 

 

 

 

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Coronary artery disease in symptomatic patients referred for coronary angiography: Predicted by Serum Protein Profiles

Reporter: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN
BMC Med. 2012 Dec 5;10(1):157. [Epub ahead of print]

Serum protein profiles predict coronary artery disease in symptomatic patients referred for coronary angiography.

Laframboise WADhir RKelly LAPetrosko PKrill-Burger JMSciulli CMLyons-Weiler MAChandran URLomakin AMasterson RVMarroquin OC,Mulukutla SRMcNamara DM.

ABSTRACT:

BACKGROUND: More than a million diagnostic cardiac catheterizations are performed annually in the US for evaluation of coronary artery anatomy and the presence of atherosclerosis. Nearly half of these patients have no significant coronary lesions or do not require mechanical or surgical revascularization. Consequently, the ability to rule out clinically significant coronary artery disease (CAD) using low cost, low risk tests of serum biomarkers in even a small percentage of patients with normal coronary arteries could be highly beneficial.

METHODS:

Serum from 359 symptomatic subjects referred for catheterization was interrogated for proteins involved in atherogenesis, atherosclerosis, and plaque vulnerability. Coronary angiography classified 150 patients without flow-limiting CAD who did not require percutaneous intervention (PCI) while 209 required coronary revascularization (stents, angioplasty, or coronary artery bypass graft surgery). Continuous variables were compared across the two patient groups for each analyte including calculation of false discovery rate (FDR [less than or equal to]1%) and Q value (P value for statistical significance adjusted to [less than or equal to]0.01).

RESULTS:

Significant differences were detected in circulating proteins from patients requiring revascularization including increased apolipoprotein B100 (APO-B100), C-reactive protein (CRP), fibrinogen, vascular cell adhesion molecule 1 (VCAM-1), myeloperoxidase (MPO), resistin, osteopontin, interleukin (IL)-1beta, IL-6, IL-10 and N-terminal fragment protein precursor brain natriuretic peptide (NT-pBNP) and decreased apolipoprotein A1 (APO-A1). Biomarker classification signatures comprising up to 5 analytes were identified using a tunable scoring function trained against 239 samples and validated with 120 additional samples. A total of 14 overlapping signatures classified patients without significant coronary disease (38% to 59% specificity) while maintaining 95% sensitivity for patients requiring revascularization. Osteopontin (14 times) and resistin (10 times) were most frequently represented among these diagnostic signatures. The most efficacious protein signature in validation studies comprised osteopontin (OPN), resistin, matrix metalloproteinase 7 (MMP7) and interferon gamma (IFNgamma) as a four-marker panel while the addition of either CRP or adiponectin (ACRP-30) yielded comparable results in five protein signatures.

CONCLUSIONS:

Proteins in the serum of CAD patients predominantly reflected (1) a positive acute phase, inflammatory response and (2) alterations in lipid metabolism, transport, peroxidation and accumulation. There were surprisingly few indicators of growth factor activation or extracellular matrix remodeling in the serum of CAD patients except for elevated OPN. These data suggest that many symptomatic patients without significant CAD could be identified by a targeted multiplex serum protein test without cardiac catheterization thereby eliminating exposure to ionizing radiation and decreasing the economic burden of angiographic testing for these patients.

 
 SOURCE:

Other related articles on this Open Access Online Scientific Journal:

 

Assessing Cardiovascular Disease with Biomarkers

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/12/25/assessing-cardiovascular-disease-with-biomarkers/#comment-6990

 

To Stent or Not? A Critical Decision

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/10/23/to-stent-or-not-a-critical-decision/

Obstructive coronary artery disease diagnosed by RNA levels of 23 genes – CardioDx heart disease test wins Medicare coverage

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/08/14/obstructive-coronary-artery-disease-diagnosed-by-rna-levels-of-23-genes-cardiodx-heart-disease-test-wins-medicare-coverage/

 

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/?s=PCI

 

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English: Amino acid sequence of the molecule o...

English: Amino acid sequence of the molecule of the brain natriuretic peptide (BNP) 32 (functional). Português: Sequência de aminoácidos da molécula de BNP 32 (funcional). (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Assessing Cardiovascular Disease with Biomarker

Author and Curator: Larry H Bernstein, MD, FCAP

 

A Changing expectation from cardiac biomarkers.

This article on Assessing Cardiovascular Disease with Biomarkers will demonstrate the unique role in the discipline evolution that each of the following biomarkers has played in our understanding of CVD risk:

The article is introduced with an entire section on the evolution of our knowledge of cardiac biomarkers and how concepts from thermodynamics have transformed
the way we investigate biochemical mechanisms, and how we have gone from a macro- to a micro- landscape of high complexity.  The same concepts from physics
have also transformed the mathematical stage upon which we model data.  BIG Data is not just about business!  We have entered a new domain of knowledge enabling.

(1)  Enzymes and Isoenzymes

  • AST, ALT, LD, alkaline phosphatase
  • Isoenzymes evolution and genomic loci for polypeptides
  • Emergence of pathway divergence and regulation from gene-loci peptide changes
  • A reflection to implications for biomarkers and therapeutic development based on critical links

(2)  Natriuretic Peptides

  •       Cause of Death: silent cardiac target organ damage (cTOD) (no so sign of cardiac disease)
  •       B Type natriuretic peptide in evolution of CHF
  •       2D and Doppler echocardiography and BNP serum level
  •       Amino terminal pro B-type Natriuretic Peptide
  •       Renal Effect on NT-proBNP
  •       pro-atrial natriuretic peptide

(3)     CRP as Biomarker, theory that lowering the C-reactive protein (CRP) level with statin therapy is predictive of cardiovascular outcomes independent of lowering the low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol level

(4)     CRP as an Inflammatory Agent

Acute phase reaction is a systemic response: physiological condition  in the beginning of an inflammatory process.

(5)     troponins and hs-troponins (I, T)

(6)     New Candidate  Biomarkers for NSTEMI

(7)    Guidelines for Cardiovascular Risk Assessment

(8)     Statistical Issues to be Resolved

Historical perspective

The use of cardiac markers emerged in the late 1950s, when the physician was faced with the problem of a patient with recent onset of squeezing, crushing, or heaviness in the chest, with or without a Q-wave or definitive ST elevation (acute injury), and perhaps a non specific elevation of the neutrophil count.   A medical student at Albert Einstein Medical school at the time, Arthur Karmen identified the first enzymatic test for acute myocardial infarct (MI), serum glutamic oxaloacetic acid transaminase (SGOT), which is renamed Aspartate Aminotransferase (AST) in a seminal study with Wroblewski and LaDue[1].  The enzyme is ubiquitous, and the authors published another observation that the SGPT, now referred to as Alanine Aminotransferase, has a greater specific activity in liver and myocardial infarct can be distinguished from necrotizing liver disease by using AST and ALT.  These two enzymes were among the three enzymes,with lactate dehydrogenase (LD) and alkaline phosphatase that appeared on the original Technicon (later Siemens) SMA-12 profile, prior to the designated panels used today.  At that time it was common for the pathologist to stain the heart lesion at autopsy in identifying the “ischemic necrosis” postmortem.

In 1957 Hunter and Markert described the five isoenzymes of lactate dehydrogenase, the most anodal migrating pattern was associated with heart and the most cathodal isoenzymes with liver, the five bands being combinations of two subunits.  These were described as different variants of the same enzyme having identical functions, but different tissue specific patterns, such that,  enzyme variants have altered gene loci that results in an amino acid change but catalyze the same reaction.  When mutation modifies the enzymatic catalysis, or its pattern of gene expression, then any of two (or more) variants may be favoured by natural selection and become specialized to different cell environments.  His group suggested that a single gene might somehow encode an array of isozymes differing in “structural variations,” a concept that seems to presage our current understanding of alternative mRNA splicing and post-translational protein modification. A former student of George beadle, he transformed the “concept of one gene one enzyme”  to “one gene one polypeptide”. By treating the enzyme with denaturing agents it was learned that LDH is a tetramer of two types of polypeptide chains (Appella and Markert, 1961). Thus the multiple-gene hypothesis was partially correct: Two different LDH subunits, each encoded by a distinct gene, re-sort themselves in various tetrameric combinations to give rise to five different isozymes (Markert, 1963). During the succeeding years Markert and his students and postdocs elucidated how the study of isozymes could contribute to our understanding of the biochemical variation that underlies cell differentiation and evolution, culminating in the new perspective presented in a Science paper (Markert et al., 1975) entitled “Evolution of a Gene.”

In the early 1960’s Nathan Kaplan postulated that the major LD-isoenzyme types were associated with fundamental differences in the metabolism of the tissue of origin, either catabolic (heart) or anabolic (liver), and skeletal muscle would appear to be in the same class as liver (ignore the ratio of fast and slow twitch), which was elaborated on further by studies of the flight wing patterns of birds.   These isoenzymes not only had different migration in an electrophoretic field and could be separated chromatographically, but they also had different kinetic properties. They all have the same Km, but the purified heart LD is inhibited by a ternary complex of the enzyme, the NAD, and pyruvate that forms, slowing the reaction in the forward direction (pyruvate to lactate).

At about the same time, Masahiro Chiga discovered that adenylate kinase, the enzyme that converts ATP to ADP, from skeletal muscle can be inhibited by inorganic S (myokinase), which led Bernstein and Russell to publish on the identification of adenylate kinase from heart in myocardial infarction using sulfhydryl inhibition in J Molec Cellular Cardiology.  Burton Sobel in the early 1970s showed that CK and the MB isoenzyme of CK, which has a more rapid increase and disappearance than the AST or LD ,  could be used to estimate the amount of cardiac damage in MI.   This meant that a test could be done at any time of day or night with a result in less than an hour.  He applied this to determining whether the extent of infarction was an important determinant of prognosis after myocardial infarction and furthermore, whether the extent of infarction could be modified by interventions that reduce myocardial oxygen requirements or increase myocardial oxygen supply. This work has had a major impact on how patients with acute myocardial infarction are treated and led to a reduction of mortality secondary to treatments, such as thrombolysis, that were validated initially with the methods developed. This led to an immunoassay for CK isoenzyme MB that was offered by Roche on the Cobas analyzer, and by Dupont on the ‘aca’. What emerged is a new imperative to reduce infarct size under the rubrick – “Time is Muscle”.

References

  1. Karmen Arthur, Wróblewski Felix, LaDue John S. TRANSAMINASE ACTIVITY IN HUMAN BLOOD. J Clin Invest. 1955; 34(1):126–133.
  2. LADUE JS, WROBLEWSKI F, KARMEN A. Serum glutamic oxaloacetic transaminase activity in human acute transmural myocardial infarction. Science 1956; 75(11).
  3. Hunter, R. L. and C.L. Merkert. (1957) Histochemical demonstration of enzymes separated by zone electrophoresis in starch gels. Science 125: 1294-1295.
  4. Bernstein L, Kerrigan M, Maisel H. Lactic dehydrogenase isoenzymes in lens and cornea. Exp Eye Res 1965; 5(3):999-1005. ICID: 844979
  5. Nathan O. Kaplan Papers. MSS 0099. UC San Diego::Mandeville Special Collections Library.

Enzyme-coenzyme-substrate complex. of pyridine nucleotide depend. dehydrogenases 1958.  box 39, folder 5.
Enzymatic studies with analogues of diphosphopyridine nucleotide 1959. box 39, folder 12.
Heterogeneity of the lactic dehydrogenases of new-born and adult rat heart as determined with enzyme analogs 1961. box 39, folder 37.
Regulatory effects of enzyme action 1961. box 39, folder 38.
Inhibition of dehydrogenase reactions by a substance formed from reduced dpn 1961. box 39, folder 40.
Lactic dehydrogenases: functions of the two types 1964. box 39, folder 67.
Lactate dehydrogenase – structure and function. 1964. box 40, folder 4.
Role of the two types of lactic dehydrogenases 1964. Box 40, folder 9.
Structural and functional properties of h and m subunits of lactic dehydrogenase 1965. Box 40, folder 12.

  • Bernstein LH, Everse J, Shioura N, Russell PJ. Detection of cardiac damage using a steady state assay for lactate dehydrogenase isoenzymes in serum. J Mol Cell Cardiol 1974; 6(4):297-315. ICID: 825597
  • Bernstein LH, Everse J.  Determination of the isoenzyme levels of lactate dehydrogenase. Methods Enzymol 1975; 41 47-52.
  • Bernstein LH. Automated kinetic determination of lactate dehydrogenase isoenzymes in serum. Clin Chem 1977; 23(10):1928-1930. ICID: 825616
  • Bernstein LH, Scinto P. Two methods compared for measuring LD-1/total LD activity in serum. Clin Chem 1986; 32(5):792-796. ICID: 825581
  1. Shell WE, Kjekshus JK, Sobel BE: Quantitative assessment of the extent of myocardial infarction in the conscious dog by means of analysis of serial changes in serum creatine phosphokinase activity. J Clin Invest 50:2614-2626, 1971.
  2. Bergmann SR, Fox KAA, Ter-Pogossian MM, Sobel BE (Washington University), Collen D (University of Leuven): Clot-selective coronary thrombolysis with tissue-type plasminogen activator. Science 220:1181-1183, 1983.
  3. Van de Werf F, Ludbrook PA, Bergmann SR, Tiefenbrunn AJ, Fox KAA, de Geest H, Verstraete M, Collen D, Sobel BE: Coronary thrombolysis with tissue-type plasminogen activator in patients with evolving myocardial infarction. N Engl J Med 310:609-613, 1984.
  • Adan J, Bernstein LH, Babb J. Can peak CK-MB segregate patients with acute myocardial infarction into different outcome classes?  Clin Chem 1985; 31(2):996-997. ICID: 844986
  • Bernstein LH, Reynoso G.  Creatine kinase B-subunit activity in serum in cases of suspected myocardial infarction: a prediction model based on the slope of MB increase and percentage CK-MB activity. Clin Chem 1983; 29(3):590-592. ICID: 825549
  • Bernstein LH, Horenstein JM, Sybers HB, Russell PJ.  Adenylate kinase in human tissue. II. Serum adenylate kinase and myocardial infarction. J Mol Cell Cardiol 1973; 5(1):71-85. ICID: 825590

A Metabolic Functional Meaning of Existence of Isoenzymes

There are many examples of  isozymes, such as glucokinase, a variant of hexokinase which is not inhibited by glucose 6-phosphate. It has different regulatory features and lower affinity for glucose (compared to other hexokinases). Alkaline and acid phosphatase isoenzymes were used briefly for a time in clinical diagnostics.  These isoenzymes are oligomeric proteins that have distinct subunits that affect their binding with substrate.  A distinctive type of protein that can form two or more different homo-oligomers, comes apart and changes shape to convert between forms is called a morpheein. The alternate shape may reassemble to a different oligomer, and the shape of the subunit dictates which oligomer is formed. Morpheeins can interconvert between forms under physiological conditions and can exist as an equilibrium of different oligomers. Features of morpheeins can be exploited for drug discovery. A small molecule compound can shift the equilibrium either by blocking or favoring formation of one of the oligomers. The equilibrium can be shifted using a small molecule that has a preferential binding affinity for only one of the alternate morpheein forms. This introduces the concept of allostericity.  Most allosteric effects can be explained by a model put forth by Monod, Wyman, and Changeux, and also by a model described by Koshland, Nemethy, and Filmer. Both postulate that enzyme subunits exist in one of two conformations, tensed (T) or relaxed (R), and that relaxed subunits bind substrate more readily than those in the tense state.  This concept provides a foundation for another generation of biomarkers than was the focus of the 20th century, and only has been investigated since the 1980’s, and takes another dimension after the completion of the Human Genome Project, opening a “Pandora’s box”. This moved biomedical science forward into an emerging field of ‘OMICs’, which tied small molecules into regulatory processes, transcription, and the possibility of identifying new biomarkers and developing new biomolecules that could modify disease progression.

References

  1. Bu Z, Callaway DJ. “Proteins MOVE! Protein dynamics and long-range allostery in cell signaling”. Adv in Protein Chemistry and Structural Biology 2011; 83: 163–221. doi:10.1016/B978-0-12-381262-9.00005-7. PMID 21570668.
  2.  Monod J, Wyman J, Changeux JP. On the nature of allosteric transitions:A plausible model. J Mol Biol, May 1965; 12:88-118.
  3.   Koshland DE, Némethy G, Filmer D. Comparison of experimental binding data and theoretical models in proteins containing subunits. Biochemistry. Jan 1966; 5(1):365-8
  4.  Jaffe EK. “Morpheeins – a new structural paradigm for allosteric regulation”. Trends Biochem Sci 2005; 30(9): 490–497. doi:10.1016/j.tibs.2005.07.003. PMID 16023348.
  5.  Huang Z, Zhu L, Cao Y, Wu G, Liu X, et al.  ASD: a comprehensive database of allosteric proteins and modulators. Nucleic Acids Res 2011; 39: D663-669

Fundamental Transformative Concepts Carried Over from Physics to Biomolecular Processes.

A colleague once noted that we are learning more and more about less and less.  This is the remarkable evolution of our thinking from macrostates to microstates and segmentation of processes, further leading us to exploration of interactions between states.  This has required a breakdown and a repeated remodeling or resynthesis of ideas based on new findings in science.  It has gradually driven medicial science to a greater dependence on chemistry and physics in underlying principle.  We can better envision the mechanism of evolution from the concepts put forth.

In 1824 Sadi Carnot published the concept that heat is lost in the conversion into work, using the term “caloric”, equivalent to entropy in the second law of thermodynamics.  Clausius then develops the concepts of interior work in 1854, i.e. that “which the atoms of the body exert upon each other”, and exterior work, i.e. that “which arise from foreign influences [to] which the body may be exposed”, anticipating the concept of entropy. He enunciated the passage of the quantity of heat Q from the temperature T1 to the temperature T2 has the equivalence-value entropy, symbolized by S :  dS = Q (1/T2 – 1/T1), which led to his 1865 statement on irreversible heat loss: I propose to name the quantity S the entropy of the system, after the Greek word [τροπη trope], the transformation. I have deliberately chosen the word entropy to be as similar as possible to the word energy.”  In 1876, physicist J. Willard Gibbs, building on the work of Clausius, Hermann von Helmholtz and others, proposed that the measurement of “available energy” ΔG in a thermodynamic system could be mathematically accounted for by subtracting the “energy loss” TΔS from total energy change of the system ΔH, and in 1877, Ludwig Boltzmann formulated the alternative definition of entropy S defined as:

S = kBlnΩ

where

kB is Boltzmann’s constant and

Ω is the number of microstates consistent with the given macrostate.

An analog to thermodynamic entropy is information entropy. Claude Shannon set out to mathematically quantify the statistical nature of “lost information” in phone-line signals  and developed  a concept of information entropy, a fundamental cornerstone of information theory. The close similarity between his new quantity and earlier work in thermodynamics is attributed to a visit and discussion with Jon von Neumann in 1949. Shannon then called the “measure of uncertainty” or attenuation in phone-line signals with reference to his new information theory.  This led to the elucidation of a signal (as opposed to noise, by Solomon Kullback, which became the basis for the measure of an optimum diagnostic decision point of a laboratory test by Bernstein and Rudolph, related to Eugene Rypka’s “Syndromic Clustering”.  The loop was closed by the Japanese mathematician Akaike, who brought Fisher’s statistical formulations and Kullback-Liebler distance into alignment.   This is not a digression because it has been central to underlying principles in resolution in spectroscopy, and to classification of biochemical molecular features.

Although Boltzmann first linked entropy and probability in 1877, it seems the relation was never expressed with a specific constant until Max Planck first introduced k, and gave an accurate value for it (1.346×10−23 J/K, about 2.5% lower than today’s figure), in his derivation of the law of black body radiation in 1900–1901. Before 1900, equations involving Boltzmann factors were not written using the energies per molecule and the Boltzmann constant, but rather using a form of the gas constant R, and macroscopic energies for macroscopic quantities of the substance. The iconic terse form of the equation S = k log W on Boltzmann’s tombstone is in fact due to Planck, not Boltzmann. Planck actually introduced it in the same work as his h. Planck noted in his 1920 Nobel Prize acceptance : “:This constant is often referred to as Boltzmann’s constant, although, to my knowledge, Boltzmann himself never introduced it — a peculiar state of affairs.”  The Kullback–Leibler divergence (also information divergence, information gain, relative entropy, or KLIC) is a non-symmetric measure of the difference between two probability distributions P and Q, was  introduced by Solomon Kullback and Richard Leibler in 1951. KL-divergence of a model from reality may be estimated, to within a constant additive term, by a function (like the squares summed) of the deviations observed between data and the model’s predictions. When trying to fit parametrized models to data there are various estimators which attempt to minimize Kullback–Leibler divergence, such as, the familiar maximum likelihood  estimator.

References

  1. Planck, Max (2 June 1920), The Genesis and Present State of Development of the Quantum Theory (Nobel Lecture)
  2. Kalinin M, Kononogov S. “Boltzmann’s Constant, the Energy Meaning of Temperature, and Thermodynamic Irreversibility”, Measurement Techniques 2005; 48 (7): 632–36, doi:10.1007/s11018-005-0195-9
  3. Kullback S, Leibler RA “On Information and Sufficiency”. Annals of Mathematical Statistics 1951; 22 (1): 79–86. doi:10.1214/aoms/1177729694. MR 39968.
  4. Kullback S (1959) Information theory and statistics (John Wiley and Sons, NY).
  5. Jaynes ET(1957) Information theory and statistical mechanics, Physical Review 106:620
  6. Jaynes ET(1957) Information theory and statistical mechanics II, Physical Review 108:171
  7. Burnham KP and Anderson DR. (2002) Model Selection and Multimodel Inference: A Practical Information-Theoretic Approach, Second Edition (Springer Science, New York) ISBN 978-0-387-95364-9.
  8. Rudolph RA, Bernstein LH, Babb J.  Information induction for predicting acute myocardial infarction. Clin Chem 1988; 34(10):2031-2038. ICID: 825568

A New Imperative

Cardiovascular Biomarkers

I. BNP:

[A] Aids in the Prevention of Cardiac Events by Detecting Silent Ischemic Lesions and Selecting Patients for Imaging

12/17/12 · Emily Humphreys

Physicians use risk factors, such as history, exercise level, diabetes, blood pressure, lipid profiles, and other laboratory measurements to ascertain risk for cardiac events, which are not foolproof in predicting all cardiac events. Nonetheless, 40% to 50% of sudden cardiac deaths (SCD) occur before risk factors are able to predict cardiac events.2,3 Those who die suddenly with no so sign of cardiac disease often have silent cardiac target organ damage (cTOD).  While patients with silent ischemia have a 21-fold increase in risk of a coronary event.4 It has also been shown that cTODs such as left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH), left ventricular systolic dysfunction (LVSD), left ventricular diastolic dysfunction (LVDD), and left atrial enlargement (LAE) each independently predict cardiovascular events5,6,7,8 Nadir et al. hypothesized that identification of silent cTOD would aid in the prevention of cardiovascular events, including SCDs.9 To identify cTOD present, The Nadir group evaluated several known cardiac biomarkers including: B-type natriuretic peptide (BNP), high-sensitivity cardiac troponin T (hs-cTnT), microalbuminuria, the estimated glomerular filtration rate, and uric acid.  The lab results of 300 asymptomatic individuals recruited for the study were compared with primary screening using transthoracic echocardiography, stress echocardiography, and/or myocardial perfusion imaging.
  • 34% of study volunteers had evidence of a cTOD. Out of all biomarkers analyzed, BNP levels were significantly higher in those with cTOD compared with those without. BNP levels were also higher in those who had more than one form of cTOD compared with those who had a single form of cTOD.
  • Hs-cTnT also performed well, but BNP levels had the highest correlation to imaging data. The gold standard diagnostic tool for cardiovascular disease is imaging studies, such as echocardiography.
  • It is not standard practice to investigate healthy individuals for possible cTOD and would be costly and time consuming to perform imaging on these individuals.
  • Biomarkers like BNP could be used as a primary screening tool with follow-up image studies performed, if necessary.

The eventual hope is to reduce the mortality of cardiovascular diseases and prevent silent cTOD from leading to more serious and potentially life-threatening cardiac events.

References

1. Roger, V.L. (2012) ‘AHA statistical update: Heart disease and stroke statistics-2012 update. A report from the american heart association‘, Circulation, 125 (2012), (pp. e2-e220)

2. Chiuve, S.E., et al., (2006) ‘Healthy lifestyle factors in the primary prevention of coronary heart disease among men: Benefits among users and nonusers of lipid-lowering and antihypertensive medications‘ Circulation, 114 (2006), (pp. 160-167)

3.De Vreede-Swagemakers, J.J., et al. (1997) ‘Out-of-hospital cardiac arrest in the 1990s: A population-based study in the Maastricht area on incidence, characteristics and survival‘, Journal of the American College of Cardiology, 30 (1997), (pp. 1500-1505)

4. Rutter, M.K., et al. (2002) ‘Significance of silent ischemia and microalbuminuria in predicting coronary events in asymptomatic patients with type 2 diabetes‘, Journal of the American College of Cardiology, 40 (2002), (pp. 56-61)

5. Tsang, T.S., et al. (2003) Prediction of risk for first age-related cardiovascular events in an elderly population: The incremental value of echocardiography‘, Journal of the American College of Cardiology, 42 (2003), (pp. 1199-1205)

6. Gosse, P., (2005) ‘Left ventricular hypertrophy—the problem and possible solutions‘,The Journal of International Medical Research, 33 (Suppl 1) (2005), (pp. 3A-11A)

7. Benjamin, E.J., et al. (1995) ‘Left atrial size and the risk of stroke and death‘ The Framingham Heart Study Circulation, 92 (4), (pp. 835-41)

8. Redfield, M.M., et al. (2003) ‘Burden of systolic and diastolic ventricular dysfunction in the community: Appreciating the scope of the heart failure epidemic‘, JAMA, 289 (2003), (pp. 194-202)

9. Nadir, M.A., et al., (2012) ‘Improving the primary prevention of cardiovascular events by using biomarkers to identify individuals with silent heart disease‘, Journal of American College of Cardiology, 60 (11), (pp. 960-968) Tags: 

[B] Evaluating CHF patients in the emergency department

The role of B-type natriuretic peptide in the evaluation of congestive heart failure patients in emergency department

Congestive heart failure (CHF) is a severe cardiovascular disorder seen in the Emergency Department (ED). B-type Natriuretic Peptide (BNP) is usually ordered to evaluate the CHF severity.

However, it is difficult to interpret serum BNP level when different clinical entities existed.

The aim of this study is to illustrate the correlation between serum BNP level and

  • relevant clinical variables and
  • further determine the role of serum BNP in different CHF patients.

High variability of serum BNP levels exists in CHF patients with weak-to-moderate correlation effects particularly on obesity and diastolic/systolic HF.

Physicians should be cautious on interpreting BNP in different CHF populations.

[C]   NT-proBNP compared with ECHO

Comparison of N-Terminal Pro B-Natriuretic Peptide and Echocardiographic Indices in Patients with Mitral Regurgitation.  Shokoufeh Hajsadeghi1, Niloufar Samiei2, Masoud Moradi3, Maleki Majid2, et al. Corresponding author email: masoud_moradi65@yahoo.com

Abstract

Introduction: Echocardiographic indices can form the basis of the diagnosis of systolic and diastolic left ventricular (LV) dysfunction in patients with Mitral regurgitation (MR). However, using echocardiography alone may bring us to a diagnostic dead-end. The aim of this study was to compare N-Terminal pro B-natriuretic peptide (BNP) and echocardiographic indices in patients with mitral regurgitation.

Methods: 2D and Doppler echocardiography and BNP serum level were obtained from 54 patients with organic mild, moderate and severe MR.

Results: BNP levels were increased with symptoms in patients with mitral regurgitation (NYHAI: 5.7 ± 1.1, NYHAII: 6.9 ± 1.5, NYHAIII: 8.3 ± 2 pg/ml, P , 0.001). BNP plasma level were significantly correlated with MPI (myocardial performance index)(r = 0.399, P = 0.004), and following echocardiographic indices: LVEDV (r = 0.45, P , 0.001), LVESV (r = 0.54, P , 0.001), LVEDD (r = 0.48, P , 0.001), LVESD (r = 0.54, P , 0.001), dp/dt (r = −0.32, P = 0.019) and SPAP (r = 0.4, P = 0.006).

Conclusion: The present study showed that BNP may be useful in patients with MR and may confirm echocardiographic indices.

Keywords: mitral regurgitation, N-Terminal pro-B natriuretic peptide, echocardiographic indices.

The hypothesis assumes that there is a linear sequence of most effective screening that comes out of this study, from a b-type natriuretic peptide to the imaging.  It’s not clear that that is the case, and moreover, silent myocardial infarct is taken and lumped with other serious conditions affecting the myocardium, presumably through compromise of the end-artery circulation to the heart (R, L, and circumflex coronaries).  There is no mention of whether the patients were screened out for peripheral, carotid, or other associated artery disease (superior mesenteric).

I’ll assume that that is the case.  I see a problem with a linear, monothetic, “gold standard” approach, when the disease and the diagnosis of it is multivariate and requires a method that uses a classificatory approach.  We’ll return to that.

English: A Wiggers diagram, showing the cardia...

English: A Wiggers diagram, showing the cardiac cycle events occuring in the left ventricle. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

[D]  reference normal for NT-proBNP

ABSTRACT

Background: The natriuretic peptides, B-type natriuretic peptide (BNP) and NT-proBNP that have emerged as tools for diagnosing congestive heart failure (CHF) are affected by age and renal insufficiency (RI).This study evaluates the reference value for interpreting NT-proBNP concentrations. Increasing concentrations of NT-proBNP are associated with co-morbidities, not merely CHF, resulting in altered volume status or myocardial filling pressures.

Methods: NT-proBNP was measured in a population with normal trans-thoracic echocardiograms (TTE) and free of anemia or renal impairment.

Selection of Patients: Study participants were seen in acute care for symptoms of shortness of breath suspicious for CHF.

Results: The median NT-proBNP for patients under 50 years is 27.6 pg/ml with an upper limit of 445 pg/ml, and for patients over 50 years the median was 142.3 pg/ml with an upper limit of 475.3 pg/ml. We introduce a transformed NT-proBNP that normalizes for decrease in glomerular filtration rate and eliminates the age factor.

Conclusion: We suggest that NT-proBNP levels can be more accurately interpreted only after removal of the major co-morbidities that affect an increase in this peptide in serum. The PRIDE study guidelines should be applied until presence or absence of comorbidities is diagnosed. With no comorbidities, the reference range for normal over 50 years of age can be reduced below 800 pg/ml. The effect shown in previous papers likely is due to increasing concurrent comorbidity with age.

Key Words: Congestive Heart Failure, Natriuretic peptides, Anemia, Chronic renal insufficiency

Statistical treatment:

The combined acute and blood donor study sets were kept separate and each analyzed for central tendency, distribution and variability. The two were combined after the comorbidities described above were extracted from the acute care study group. This resulted in a population that should be representative of an unaffected study population that could be used to establish a most representative reference range. The database was replicated several times and then patient rows were randomly deleted until there was an expanded combined and mixed data set with 6,700 entries. All of the database sets were used for analyses.

The results are reported in means with p < 0.05 as the measure of significance for difference between means. Independent Student’s t-tests were applied comparing NT-proBNP and anemia. Univariate ANOVAs were used to compare NT-proBNP levels with varying ranges of hemoglobin and age using SPSS 15.0 (SPSS, Chicago, IL). A linear regression analysis with linear fitting and confidence interval was performed using SYSTAT 12 (SYSTAT, San Jose, CA). The results are reported in means with p < 0.05 as the measure of significance for difference between means. Linear regression analysis, Independent Student’s t and Mann-Whitney tests were applied comparing NT-proBNP for age intervals. Reference range was determined using MedCalc 9.2.0.0 (Mariakerke, Belgium).

We observe the following changes with respect to NT-proBNP and age:
  • Sharp increase in NT-proBNP at over age 50
  • Increase in NT-proBNP at 7 percent per decade over 50
  • Decrease in eGFR at 4 percent per decade over 50
  • Slope of NT-proBNP increase with age is related to proportion of patients with eGFR less than 90
  •  NT-proBNP increase can be delayed or accelerated based on disease comorbidities
Adjustment of the NT-proBNP for eGFR and for age over 50 difference

We have carried out a normalization to adjust for both eGFR and for age over 50:

  • Take Log of NT-proBNP and multiply by 1000
  • Divide the result by eGFR (using MDRD[9] or Cockroft Gault[10])
  • Compare results for age under 50, 50-70, and over 70 years
  • Adjust to age under 50 years by multiplying by 0.66 and 0.56.

GFR (mL/min/1.73 m2) = 186 x (Scr)-1.154 x (Age)-0.203 x (0.742 if female) x (1.210 if African-American) (conventional units)

The equation does not require weight because the results are reported normalized to 1.73 m2 body surface area, which is an accepted average adult surface area.

Comparison of the mean + standard deviation of 607 blood donors and NYMH inpatients for the MDRD and Cockroft Gault (eCG), respectively gave 114.3, 43.7(MDRD); 105.0, 40.1 (eCG). The eCG is predicted by the regression: eCG = 0.059 + 0.918*MDRD. The mean + standard deviation for the age under 50 years and 50 or older is 106.5 + 14.7, 100.9 + 14.5 (MDRD); and 102.5 + 18.5, 98.4 + 20.8 (eCG). These differences are significant at < 0.0001, and 0.010, respectively.

The means comparison of the normalized NT-proBNP (NKLog[NT-proBNP]/eGFR) results in 23.4 and 18.7 for 307 non-donors and 300 donors, significant at p < 0.0001, assuming unequal variance). The difference is not significant for the MDRD normalized NT-proBNP (16.5, 6.6). The normalized by eCG result for 324 under age under 50 years and 283 age 50 years and older is 17.7 versus 18.2, significant at p = 0.0001. The MDRD calculated adjustment is 16.8 vs 16.9, which is not significant. The relationship between these is NKLog(NT-proBNP)/eCG = 4.47 + 0.948*NKLog(NT-proBNP)/MDRD. Figure 4 is a plot of the regression of NKLog(NTproBNP)/MDRD vs NKLog(NTproBNP)/eCG predicted over the full study population.

The reference range for the normalized Klog(NT-proBNP)/MDRD is described by a mean 13.99, median 13.12, and standard deviation 6.14 with a nonparametric upper limit of 24.7. A ROC curve is constructed comparing the NT-proBNP, the NKLog(NTproBNP)/MDRD and the ratio NTproBNP to NKLog(NTproBNP)/MDRD in the expanded full database. The area under the curve is 0.944 (0.938-0.950) for NKLog(NTproBNP)/MDRD with a base of 571 patients with early CHF and 6115 patients without. The reference range for NKLog(proBNP)/MDRD can be referenced to the percentiles as follows: 20, 8.78; 40, 11.92; 60, 14.85; 90, 21.10; 95, 24.73; 97.5, 29.54.

Conclusion: We suggest that NT-proBNP levels can be accurately assessed only after removal of the major confounding co-morbidities that increase this peptide in serum. We established our new range after establishing absence of co-morbidities. The value of this approach for screening purposes is an allowance for a considerably lower reference normal with a higher specificity based on the donor studies and the mixture model. This study finds that the reference range for NT-proBNP is age-dependent past age 50 years, mainly as the change relates to eGFR, and we introduce an age adjusted alternative measure, the normalized NT-proBNP using the MDRD transformation described.

NT-pro BNP reference range with blood donors and patients

Measure                                            NT-proBNP (pg/ml)                         After trimming extremes

Highest                                                    1110                                                                   599.4

Arithmetic mean                                   179.6                                                                   118.2

Geometric mean                                        68.7                                                                      54.4

Median                                                          52.6                                                                     42.6

Standard deviation                                250.5                                                                  150.6

D’Agostino-Pearson                          P = 0.0026                                                    P = 0.0091

97.5%

< 50 years                                                  526.9                                                                 445.0

> 50 years                                                1000                                                                    565.0

Upper Limit of Normal                           772.9                                                                475.3

95% confidence interval                   637.1 – 873.73                                      442.7 – 531.0

Bernstein LH, Zions MY, Alam ME, Haq SA, Heitner JF, et al.  What is the best approximation of reference normal for NT-proBNP? Clinical Levels for Enhanced Assessment of NT-proBNP (CLEAN)

Renal Effect on NT-proBNP

NT-proBNP is excreted by the kidney.  Therefore, GFR has to be taken into account in adjusting the reference range.  BNP, unlike the propeptide, is eliminated 80% by vascular endothelium.  What would be the effect of vascular endothelium erosion?  We don’t know.

The Cockroft Gault equation is widely used in hospitals for adjusting medication doses in hospital patients. The MDRD equation was developed for patients with renal insufficiency and has been shown to be comparable to CG for the population the MDRD is applied. However, the MDRD is only reported to a CLCR of only 60 ml/min and is not validated for age over 65 years. On the other hand, the body weight and BMI, necessary for calculating the CG formula are not routinely done for all patients or in all hospitals. We used 307 inpatients and calculated the MDRD up to 100 ml/min/m2, then used the results to predict the CG. The regression for MDRD versus the CG resulted in an r = 0.884, and a regression equation: CG = -21.1 + 1.172*(MDRD). The initial prediction of CG from MDRDe from 198 of the patients is defined by the regression: CGe = -64.6 + 1.866*MDRDe. (Deming)(95% CI: Intercept -84.5 to -42.8; slope 1.40 to 2.33).  The means, medians, standard deviations, and 97.5th percentiles, respectively, of the age, MDRDe and CGe (calculated from weight data) for the 307 patients are: age- 61.2, 62.0, 17.4, 91.3; MDRD – 121.5, 107.5, 55.9, 212.3; CG – 111.7, 98.7, 51.4, 195.0.

The NT-proBNP was adjusted using a log transform and the estimated GFR (glomerular filtration rate by the original method of Levey et al.  The result for reference corrected Nt proBNP is shown in Table 2.

Table 2.

Kruskal-Wallis test

Data KLOGNTPR
Factor codes MDRD60
Sample size

440

Factor

n

Average Rank

0

344

174.11

1

96

386.73

Test statistic

209.8311

Corrected for ties  Ht

209.8313

Degrees of Freedom (DF)

1

Significance level

P < 0.0001

[E]   Mid-region proANP in Emergency Room

Mid-region pro-hormone markers for diagnosis and prognosis in acute dyspnea: results from the BACH (Biomarkers in Acute Heart Failure) trial.
J Am Coll Cardiol 2010 May 11;55(19):2062-76 (ISSN: 1558-3597)
Maisel A; Mueller C; Nowak R; Peacock WF; Landsberg JW; Ponikowski P; Mockel M; Hogan C; Wu AH; Richards M; Clopton P; Filippatos GS; Di Somma S; Anand I; Ng L; Daniels LB; Neath SX; Christenson R; Potocki M; McCord J; Terracciano G; Kremastinos D; Hartmann O; von Haehling S; Bergmann A; Morgenthaler NG; Anker SD
VA San Diego Healthcare System, San Diego, California 92161, USA. amaisel@ucsd.edu.
OBJECTIVES: Our purpose was to assess the diagnostic utility of midregional pro-atrial natriuretic peptide (MR-proANP) for the diagnosis of acute heart failure (AHF) and the prognostic value of midregional pro-adrenomedullin (MR-proADM) in patients with AHF. BACKGROUND: There are some caveats and limitations to natriuretic peptide testing in the acute dyspneic patient. METHODS: The BACH (Biomarkers in Acute Heart Failure) trial was a prospective, 15-center, international study of 1,641 patients presenting to the emergency department with dyspnea. A noninferiority test of MR-proANP versus B-type natriuretic peptide (BNP) for diagnosis of AHF and a superiority test of MR-proADM versus BNP for 90-day survival were conducted. Other end points were exploratory. RESULTS: MR-proANP (> or =120 pmol/l) proved noninferior to BNP (> or =100 pg/ml) for the diagnosis of AHF (accuracy difference 0.9%). In tests of secondary diagnostic objectives, MR-proANP levels added to the utility of BNP levels in patients with intermediate BNP values and with obesity but not in renal insufficiency, the elderly, or patients with edema. Using cut-off values from receiver-operating characteristic analysis, the accuracy to predict 90-day survival of heart failure patients was 73% (95% confidence interval: 70% to 77%) for MR-proADM and 62% (95% confidence interval: 58% to 66%) for BNP (difference p < 0.001). In adjusted multivariable Cox regression, MR-proADM, but not BNP, carried independent prognostic value (p < 0.001). Results were consistent using NT-proBNP instead of BNP (p < 0.001). None of the biomarkers was able to predict rehospitalization or visits to the emergency department with clinical relevance. CONCLUSIONS: MR-proANP is as useful as BNP for AHF diagnosis in dyspneic patients and may provide additional clinical utility when BNP is difficult to interpret. MR-proADM identifies patients with high 90-day mortality risk and adds prognostic value to BNP. (Biomarkers in Acute Heart Failure [BACH]; NCT00537628). [Copyright 2010 American College of Cardiology Foundation. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.].
Comment In: RefSource:J Am Coll Cardiol. 2010 May 11; 55(19):2077-9/PMID:20447529

II. CRP

[A] Predictor of benefit of lowering CRP with statin

Sever PS, Poulter NR, Chang CL, et al; ASCOT Investigators. Evaluation of C-reactive protein prior to and on-treatment as a predictor of benefit from atorvastatin: observations from the Anglo-Scandinavian Cardiac Outcomes Trial. Eur Heart J. 2012;33:486-494

The theory that lowering the C-reactive protein (CRP) level with statin therapy is predictive of cardiovascular outcomes independent of lowering the low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol level was first advanced by the JUPITER investigators.[1]

  • This study further fueled the debate on whether CRP measurement should be routine for monitoring cardiovascular disease risk. The ASCOT investigators entered this debate when they analyzed data from their trial to determine whether on-statin C-reactive protein level was associated with cardiovascular outcomes.[4]
  • The data in the nested case-control study were from persons recruited to ASCOT in the United Kingdom and Ireland, 9098 of whom were randomly assigned in the blood pressure-lowering arm to receive either amlodipine with or without perindopril or atenolol with or without bendroflumethiazide.[5] Within the whole blood-pressure-lowering group, 4853 persons with a total cholesterol level of 6.5 mmol/L or less (≤ 250 mg/dL) were further randomized to receive atorvastatin or placebo as part of the lipid-lowering arm.[6]
  • For the case-control study, 485 cardiovascular cases were age- and sex-matched with 1367 controls. As expected, the investigators found that baseline LDL cholesterol and CRP levels both predicted cardiovascular events.
  • However, neither the baseline nor the on-treatment CRP level was related to the magnitude of statin efficacy in the prevention of cardiovascular events, whereas the on-treatment LDL cholesterol level was strongly predictive. Including CRP in the Framingham model resulted in a “modest” (2.1%) improvement in risk prediction overall.

The investigators noted that this finding was in line with other prospective studies that showed statistically significant, but modest, absolute improvements with the use of CRP in clinical risk prediction.[7,8] They concluded that “in this hypertensive population selected on the basis of traditional, common coexisting risk factors, CRP did not usefully improve the prediction of cardiovascular events and, critically, reduction in CRP associated with statin therapy was not a predictor of cardiovascular outcome alone or in combination with LDL-cholesterol.”

Eugene Braunwald downplayed the ASCOT investigators’ conclusions in observing “the ASCOT results, albeit quite limited in size, are in fact remarkably similar to those of the [CARE, AFCAPS/TexCAPS, REVERSAL, A to Z], and JUPITER trials, especially in light of the fact that the dose of atorvastatin [in ASCOT] was only 10 mg, while some of the other trials used considerably larger equivalent doses of statins.”

My own take on this is that for at least two decades, there was a belief that the LDL lowering was the main effect of statins, until the (deep frozen) specimens were reexamined from the Framingham study using a hs CRP assay.  The investigation was to determine whether there is a predictor of CVD that is present when the traditional features are not present (which would have to include diabetes and hypertension).  The basis for the use of hsCRP became to identify patients who had sufficient risk to be treated with a statin.  The essential focus seemed to turn on whether statin treatment has efficacy in view of the differential between the LDL or the CRP on the magnitude of the effect.  The muscular effect of a statin then comes into view with the size dose and length of treatment.  However, the CRP measurement identified a relationship between development of the vascular disease and the inflammatory process independently of the STATIN treatment benefit.

Prof. Sever (Medscape): The key result that we found in the initial paper was that CRP, although an independent predictor of cardiovascular events in the hypertensive population, was really only a weak predictor, which is confirmed by the meta-analyses. Furthermore, when you incorporate CRP into a Framingham-style model, it really does not add any benefit or give any more information than if it had not been included in the model. LDL cholesterol is a much more important biomarker. Our second important conclusion addressed the question of whether, after starting a patient on statin therapy, the magnitude of lowering CRP by the statin and the level to which CRP has been reduced predicts cardiovascular outcome. The simple answer from our analyses was that it did not and that the benefits were all related to lowering LDL cholesterol. Our population comprised patients with stable hypertension and no history of coronary disease; likewise, the diabetes population in CARDS had no history of coronary heart disease. Oddly, PROVE IT-TIMI 22 involved persons who were selected from a high-risk coronary heart disease population simply because they had a high level of an inflammatory marker. So, to a certain extent, this is like comparing apples and oranges, and to find some unifying hypothesis on the basis of widely heterogeneous patient populations seems to be a little naive.

[B] Predictor of cardiovascular disease

Acute Phase Reactants as Novel Predictors of Cardiovascular Disease  M. S. AhmedA. B. JadhavA. Hassan, and Qing H. Meng SRN Inflammation 2012; Article ID 953461, 18 pages. doi:10.5402/2012/953461

  • Acute phase reaction is a systemic response which usually follows a physiological condition that takes place in the beginning of an inflammatory process.
  • This physiological change usually lasts 1-2 days. However, the systemic acute phase response usually lasts longer.
  • The aim of this systemic response is to restore homeostasis.
  1. These events are accompanied by upregulation of some proteins (positive acute phase reactants) and
  2. downregulation of others (negative acute phase reactants) during inflammatory reactions.

Cardiovascular diseases are accompanied by the elevation of several positive acute phase reactants such as

  • C-reactive protein (CRP),
  • serum amyloid A (SAA),
  • fibrinogen,
  • white blood cell count,
  • secretory nonpancreatic phospholipase 2-II (sPLA2-II),
  • ferritin, and
  • ceruloplasmin.

Cardiovascular disease is also accompanied by the reduction of important transport proteins such as

  • albumin, transferrin,
  • transthyretin,
  • retinol-binding protein,
  • antithrombin, and
  • transcortin.

In this paper, we will be discussing the biological activity and diagnostic and prognostic values of acute phase reactants with cardiovascular importance.

The potential therapeutic targets of these reactants will be also discussed.

.

[C] CRP as an Inflammatory Biomarker

CRP is an acute phase protein [78] produced in the liver in response to interleukin- (IL-) 6 which is stimulated, in turn, by tumour necrosis factor-α (TNF-α) and IL-1 [89].

Recent studies suggest that CRP plays a pivotal role in many aspects of atherogenesis including

  • LDL uptake by macrophage,
  • release of proinflammatory cytokines,
  • expression of monocyte chemotactic protein-1,
  • intercellular adhesion molecule-1, and vascular cellular adhesion molecule-1 [1012].

Activation of inflammation and the acute phase reaction appear to play an important role, not only in the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis, but also in the initiation of the acute coronary syndrome (ACS) [13,14]. Cesari et al. suggested that the inflammatory markers CRP, IL-6, and TNF-α are independent predictors of cardiovascular events in older persons [14].

Diagnostic Value

CRP is also an early ischemic marker and elevated CRP is predictive of future adverse events [2223]. High-sensitivity CRP (hs-CRP) rises acutely after tissue injury, including myocardial infarction (MI). Intense cytokine production and inflammatory cell infiltration occur in the area of ischemia and necrosis. This increase of hs-CRP levels, in part, correlates with infarct size [2425]

CRP can be also used for patients screening in the primary prevention population [36]. Ockene et al. indicated that CRP is generally expressed at low levels (<1 mg/L) in healthy adults and levels remain relatively stable in the absence of an acute inflammatory stimulus [37].

Patients with unstable angina and CRP >3 mg/L at discharge are more likely to be readmitted for recurrent cardiovascular instability or MI within 1 year [38].

Pietilä et al. indicated that hs-CRP measurement is the strongest correlative factor for future clinical events due to arterial inflammation, myocardial infarction, unstable angina, stroke, and peripheral vascular disease in both diseased and apparently healthy asymptomatic patients [40].

The CRP plasma level also is the best risk assessment in patients with

  • either stable or unstable angina,
  • long term after myocardial infarction, and
  • in patients undergoing revascularization therapies [41].
  • One study showed the only independent cardiovascular risk indicators using multivariate, age adjusted and traditional risk analysis were CRP and Total/HDL cholesterol ratio.
  • If CRP, IL-6, and ICAM-1 levels are added to lipid levels, risk assessment can be improved over lipids alone.
  • Moreover, serum CRP may indicate the vulnerability of the plaque [40].

Prognostic Value

  • elevation of hs-CRP levels predicts a poor cardiovascular prognosis [42].
  • The extent of the inflammatory response to injury appears to have prognostic significance, which is independent of the extent of myocardial injury.
  • hs-CRP response after MI has been shown to predict future CHD morbidity and mortality independent of infarct size [43].
  • CRP is also a predictor of incident type 2 diabetes. As well, it adds a prognostic information on vascular risk at all levels of the metabolic syndrome [44].

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III.  Troponin(s) and hs-TnI/cTnT

Comparison of diagnostic accuracy between three different rules of interpreting high sensitivity troponin T results. Francesco Buccelletti; Leonarda Galiuto; Davide Marsiliani; Paolo Iacomini; et al. Intern Emerg Med 2012; 7, 365

Abstract

With the introduction of high sensitivity troponin-T (hs-TnT) assay, clinicians face more patients with ‘positive’ results but without myocardial infarction. Repeated hs-TnT determinations are warranted to improve specificity. The aim of this study was to compare diagnostic accuracy of three different interpretation rules for two hs-TnT results taken 6 h apart. After adjusting for clinical differences, hs-TnT results were recoded according to the three rules.

  • Rule1: hs-TnT >13 ng/L in at least one determination.
  • Rule2: change of >20 % between the two measures.
  • Rule3: change >50 % if baseline hs-TnT 14-53 ng/L and >20 % if baseline >54 ng/L.

The sensitivity, specificity and ROC curves were compared. The sensitivity analysis was used to generate post-test probability for any test result. Primary outcome was the evidence of coronary critical stenosis (CCS) on coronary angiography in patients with high-risk chest pain.

183 patients were analyzed (38.3 %) among all patients presenting with chest pain during the study period. CCS was found in 80 (43.7 %) cases.

The specificity was 0.62 (0.52-0.71), 0.76 (0.66-0.84) and 0.83 (0.74-0.89) for rules 1, 2 and 3, respectively (P < 0.01). Sensitivity decreased with increasing specificity (P < 0.01).

Overall diagnostic accuracy did not differ among the three rules (AUC curves difference P = 0.12). Sensitivity analysis showed a 25 % relative gain in predicting CCS using rule 3 compared to rule 1. Changes between two determinations of hs-TnT 6 h apart effectively improved specificity for CCS presence in high-risk chest pain patients.

There was a parallel loss in sensitivity that discouraged any use of such changes as a unique way to interpret the new hs-TnT results.

Advances in identifying NSTEMI biomarkers [Published 31 August 2012 | Article by Excerpta Medica | Tags: elderly, ami, biomarkers, diagnosis]

In the run-up to the ESC conference at the end of August, we review some recently published research on the hot topic of biomarkers for NSTEMI.

Prompt and accurate diagnosis of acute non-ST elevation myocardial infarction (NSTEMI) can be particularly challenging in elderly patients, as they often present with

  • atypical symptoms and/or have an inconclusive ECG.
  • the diagnostic value of cardiac troponin T (cTnT), an established marker of cardiac injury, is often limited as there is often non-coronary troponin elevation caused by concomitant conditions such as acute congestive heart failure.
  • Identifying new sensitive and specific biomarkers of NSTEMI in elderly patients is therefore important, and circulating microRNAs (miRs) are emerging as good candidates.

researchers evaluated the diagnostic potential of plasma levels of various miRs in elderly patients enrolled at presentation:

  • 92 acute NSTEMI patients (complicated by congestive heart failure in three-quarters of cases),
  • 81 patients with acute congestive heart failure without acute MI, and
  • 99 age-matched healthy people (the control group).

The researchers, from centers in Italy, found that levels of miR-1, miR-21, miR-133a, and miR-423-5p were 3-10 times higher in the patients with NSTEMI, compared with controls. Levels of miR-499-5p, meanwhile, were more than 80 times higher in the NSTEMI patients compared with the patients in the control group.

  • Levels of miR-499-5p and miR-21 were also significantly higher in the NSTEMI group compared with the group of patients with acute congestive heart failure without acute MI.
  • The researchers also found that miR-499-5p was similar to cTnT in being able to distinguish NSTEMI patients from the other two groups.
  • Also, a subgroup analysis of patients with a modest elevation in cTnT level at presentation (0.03-0.10 ng/mL) revealed that miR-499-5p had a diagnostic accuracy superior both to cTnT and to high sensitivity cTnT in differentiating NSTEMI from acute congestive heart failure.

International Journal of Cardiology

________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

IV. Predicting cardiovascular mortality in NSTEMI patients

[A]  Japanese researchers studied 258 consecutive patients hospitalized for unstable angina and NSTEMI within 24 hours of the onset of chest symptoms, and followed them up for a median period of 49 months after admission. During this period there were 38 cardiovascular deaths (14.7%).

They reported that high-mobility group- box 1 (HMGB1), a nuclear protein and signaller of tissue damage, was “a potential and independent predictor of cardiovascular mortality in patients hospitalized for unstable angina and NSTEMI.

  • HMGB1,
  • cardiac troponin I,
  • Killip class greater than 1, and
  • age

were each independently and significantly associated with cardiovascular mortality.

……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………

[B]  William LaFramboise et al.       BMC Med. 2012 Dec 5;10(1):157)
see Report by Aviva Lev-Ari (pharmaceuticalintelligence.com)  Coronary artery disease in symptomatic patients referred for coronary angiography: Predicted by Serum Protein Profiles

Significant differences were detected in circulating proteins from patients requiring revascularization including increased apolipoprotein B100 (APO-B100), C-reactive protein (CRP), fibrinogen, vascular cell adhesion molecule 1 (VCAM-1), myeloperoxidase (MPO), resistin, osteopontin, interleukin (IL)-1beta, IL-6, IL-10 and N-terminal fragment protein precursor brain natriuretic peptide (NT-pBNP) and decreased apolipoprotein A1 (APO-A1). Biomarker classification signatures comprising up to 5 analytes were identified using a tunable scoring function trained against 239 samples and validated with 120 additional samples. A total of 14 overlapping signatures classified patients without significant coronary disease (38% to 59% specificity) while maintaining 95% sensitivity for patients requiring revascularization. Osteopontin (14 times) and resistin (10 times) were most frequently represented among these diagnostic signatures. The most efficacious protein signature in validation studies comprised osteopontin (OPN), resistin, matrix metalloproteinase 7 (MMP7) and interferon gamma (IFNgamma) as a four-marker panel while the addition of either CRP or adiponectin (ACRP-30) yielded comparable results in five protein signatures.

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V.  Assessing Cardiovascular Risk

Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ)

Assessing Cardiovascular Risk: Guideline Synthesis

Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) Authors and Disclosures Posted: 03/01/2012

…………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..

The Third MI Definition: An Expert Interview With Joseph Alpert In the new definition, the diagnosis of acute MI remains unchanged: That is, it applies where there is evidence of myocardial necrosis in a clinical setting consistent with acute myocardial ischemia. However, the criteria for diagnosis have been updated, with an emphasis on the biomarker cardiac troponin.

  1. The first essential criterion for diagnosis of MI is detection of a rise or fall in cardiac troponin, or CKMB if troponin is not available, with at least 1 value above the 99th percentile upper reference limit, plus at least 1 the following criteria:
  2. Symptoms of ischemia;
  3. ECG changes of new or presumed new ischemia (significant ST-segment T-wave changes or new left bundle branch block);
  4. Development of pathologic Q waves on ECG; or
  5. Imaging evidence of new loss of viable myocardium or new regional wall-motion abnormality.Other criteria include those for MI in sudden unexpected cardiac death and for MI during percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI) and coronary artery bypass graft surgery (CABG).

The guidance document supports the use of high-sensitivity cardiac troponin assays, especially for distinguishing myocardial injury not related to myocardial ischemia, such as that associated with heart failure or renal failure. These assays are available in Europe, and not in the United States. MI is designated as ST-segment elevation MI or non- ST-segment elevation MI, and as in the 2007 version, it is classified into 5 types on the basis of pathologic, clinical, and prognostic differences. These types have been updated in the latest version.

  1. Type 1 MI (spontaneous MI) is related to atherosclerotic plaque rupture or other event leading to thrombus formation in ≥ 1 of the coronary arteries, leading to decreased myocardial blood flow with ensuing necrosis;
  2.  Type 2 MI arises from a condition other than CAD;
  3.  Type 3 MI is deemed to have occurred when cardiac death occurs with symptoms suggestive of myocardial ischemia, but without biomarker values having been obtained; and
  4. Type 4 and 5 MIs are related to PCI and CABG, respectively, and have been redefined since 2007.

The new document also describes situations in which troponin levels are elevated in conditions where myocardial injury with necrosis is associated with predominantly nonischemic myocardial injury, such as heart failure, renal failure, myocarditis, arrhythmias, or pulmonary embolism.

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VI Statistical Problems

The normal or “bell shaped” curve is a plot of numerical values along the x-axis and the frequency of the occurrence on the y-axis.  If the set of measurements occurs as a random and independent event, we refer to this as parametric, and the distribution of the values is a bell shaped curve with all but 2.5% of the values included within both ends, with the mean or arithmetic average at the center, and with 67% of the sample contained within 1 standard deviation of the mean.  We view a reference range in terms of a homogeneous population.  This means that while all values might not be the same, the values are scattered within a distance from the mean that becomes less frequent as the distance is larger so that we can describe a mean and a 95% confidence interval around the mean.  In the problem we are discussing, the classic reference value could be determined with outliers removed, and it would most likely fit to a Receiver Operator Characteristic curve.  This became blurred when the high sensitivity assay was introduced, which included NOISE, which is really not noise but heterogeneous elements related to [a] vascular events that are not caused by plaque rupture, or [b] ischemia related to “piecemeal necrosis” which continued might predict a serious future event.  Hidden variables include – age, diurnal variation, racial factors, and disease (hypertension, CHF, type 2 diabetes, renal failure).

A majority have no ST elevation on EKG, considered definitive for AMI.  This makes the finding of elevated and increasing cardiac specific enzyme or protein in serum of paramount importance for specifying damaged cardiac muscle in a context of insufficient circulation.   We examine the classification of AMI using a combination of features of chest pain, EKG, and a sensitive cardiac marker, derived from the cardiac muscle filament.   An optimum value for a test cutoff is, such as cTnT, can be derived without using a prior determination of disease status. This is an alternative to first carrying out a study with a training set, and then repeating it with a validation set, provided there is sufficient information for classifying the data..  We have to construct a self-classifying table of ordered classes that have assigned measurable risks.   Haberman (4) discusses the underlying assumptions used by Magidson for association models of cross-classified data in calculating the maximum likelihood estimates (MLE) by using the log-likelihood ratio and a sum of squares representing deviations of parameters from their constraints. The Latent Class Analysis (LCA) developed by Magidson and Vermunt allows use of a traditional LCA or a regression model (Statistical Innovation. Belmont, MA).  .  The LCA model uses the variables – chest pain, EKG, and troponin T – to classify the data and to test the underlying structure using powerful fit measures, such as L2.  Chest pain has the value of “typical” or “other”.   EKG has the value ST depression or any other (for a non Q-wave study).  “cTnT” has the value  assigned by rank in the scaling intervals.   The results of such an analysis are displayed in Table 1.

Table 1. This LCA classification was constructed using the troponin T before hsTnT was available.

CTnT (mg/L) MI (6%)  Not MI (94%)
0-0.03 0.0008 0.8485
0.031-0.055 0.0009 0.0791
0.056-0.080 0.0009 0.0369
0.081-0.099 0.0010 0.0106
0.10-0.199 0.2026 0.0238
> 0.20 0.7939 0.0012

Eugene Rypka. Syndromic classification: A process for amplifying information using S-Clustering.  Nutrition 1996; 14(12: 827-829.

Stuart W Zarich, Keith Bradley, Inder Dip Mayall, Larry H Bernstein. Minor elevations in troponin T values enhance risk assessment in emergency department patients with suspected myocardial ischemia: analysis of novel troponin T cut-off values. Clin Chim Acta 2004; 343(1-2):223-229

Haberman SJ. Computation of maximum likelihood estimates in association models. J Am Stat Assoc 1995;90:1438-1446

Rudolph RA, Bernstein LH, Babb J.  Information Induction for the Diagnosis of  Myocardial Infarction. Clin Chem 1988; 34: 2031-8.

Vermoent JK, and Magidson J. Latent class cluster analysis. JA Hagenaars and AL McCutcheon (eds.), Advanced Latent Class Analysis. Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2000.

Bernstein LH, Qamar A, McPherson C, Zarich S. Evaluating a new graphical ordinal logit method (GOLDminer) in the diagnosis of myocardial infarction utilizing clinical features and laboratory data.   Yale J Biol Med 1999; 72: 259-268.

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VII. Conclusions I have made a number of comments to follow up on.  The diagnosis of myocardial infarct has been extended as a result of the emergence of the high sensitivity troponins, but the laboratory methods have not caught up with the technology as the identification of myocardial ischemia is broken down with fine granularity in order to

  • identify the high risk patients early
  • and manage them effectively at the earliest stage of disease evolution

We no longer ponder over

  1. ECG findings of new Q-qave, not previously seen
  2. ST elevation
  3. T-wave inversion

These are an indication of plaque rupture. There are strong associations between CRP, hyperhomocysteinemia, and then add the troponins and b-type natriuretic  and the pro b-type peptides.  These associations have to be analyzed by “syndromic classification”, described by Eugene Rypka. The study first described found great value in the BNP and proBNP.  Despite having the creatinine clearance, the NT-proBNP can’t be adequately interpreted without adjusting for the estimated glomerular filtration rate, and using a log transform for the high fold-increase with age.

There is much more to be done with capturing the information from the data we are generating.  The problem of classification requires accurate data measurement, but it also requires that features in scaled data are combined in meaningful ways.  That job is far from completed.

…………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………….

Below I paste all discussions on this post that are taking place on LinkedIn Group: Innovations in Cardiology:

Kathy Dowd, AuD • I am an audiologist representing the Academy of Doctors of Audiology for an initiative of early identification of hearing loss in adults with chronic diseases, including cardiovascular disease, thyroid disease, diabetes, etc. I am working on a new product that will automatically screen hearing of patients with these conditions and route them to audiologists for evaluation, treatment and counseling. Hearing loss is unidentified for most adults for 7-10. The psychological impact of hearing loss includes depression, isolation, confusion and poor job performance. We are focused on educating healthcare professionals on the need to identify this ‘silent epidemic’ as a co morbidity with most major illnesses.

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN • Dr. William LaFramboise

Thank you for your comment above and the reference to your most recent publication. It is very helpful. We are on the same page on this topic.

May I bring to the attention of the readers three sources which are shading additional light on that matter.

To Stent or Not? A Critical Decision

To Stent or Not? A Critical Decision

Obstructive coronary artery disease diagnosed by RNA levels of 23 genes – CardioDx heart disease test wins Medicare coverage

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/08/14/obstructive-coronary-artery-disease-diagnosed-by-rna-levels-of-23-genes-cardiodx-heart-disease-test-wins-medicare-coverage/http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/?s=PCI

Follow William
William LaFramboise • Thank you Aviva. The CardioDx approach is promising with heavy commercial support for use in a primary care practitioner’s office. However, RNA acquisition, purification and qRT-PCR expression analysis takes 2-3 days, is performed off-site, derives from a small subset of circulating inflammatory cells and is not yet directly correlated with functional proteomics. So its value in the Emergency Room and Chest Clinic is currently limited. The proteomics test we published revealed systemic serum changes in a small number of proteins known to be involved in atherosclerosis. It has a faster turnaround time (minutes to hours) that could be implemented in an emergency room or chest clinic. We are predominantly interested in using our test to “rule out” symptomatic patients who currently undergo coronary angiography but do NOT have clinically significant CAD. Our goal is to eliminate unecessary catheterizations while catching all patients that should undergo coronary angiography with a high probability of percutaneous intervention. Currently, the patients we are targeting all undergo catheterization; our test will hopefully allow us to identify at least some of these patients who do not have CAD and eliminate this expensive and risky procedure. However, we are in the pioneering stages of developing our test so there are miles to go before we establish and validate clinical efficacy.

Larry

Larry Bernstein • What you have indicated is practical proteomics. There is more to be done in line with what Dr Lev-Ari has indicated based on additional voluminous literature. What you have done with a not so large data set, and probably underpowered looks very interesting.

I f you were willing to share the data, now that it is publihed, I think that we can sharpen the results using a method of “identifying anomalies”, and even come up with estimated probabilities for meaningful classes. I think that the best you can get is defined by Kullback-Liebler distance.

Larry H Bernstein, MD
larry.bernstein@gmail.com

Biomarker classification signatures comprising up to 5 analytes were identified using a tunable scoring function trained against 239 samples and validated with 120 additional samples. A total of 14 overlapping signatures classified patients without significant coronary disease (38% to 59% specificity) while maintaining 95% sensitivity for patients requiring revascularization. Osteopontin (14 times) and resistin (10 times) were most frequently represented among these diagnostic signatures. The most efficacious protein signature in validation studies comprised osteopontin (OPN), resistin, matrix metalloproteinase 7 (MMP7) and interferon gamma (IFNgamma) as a four-marker panel while the addition of either CRP or adiponectin (ACRP-30) yielded comparable results in five protein signatures.

Proteins in the serum of CAD patients predominantly reflected (1) a positive acute phase, inflammatory response and (2) alterations in lipid metabolism, transport, peroxidation and accumulation.

Follow William
William LaFramboise • Our study (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23216991) comprised discovery research using targeted immunochemical screening of retrospective patient samples using both Luminex and Aushon platforms as opposed to shotgun proteomics. Hence the costs constrained sample numbers. Nevertheless, our ability to predict outcome substantially exceeded available methods:

DISCUSSION
The Framingham CHD scores were statistically different between groups (P <0.001, unpaired Student’s t test) but they classified only 16% of the subjects without significant CAD (10 of 63) at a 95% sensitivity for patients with CAD. In contrast, our algorithm incorporating serum values for OPN, RES, CRP, MMP7 and IFNγ identified 63% of the subjects without significant CAD (40 of 63) at 95% sensitivity for patients with CAD. Thus, our multiplex serum protein classifier correctly identified four times as many patients as the Framingham index.

The addition of clinical variables to our scoring system should improve the acuity of our test as we move into the next phase. I appreciate your input and will contact you directly for further insights

Larry Bernstein • Bill La Fram..

our algorithm incorporating serum values for OPN, RES, CRP, MMP7 and IFNγ identified 63% of the subjects without significant CAD (40 of 63) at 95% sensitivity for patients with CAD

I think you can improve the algorithm with strong clinical features. The Goldman algorithm is stronger than the Framingham Index. Maybe its because the FI is epidemiological and is a measure of long term risk being present and does not indicate significant features at the time of presenting. The best features of the Goldman algorithm (without lab work) are – ECG (which may be arguable with NSEMI), but the presence of Afib or tachyarrhythmia could be added to that in weighting, and radiation actually should include symptoms of gall bladder (vagal nerve branch), and onset, characteristic and duration of pain, and SOB.

In your algorithm there isn’t any assessment of the hypercoagulable state, blood flow or Viscosity. There is a strong relationship between hyperhomocysteinemia and CVD, and the HHCys has ties to impaired methyl group transfers that maybe proinflammatory through more than one interaction: countering eNOS, related to Lp(a), un unknown relationship to iNOS (which becomes a counterpoise to eNOS), an effect on blood flow and viscosity, and a relationship to platelet aggregation.

Lp(a) was originally considered of less weight, except that it occurred in thin people from Asian Indian descent. The relationship to apo(B) and to dense LDL particles is now a factor. Sam Filligane uses Lp(a) in his ambulatory practice, and he also uses the PLAC test that Aviva has posted on.

The biggest problem we have is the amount of variability in the data physicians use. It makes metaanalysis a poor solution to the problem. The standardization of laboratory “panels” set up after CLIA 88 puts a real burden on the physician for unsubstantiated “cost benefits” in the light of today’s knowledge.

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English: Four chamber view on cardiovascular m...

English: Four chamber view on cardiovascular magnetic resonance imaging. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Other related articles on Assessing Cardiovascular Disease with Biomarkers published on this Open Access Online Scientific Journal, include the following:

 

Dr. Lev-Ari’s research on Assessing Cardiovascular Disease with Biomarkers includes

  • Biomarkers in vascular biology,
  • Biomarkers in molecular cardiology and
  • circulating Endothelial Progenitor Cells (cEPCs) as a Biomarker for cardiovascular marcovascular disease risk

 

Lev-Ari, A., (2012U). Cardiovascular Outcomes: Function of circulating Endothelial Progenitor Cells (cEPCs): Exploring Pharmaco-therapy targeted at Endogenous Augmentation of cEPCs

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/08/28/cardiovascular-outcomes-function-of-circulating-endothelial-progenitor-cells-cepcs-exploring-pharmaco-therapy-targeted-at-endogenous-augmentation-of-cepcs/

Lev-Ari, A., (2012T). Endothelial Dysfunction, Diminished Availability of cEPCs, Increasing CVD Risk for Macrovascular Disease – Therapeutic Potential of cEPCs

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/08/27/endothelial-dysfunction-diminished-availability-of-cepcs-increasing-cvd-risk-for-macrovascular-disease-therapeutic-potential-of-cepcs/

Lev-Ari, A., (2012S). Vascular Medicine and Biology: CLASSIFICATION OF FAST ACTING THERAPY FOR PATIENTS AT HIGH RISK FOR MACROVASCULAR EVENTS Macrovascular Disease – Therapeutic Potential of cEPCs

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/08/24/vascular-medicine-and-biology-classification-of-fast-acting-therapy-for-patients-at-high-risk-for-macrovascular-events-macrovascular-disease-therapeutic-potential-of-cepcs/

Lev-Ari, A. (2012a). Resident-cell-based Therapy in Human Ischaemic Heart Disease: Evolution in the PROMISE of Thymosin beta4 for Cardiac Repair

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/04/30/93/

Lev-Ari, A. (2012b). Triple Antihypertensive Combination Therapy Significantly Lowers Blood Pressure in Hard-to-Treat Patients with Hypertension and Diabetes

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/05/29/445/

Lev-Ari, A. (2012h). Macrovascular Disease – Therapeutic Potential of cEPCs: Reduction Methods for CV Risk

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/07/02/macrovascular-disease-therapeutic-potential-of-cepcs-reduction-methods-for-cv-risk/

Lev-Ari, A. (2012xx). Coronary artery disease in symptomatic patients referred for coronary angiography: Predicted by Serum Protein Profiles

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/12/29/coronary-artery-disease-in-symptomatic-patients-referred-for-coronary-angiography-predicted-by-serum-protein-profiles/

Lev-Ari, A. (2013a) forthcoming, based on:

Part III: (2006c) Biomarker for Therapeutic Targets of Cardiovascular Risk Reduction by cEPCs Endogenous Augmentation using New Combination Drug Therapy of Three Drug Classes and Several Drug Indications. Northeastern University, Boston, MA 02115

Special Considerations in Blood Lipoproteins, Viscosity, Assessment and Treatment                                    Larry Bernstein

New Insights on Nitric Oxide donors – Part IV                Larry Bernstein

The Essential Role of Nitric Oxide and Therapeutic NO Donor Targets in Renal Pharmacotherapy             Larry Bernstein

A second look at the transthyretin nutrition inflammatory conundrum                                                                  Larry Bernstein

What is the role of plasma viscosity in hemostasis and vascular disease risk?                                                        Larry Bernstein

Biochemistry of the Coagulation Cascade and Platelet Aggregation – Part I                                                            Larry Bernstein

Laboratory, Innovative Technology, Therapeutics                                                                                                            Larry Bernstein

Ubiquinin-Proteosome pathway, autophagy, the mitochondrion, proteolysis and cell apoptosis                 Larry Bernstein

Overview of new strategy for treatment of T2DM: SGLT2 inhibiting oral antidiabetic agents                             aviralvatsa

Mitochondrial dynamics and cardiovascular diseases          ritusaxena

Nitric Oxide and it’s impact on Cardiothoracic Surgery        tildabarliya

Telling NO to Cardiac Risk                                                                  sjwilliamspa

Read Full Post »

Telling NO to Cardiac Risk

DDAH Says NO to ADMA(1); The DDAH/ADMA/NOS Pathway(2)

Author-Writer-Reporter:  Stephen J. Williams, PhD

Endothelium-derived nitric oxide (NO) has been shown to be vasoprotective.  Nitric oxide enhances endothelial cell survival, inhibits excessive proliferation of vascular smooth muscle cells, regulates vascular smooth muscle tone, and prevents platelets from sticking to the endothelial wall.  Together with evidence from preclinical and human studies, it is clear that impairment of the NOS pathway increases risk of cardiovascular disease (3-5).

This post contains two articles on the physiological regulation of nitric oxide (NO) by an endogenous NO synthase inhibitor asymmetrical dimethylarginine (ADMA) and ADMA metabolism by the enzyme DDAH(1,2).  Previous posts on nitric oxide, referenced at the bottom of the page, provides excellent background and further insight for this posting. In summary plasma ADMA levels are elevated in patients with cardiovascular disease and several large studies have shown that plasma ADMA is an independent biomarker for cardiovascular-related morbidity and mortality(6-8).

admacardiacrisk

admaeffects

Figure 1 A. Cardiac risks of ADMA B. Effects of ADMA (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

ADMA Production and Metabolism

Nuclear proteins such as histones can be methylated on arginine residues by protein-arginine methyltransferases, enzymes which use S-adenosylmethionine as methyl groups.  This methylation event is thought to regulate protein function, much in the way of protein acetylation and phosphorylation (9).  And much like phosphorylation, these modifications are reversible through methylesterases.   The proteolysis of these arginine-methyl modifications lead to the liberation of free guanidine-methylated arginine residues such as L-NMMA, asymmetric dimethylarginine (ADMA) and symmetrical methylarginine (SDMA).

The first two, L-NMMA and ADMA, have been shown to inhibit the activity of the endothelial NOS.  This protein turnover is substantial: for instance the authors note that each day 40% of constitutive protein in adult liver is newly synthesized protein. And in several diseases, such as muscular dystrophy, ischemic heart disease, and diabetes, it has been known since the 1970’s that protein catabolism rates are very high, with corresponding increased urinary excretion of ADMA(10-13).  Methylarginines are excreted in the urine by cationic transport.  However, the majority of ADMA and L-NMMA are degraded within the cell by dimethylaminohydrolase (DDAH), first cloned and purified in rat(14).

endogenous NO inhibitors from pubchem

Figure 2.  Endogenous inhibitors of NO synthase.  Chemical structures generated from PubChem.

DDAH

DDAH specifically hydrolyzes ADMA and L-NMMA to yield citruline and demethylamine and usually shows co-localization with NOS. Pharmacologic inhibition of DDAH activity causes accumulation of ADMA and can reverse the NO-mediated bradykinin-induced relaxation of human saphenous vein.

Two isoforms have been found in human:

  • DDAH1 (found in brain and kidney and associated with nNOS) and
  • DDAH2 (highly expressed in heart, placenta, and kidney and associated with eNOS).

DDAH2 can be upregulated by all-trans retinoic acid (atRA can increase NO production).  Increased reactive oxygen species and possibly homocysteine, a risk factor for cardiovascular disease, can decrease DDAH activity(15,16).

  • The importance of DDAH activity can also be seen in transgenic mice which overexpress DDAH, exhibiting increased NO production, increased insulin sensitivity, and reduced vascular resistance  (17).  Likewise,
  • Transgenic mice, null for the DDAH1, showed increase in blood pressure, decreased NO production, and significant increase in tissue and plasma ADMA and L-NMMA.

amdanosfigure

Figure 3.  The DDAH/ADMA/NOS cycle. Figure adapted from Cooke and Ghebremarian (1).

As mentioned in the article by Cooke and Ghebremariam, the authors state: the weight of the evidence indicates that DDAH is a worthy therapeutic target. Agents that increase DDAH expression are known, and 1 of these, a farnesoid X receptor agonist, is in clinical trials

http://www.interceptpharma.com

An alternate approach is to

  • develop an allosteric activator of the enzyme.  Although
  • development of an allosteric activator is not a typical pharmaceutical approach, recent studies indicate that this may be achievable aim(18).

References:

1.            Cooke, J. P., and Ghebremariam, Y. T. : DDAH says NO to ADMA.(2011) Arteriosclerosis, thrombosis, and vascular biology 31, 1462-1464

2.            Tran, C. T., Leiper, J. M., and Vallance, P. : The DDAH/ADMA/NOS pathway.(2003) Atherosclerosis. Supplements 4, 33-40

3.            Niebauer, J., Maxwell, A. J., Lin, P. S., Wang, D., Tsao, P. S., and Cooke, J. P.: NOS inhibition accelerates atherogenesis: reversal by exercise. (2003) American journal of physiology. Heart and circulatory physiology 285, H535-540

4.            Miyazaki, H., Matsuoka, H., Cooke, J. P., Usui, M., Ueda, S., Okuda, S., and Imaizumi, T. : Endogenous nitric oxide synthase inhibitor: a novel marker of atherosclerosis.(1999) Circulation 99, 1141-1146

5.            Wilson, A. M., Shin, D. S., Weatherby, C., Harada, R. K., Ng, M. K., Nair, N., Kielstein, J., and Cooke, J. P. (2010): Asymmetric dimethylarginine correlates with measures of disease severity, major adverse cardiovascular events and all-cause mortality in patients with peripheral arterial disease. Vasc Med 15, 267-274

6.            Kielstein, J. T., Impraim, B., Simmel, S., Bode-Boger, S. M., Tsikas, D., Frolich, J. C., Hoeper, M. M., Haller, H., and Fliser, D. : Cardiovascular effects of systemic nitric oxide synthase inhibition with asymmetrical dimethylarginine in humans.(2004) Circulation 109, 172-177

7.            Kielstein, J. T., Donnerstag, F., Gasper, S., Menne, J., Kielstein, A., Martens-Lobenhoffer, J., Scalera, F., Cooke, J. P., Fliser, D., and Bode-Boger, S. M. : ADMA increases arterial stiffness and decreases cerebral blood flow in humans.(2006) Stroke; a journal of cerebral circulation 37, 2024-2029

8.            Mittermayer, F., Krzyzanowska, K., Exner, M., Mlekusch, W., Amighi, J., Sabeti, S., Minar, E., Muller, M., Wolzt, M., and Schillinger, M. : Asymmetric dimethylarginine predicts major adverse cardiovascular events in patients with advanced peripheral artery disease.(2006) Arteriosclerosis, thrombosis, and vascular biology 26, 2536-2540

9.            Kakimoto, Y., and Akazawa, S.: Isolation and identification of N-G,N-G- and N-G,N’-G-dimethyl-arginine, N-epsilon-mono-, di-, and trimethyllysine, and glucosylgalactosyl- and galactosyl-delta-hydroxylysine from human urine. (1970) The Journal of biological chemistry 245, 5751-5758

10.          Inoue, R., Miyake, M., Kanazawa, A., Sato, M., and Kakimoto, Y.: Decrease of 3-methylhistidine and increase of NG,NG-dimethylarginine in the urine of patients with muscular dystrophy. (1979) Metabolism: clinical and experimental 28, 801-804

11.          Millward, D. J.: Protein turnover in skeletal muscle. II. The effect of starvation and a protein-free diet on the synthesis and catabolism of skeletal muscle proteins in comparison to liver. (1970) Clinical science 39, 591-603

12.          Goldberg, A. L., and St John, A. C.: Intracellular protein degradation in mammalian and bacterial cells: Part 2. (1976) Annual review of biochemistry 45, 747-803

13.          Dice, J. F., and Walker, C. D.: Protein degradation in metabolic and nutritional disorders. (1979) Ciba Foundation symposium, 331-350

14.          Ogawa, T., Kimoto, M., and Sasaoka, K.: Purification and properties of a new enzyme, NG,NG-dimethylarginine dimethylaminohydrolase, from rat kidney. (1989) The Journal of biological chemistry 264, 10205-10209

15.          Ito, A., Tsao, P. S., Adimoolam, S., Kimoto, M., Ogawa, T., and Cooke, J. P.: Novel mechanism for endothelial dysfunction: dysregulation of dimethylarginine dimethylaminohydrolase. (1999) Circulation 99, 3092-3095

16.          Stuhlinger, M. C., Tsao, P. S., Her, J. H., Kimoto, M., Balint, R. F., and Cooke, J. P. : Homocysteine impairs the nitric oxide synthase pathway: role of asymmetric dimethylarginine.(2001) Circulation 104, 2569-2575

17.          Sydow, K., Mondon, C. E., Schrader, J., Konishi, H., and Cooke, J. P.: Dimethylarginine dimethylaminohydrolase overexpression enhances insulin sensitivity. (2008) Arteriosclerosis, thrombosis, and vascular biology 28, 692-697

18.          Zorn, J. A., and Wells, J. A.: Turning enzymes ON with small molecules. (2010) Nature chemical biology 6, 179-188

Other research papers on Nitric Oxide and Cardiac Risk  were published on this Scientific Web site as follows:

The Nitric Oxide and Renal is presented in FOUR parts:

Part I: The Amazing Structure and Adaptive Functioning of the Kidneys: Nitric Oxide

Part II: Nitric Oxide and iNOS have Key Roles in Kidney Diseases

Part III: The Molecular Biology of Renal Disorders: Nitric Oxide

Part IV: New Insights on Nitric Oxide donors

Cardiac Arrhythmias: A Risk for Extreme Performance Athletes

What is the role of plasma viscosity in hemostasis and vascular disease risk?

Cardiovascular Risk Inflammatory Marker: Risk Assessment for Coronary Heart Disease and Ischemic Stroke – Atherosclerosis.

Endothelial Dysfunction, Diminished Availability of cEPCs, Increasing CVD Risk for Macrovascular Disease – Therapeutic Potential of cEPCs

Biochemistry of the Coagulation Cascade and Platelet Aggregation – Part I

Nitric Oxide Function in Coagulation

Read Full Post »

Reporter: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

International Consortium Finds 15 Novel Risk Loci for Coronary Artery Disease

“lipid metabolism and inflammation as key biological pathways involved in the genetic pathogenesis of CAD”

Themistocles Assimes from Stanford University Medical Center said in a statement that these findings begin to clear up its role. “Our network analysis of the top approximately 240 genetic signals in this study seems to provide evidence that genetic defects in some pathways related to inflammation are a cause,” he said.

On this Open Access Online Scientific Journal, lipid metabolism and inflammation were researched and exposed in the following entries.

However, it is ONLY,  these 15 Novel Risk Loci for Coronary Artery Disease published on 12/3/2012 that provides the genomics loci and the genetic explanation for the following empirical results obtained in the recent research on Cardiovascular diseases, as present in the second half of this post, below.

Special Considerations in Blood Lipoproteins, Viscosity, Assessment and Treatment

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/11/28/special-considerations-in-blood-lipoproteins-viscosity-assessment-and-treatment/

What is the role of plasma viscosity in hemostasis and vascular disease risk?

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/11/28/what-is-the-role-of-plasma-viscosity-in-hemostasis-and-vascular-disease-risk/

PIK3CA mutation in Colorectal Cancer may serve as a Predictive Molecular Biomarker for adjuvant Aspirin therapy

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/11/28/pik3ca-mutation-in-colorectal-cancer-may-serve-as-a-predictive-molecular-biomarker-for-adjuvant-aspirin-therapy/

Peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor (PPAR-gamma) Receptors Activation: PPARγ transrepression for Angiogenesis in Cardiovascular Disease and PPARγ transactivation for Treatment of Diabetes

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/11/13/peroxisome-proliferator-activated-receptor-ppar-gamma-receptors-activation-pparγ-transrepression-for-angiogenesis-in-cardiovascular-disease-and-pparγ-transactivation-for-treatment-of-dia/

Positioning a Therapeutic Concept for Endogenous Augmentation of cEPCs — Therapeutic Indications for Macrovascular Disease: Coronary, Cerebrovascular and Peripheral

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/08/29/positioning-a-therapeutic-concept-for-endogenous-augmentation-of-cepcs-therapeutic-indications-for-macrovascular-disease-coronary-cerebrovascular-and-peripheral/

Cardiovascular Risk Inflammatory Marker: Risk Assessment for Coronary Heart Disease and Ischemic Stroke – Atherosclerosis.

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/10/30/cardiovascular-risk-inflammatory-marker-risk-assessment-for-coronary-heart-disease-and-ischemic-stroke-atherosclerosis/

The Essential Role of Nitric Oxide and Therapeutic NO Donor Targets in Renal Pharmacotherapy

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/11/26/the-essential-role-of-nitric-oxide-and-therapeutic-no-donor-targets-in-renal-pharmacotherapy/

Nitric Oxide Function in Coagulation

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2012/11/26/nitric-oxide-function-in-coagulation/Nitric Oxide Function in Coagulation

15 Novel Risk Loci for Coronary Artery Disease

December 03, 2012

NEW YORK (GenomeWeb News) – A large-scale association analysis of coronary artery disease has detected 15 new loci associated with risk of the disease, bringing the total number of known risk alleles to 46. As the international CARDIoGRAMplusC4D Consortium reported in Nature Genetics yesterday, the study also found that lipid metabolism and inflammation pathways may play a part in coronary artery disease pathogenesis.

“The number of genetic variations that contribute to heart disease continues to grow with the publication of each new study,” Peter Weissberg from the British Heart Foundation, a co-sponsor of the study, said in a statement. “This latest research further confirms that blood lipids and inflammation are at the heart of the development of atherosclerosis, the process that leads to heart attacks and strokes.”

For its study, the consortium, which was comprised of more than 180 researchers, performed a meta-analysis of data from the 22,233 cases and 64,762 controls of the CARDIoGRAM genome-wide association study and of the 41,513 cases and 65,919 controls from 34 additional studies of people of European and South Asian descent. Using the custom Metabochip array from Illumina, the team tested SNPs for disease association in those populations. The SNPs that reached significance in that stage of the study were then replicated using data from a further four studies.

From this, the team identified 15 new loci with genome-wide significance for risk of coronary artery disease, in addition to known risk loci.

The consortium also reported an additional 104 SNPs that appeared to be associated with coronary artery disease but did not meet the cut-off for genome-wide significance.

Then looking to other known risk factors for coronary artery disease, like blood pressure and diabetes, the researchers assessed whether any of those risk factors were associated with the risk loci. Of the 45 known risk loci, 12 were associated with blood lipid content and five with blood pressure. And while people with type 2 diabetes have a higher risk of developing coronary artery disease, none of the known risk loci were linked to diabetic traits.

An analysis of the pathways that SNPs linked to coronary artery disease fall in revealed that many of them are involved in lipid metabolism and inflammation pathways — 10 risk loci were found to be involved in lipid metabolism. “Our network analysis identified lipid metabolism and inflammation as key biological pathways involved in the genetic pathogenesis of CAD,” the researchers wrote in the paper. “Indeed, there was significant crosstalk between the lipid metabolism and inflammation pathways identified.”

The role of inflammation in coronary artery disease has been up for debate — a debate centering on whether it is a cause or a consequence of the disease — and study author Themistocles Assimes from Stanford University Medical Center said in a statement that these findings begin to clear up its role. “Our network analysis of the top approximately 240 genetic signals in this study seems to provide evidence that genetic defects in some pathways related to inflammation are a cause,” he said.

Related Stories

SOURCE:

http://www.genomeweb.com//node/1159041?hq_e=el&hq_m=1424172&hq_l=3&hq_v=09187c3305

 

GWAS, Meta-Analyses Uncover New Coronary Artery Disease Risk Loci

March 07, 2011

By a GenomeWeb staff reporter

NEW YORK (GenomeWeb News) – Three new studies — including the largest meta-analysis yet of coronary artery disease — have identified dozens of coronary artery disease risk loci in European, South Asian, and Han Chinese populations. All three papers appeared online yesterday in Nature Genetics.

For the first meta-analysis, members of a large international consortium known as the Coronary Artery Disease Genome-wide Replication and Meta-Analysis study, or CARDIoGRAM, sifted through data on more than 135,000 individuals from the UK, US, Europe, Iceland, and Canada. In so doing, they tracked down nearly two-dozen new and previously reported coronary artery disease risk loci.

Because only a few of these loci have been linked to other heart disease-related risk factors such as high blood pressure, those involved say the work points to yet unexplored heart disease pathways.

“[W]e have discovered several new genes not previously known to be involved in the development of coronary heart disease, which is the main cause of heart attacks,” co-corresponding author Nilesh Samani, a cardiology researcher affiliated with the University of Leicester and Glenfield Hospital, said in a statement. “Understanding how these genes work, which is the next step, will vastly improve our knowledge of how the disease develops, and could ultimately help to develop new treatments.”

Samani and his co-workers identified the loci by bringing together data on 22,233 individuals with coronary artery disease and 64,762 unaffected controls. The participants, all of European descent, had been sampled through 14 previous genome-wide association studies and genotyped at an average of about 2.5 million SNPs each. The team then assessed the top candidate SNPs found in this initial analysis in another 56,582 individuals (roughly half of whom had coronary artery disease).

The search not only confirmed associations between coronary artery disease and 10 known loci, but also uncovered associations with 13 other loci. All but three of these were distinct from loci previously implicated in other heart disease risk factors such as hypertension or cholesterol levels, researchers noted.

Consequently, those involved in the study say that exploring the biological functions of the newly detected genes could offer biological clues about how heart disease develops — along with strategies for preventing and treating it.

The genetic complexity of coronary artery disease being revealed by such studies has diagnostic implications as well, according to some.

“Each new gene identified brings us a small step closer to understanding the biological mechanisms of cardiovascular disease development and potential new treatments,” British Heart Foundation Medical Director Peter Weissberg, who was not directly involved in the new studies, said in a statement. “However, as the number of genes grows, it takes us further away from the likelihood that a simple genetic test will identify those most of risk of suffering a heart attack or a stroke.”

Meanwhile, researchers involved with Coronary Artery Disease Genetics Consortium did their own meta-analysis using data collected from four GWAS to find five coronary artery-associated loci in European and South Asian populations.

The group initially looked at 15,420 individuals with coronary artery disease — including 6,996 individuals from South Asia and 8,424 from Europe — and 15,062 unaffected controls. Participants were genotyped at nearly 575,000 SNPs using Illumina BeadChips. Most South Asian individuals tested came from India and Pakistan, researchers noted, while European samples came from the UK, Italy, Sweden, and Germany.

For the validation phase of the study, the team focused in on 59 SNPs at 50 loci from the discovery group that seemed most likely to yield authentic new disease associations. These variants were assessed in 10 replication groups comprised of 21,408 individuals with coronary artery disease and 19,185 individuals without coronary artery disease.

All told, researchers found five loci that seem to influence coronary artery disease risk in the European and South Asian populations: one locus each on chromosomes 7, 11, and 15, along with a pair of loci on chromosome 10.

The team didn’t see significant differences in the frequency or effect sizes of these newly identified variants between the European and South Asian populations, though they emphasized that their approach may have missed some potential risk variants, particularly in those of South Asian descent.

“[C]urrent genome-wide arrays may not capture all important variants in South Asians,” they explained, “Nevertheless, all of the known and new variants were significantly associated with [coronary artery disease] risk in both the European and South Asian populations in the current study, indicating the importance of genes associated with [coronary artery disease] beyond the European ancestry groups in which they were first defined.”

Finally, using a three-stage discovery, validation, and replication GWAS approach, Chinese researchers identified a single coronary artery disease risk variant in the Han Chinese population.

In this first phase of that study, researchers tested samples from 230 cases and 230 controls from populations in Beijing and in China’s Hubei province that were genotyped at Genentech and CapitalBio using Affymetrix Human SNP5.0 arrays.

From the nearly three-dozen SNPs identified in the first stage of the study, they narrowed in on nine suspect variants. After finding linkage disequilibrium between two of the variants, they did validation testing on eight of these in 572 individuals with coronary artery disease and 436 unaffected controls, all from Hubei province.

That analysis implicated a single chromosome 6 SNP called rs6903956 in coronary artery disease — a finding the team ultimately replicated in another group of 2,668 coronary artery disease cases and 3,917 controls from three independent populations in Hubei, Shandong province, and northern China.

The team’s subsequent experiments suggest that the newly detected polymorphism, which falls within a putative gene called C6orf105 on chromosome 6, curbs the expression of this gene. The functional consequences of this shift in expression, if any, are yet to be determined.

Because C6orf105 shares some identity and homology with an androgen hormone inducible gene known as AIG1, those involved in the study argue that it may be worthwhile to investigate possible ties between C6orf105 expression, androgen signaling, and coronary artery disease.

“Androgen has previously been reported to be associated the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis,” they wrote. “Future studies are needed to explore whether C6orf105 expression can be induced by androgen and to further determine the potential mechanism of [coronary artery disease] associated with decreased C6orf105 expression.”

 SOURCE:

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Artherogenesis: Predictor of CVD – the Smaller and Denser LDL Particles

Reporter: Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

Updated 3/5/2013

Genetic Associations with Valvular Calcification and Aortic Stenosis

N Engl J Med 2013; 368:503-512

February 7, 2013DOI: 10.1056/NEJMoa1109034

METHODS

We determined genomewide associations with the presence of aortic-valve calcification (among 6942 participants) and mitral annular calcification (among 3795 participants), as detected by computed tomographic (CT) scanning; the study population for this analysis included persons of white European ancestry from three cohorts participating in the Cohorts for Heart and Aging Research in Genomic Epidemiology consortium (discovery population). Findings were replicated in independent cohorts of persons with either CT-detected valvular calcification or clinical aortic stenosis.

CONCLUSIONS

Genetic variation in the LPA locus, mediated by Lp(a) levels, is associated with aortic-valve calcification across multiple ethnic groups and with incident clinical aortic stenosis. (Funded by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute and others.)

SOURCE:

N Engl J Med 2013; 368:503-512

HDL is more than an eNOS Agonist

 In addition to the modulation of NO production by signaling events that rapidly dictate the level of enzymatic activity, important control of eNOS involves changes in the abundance of the enzyme. In a clinical trial by the Karas laboratory of niacin therapy in patients with low HDL levels (nine males and two females), flow-mediated dilation of the brachial artery was improved in association with a rise in HDL of 33% over 3 months (Kuvin et al., 2002).

Am. Heart J., 144:165–172.

They also demonstrated that eNOS expression in cultured human endothelial cells is increased by HDL exposure for 24 hours. They further showed that the increase in eNOS is related to an increase in the half-life of the protein, and that this is mediated by PI3K–Akt kinase and MAPK (Ramet et al., 2003).

J. Am. Coll. Cardiol., 41:2288–2297.

Thus, the same mechanisms that underlie the acute activation of eNOS by HDL appear to be operative in upregulating the expression of the enzyme.

The current understanding of the mechanism by which HDL enhances endothelial NO production is summarized in Shaul & Mineo (2004), Figure 1.

J Clin Invest., 15; 113(4): 509–513.

It describes the mechanism of action for HDL enhancement of NO production by eNOS in vascular endothelium.

(a)   HDL causes membrane-initiated signaling, which stimulates eNOS activity. The eNOS protein is localized in cholesterol-enriched (orange circles) plasma membrane caveolae as a result of the myristoylation and palmitoylation of the protein. Binding of HDL to SR-BI via apoAI causes rapid activation of the nonreceptor tyrosine kinase src, leading to PI3K activation and downstream activation of Akt kinase and MAPK. Akt enhances eNOS activity by phosphorylation, and independent MAPK-mediated processes are additionally required (Duarte, et al., 1997). Eur J Pharmacol, 338:25–33.

HDL also causes an increase in intracellular Ca2+ concentration (intracellular Ca2+ store shown in blue; Ca2+ channel shown in pink), which enhances binding of calmodulin (CM) to eNOS. HDL-induced signaling is mediated at least partially by the HDL-associated lysophospholipids SPC, S1P, and LSF acting through the G protein–coupled lysophospholipid receptor S1P3. HDL-associated estradiol (E2) may also activate signaling by binding to plasma membrane–associated estrogen receptors (ERs), which are also G protein coupled. It remains to be determined if signaling events are also directly mediated by SR-BI (Yuhanna et al., 2001), (Nofer et al., 2004), (Gong et al., 2003), (Mineo et al., 2003).

Nat. Med., 7:853–857.

J. Clin. Invest.,113:569–581.

J. Clin. Invest., 111:1579–1587.

J. Biol. Chem., 278:9142–9149.

(b)   HDL regulates eNOS abundance and subcellular distribution. In addition to modulating the acute response, the activation of the PI3K–Akt kinase pathway and MAPK by HDL upregulates eNOS expression (open arrows). HDL also regulates the lipid environment in caveolae (dashed arrows). Oxidized LDL (OxLDL) can serve as a cholesterol acceptor (orange circles), thereby disrupting caveolae and eNOS function. However, in the presence of OxLDL, HDL maintains the total cholesterol content of caveolae by the provision of cholesterol ester (blue circles), resulting in preservation of the eNOS signaling module (Ramet et al., 2003), (Blair et al., 1999), (Uittenbogaard et al., 2000).

J. Am. Coll. Cardiol., 41:2288–2297.

J. Biol. Chem., 274:32512–32519.

J. Biol. Chem., 275:11278–11283.

SOURCE:

Shaul, PW and Mineo, C, (2004). HDL action on the vascular wall: is the answer NO? J Clin Invest., 15; 113(4): 509–513.

Are Additional Lipid Measures Useful?

Ryan D. Bradley, ND; and Erica B. Oberg, ND, MPH

http://www.imjournal.com/resources/web_pdfs/recent/1208_bradley.pdf

Total cholesterol (TC) and low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) are the well-established standards by which clinicians identify individuals at risk for coronary artery disease (CAD), yet nearly 50% of people who have a myocardial infarction have normal cholesterol levels. Measurement of additional biomarkers may be useful to more fully stratify patients according to disease risk. The typical lipid panel includes TC, LDL-C, high-density lipoprotein cholesterol  (HDL-C), and triglycerides (TGs). Emerging biomarkers for cardiovascular risk include measures of LDL-C pattern, size,  and density; LDL particle number; lipoprotein(a); apolipoproteins  (apoA1 and apoB100 being the most useful);  C-reactive protein; and lipoprotein-associated phospholipase

Some of these emerging biomarkers have been proven to add to, or be more accurate than, traditional risk factors in predicting coronary artery disease and, thus, may be useful for clinical decision-making in high-risk patients and in patients with borderline traditional risk factors.  However, we still believe that until treatment strategies can uniquely address these added risk factors—ie, until protocols to rectify unhealthy findings are shown to improve cardiovascular outcomes—healthcare providers should continue to focus primarily on helping patients reach optimal LDL-C, HDL-C, and TG levels

Table 1. Traditional Lipid Panel and Recommended Treatment

Goals for Cardiovascular Disease Prevention34

  • Total Cholesterol Desirable (low) < 200 mg/dL
  • Borderline high 200-239 mg/dL
  • High 240 mg/dL or greater
  • HDL Cholesterol Desirable (high) > 60 mg/dL
  • Acceptable 40-60 mg/dL
  • Low < 40 mg/dL
  • LDL Cholesterol Desirable (low) < 100 mg/dL
  • Acceptable 100-129 mg/dL
  • Borderline high 130-159 mg/dL
  • High 160-189 mg/dL
  • Very high 190 mg/dL or greater
  • Triglycerides Desirable (low) < 150 mg/dL
  • Borderline high 150-199 mg/dL
  • High 200-499 mg/dL
  • Very high 500 mg/dL or greater

LDL-C and HDL-C: Pattern, Size, and Density

Two patterns predominate and are used to describe the average size of LDL particles. Pattern A refers to a preponderance of large LDL particles, while Pattern B refers to a preponderance of small LDL particles; a minority of individuals displays an intermediate or mixed pattern. Some commercially available assays further subdivide LDL-C into 7 distinct designations based on particle size.9,10

LDL Lipoprotein Particle Number

LDL particle number (LDL-P) is a measure of the number of lipoprotein particles independent of the quantity of lipid within the cholesterol particle; ie, LDL-P measures the number of individual particles, not a concentration like LDL-C. It is measured using nuclear magnetic resonance technology and is unaffected by fasting status.21 Higher LDL-P measures have been associated with a higher risk of CAD. This might simply be because there are more particles susceptible to oxidation in circulation.

There are suggestions, but not definitive proof, that reducing LDL-P increases intra-LDL antioxidant capacity.  The European Prospective Investigation of Cancer (EPIC)-Norfolk cohort, a study that has followed 25 663 participants  (men and women aged 45-79 years) over 6 years, evaluated associations between LDL-P and risk of CAD. Compared to controls,  cases of CAD had a higher number of LDL particles (LDL-P P<.0001), smaller average LDL-particle size (P=.002), and higher concentrations of small LDL particles (P<.0001).22

Once again,  small, dense LDL-C were positively associated with TG and negatively associated with HDL.  In another study investigating incident angina and MI with LDL-P, females, but not males, had a significantly increased odds ratio for incident MI and angina for higher LDL-P—but not for LDL size—after adjustment for LDL, age, and race.  Males had increased (but not significant) point estimates showing the same relationship.23 Of note, LDL-P and non-HDL-C (ie,  TC minus HDL-C, or, specifically, LDL-C plus VLDLs), added equivalently to Framingham-predicted CAD risk stratification, thus reducing our enthusiasm for this additional measurement when TC and HDL-C are routinely available.22 Based on these results, LDL-P is becoming recognized as a more-precise measure of LDL-related risk and, as it becomes more available, is likely to replace LDL-C in risk-stratification tools. Clinical availability is currently limited; however, Medicare recently began reimbursing for regular testing of LDL-P in highrisk patients, so we should see availability increase soon. There are no novel treatments based on LDL-P at this time, and data shows therapies that lower LDL-C lower LDL-P as well.

 Apolipoproteins

Apolipoproteins are the protein components of plasma lipoproteins. Several different apolipoproteins have been identified and numbered; however, apoB48, apoB100, and apoA are the most commonly referenced.  ApoB48 is associated with LDL particles that transport dietary cholesterol to the liver for processing. ApoB100 is found in lipoproteins originating from the liver (eg, LDL and VLDL); it transports these lipoproteins and, also, TGs to the periphery. In addition, ApoB100 is involved with the binding of LDL particles to the vascular wall, implicating itself as a key player in the development of atherogenic plaques. Importantly, there is one apoB100 molecule per hepatic-derived lipoprotein. Hence, it is possible to quantify the number of LDL/VLDL particles by noting the total apoB100 concentration.

Measurement of apoB100 has been shown in nearly all studies to outperform LDL-C and non-HDL-C as a predictor of CAD events and as an index of residual CAD risk, perhaps due to differences in measurement sensitivity between measurement methodologies. Direct measurement of apolipoproteins is superior to calculated lipid measurements. Yet, currently, apoB100 measurement is more costly than routine measurements and,  because apoB100 is so closely associated with non-HDL-C (which,  as mentioned previously, can be estimated by TC minus HDL-C),  our enthusiasm for the clinical use of this test is limited.24 For its part, apoA is associated with HDL particles; the 2 major proteins in HDL are apoAI and apoAII. Of these, apoAI has more frequently been used to estimate HDL-C, but, in contrast to apoB100, apoAI is not unique to HDL and so the ratio of apoAI to HDL is not 1 to 1.24

Lipoprotein(a)

Lipoprotein(a)—Lp(a)—is attached to apoB. The association of Lp(a) with CAD and its ability to act as a biomarker of risk appears to be strongest in patients with hypercholesterolemia and, in particular, in young patients with premature atherosclerosis (males younger than 55 and females younger than 65). Part of the reason for this is the observation that there seem to be important threshold effects such that only very high Lp(a) levels (> 30 mg/dL) are associated with elevated vascular risk; in this regard, these increased plasma levels of Lp(a) independently predict the presence of CAD, particularly in patients with elevated LDL-C levels.28

In the Cardiovascular Health Study, a relative risk of approximately 3-fold for death from vascular events and stroke was seen in the highest quintile compared to the lowest quintile of Lp(a) but for males only, whereas no such relation existed for women.29 Lp(a) is commonly considered a marker for familial hypercholesterolemia. Lp(a) may best be used in assessing the risk of younger males with strong family histories of CVD but  should not be used more generally.

Risk Factors for Cardiovascular Disease

(Exclusive of LDL Cholesterol)34

  • Cigarette smoking
  • Hypertension (BP > 140/90 mmHg or on antihypertensive medication)
  • Low HDL cholesterol (< 40 mg/dL)
  • Family history of premature CHD (CHD in first-degree male relative <
  • 55 years; CHD in first-degree female relative < 65 years)
  • Age (men > 44 years; women > 54 years

In addition,

  • Clinical coronary heart disease,
  • symptomatic carotid artery disease,
  • peripheral arterial disease, or
  • abdominal aortic aneurysm

Conclusion

In the United States, treatment guidelines for high CVD risk factors are set by the National Cholesterol Education Program (NCEP) Expert Panel, which developed the third report of the Adult Treatment Panel (ATPIII).34 Treatment goals are determined according to risk stratification by LDL-C and by known additional risk factors such as smoking, low HDL, hypertension,  family history, and age. Yet, clinically, decision-making is always more complex than this. Additional risk stratification can be accomplished by measuring the biomarkers discussed above, and this may potentially provide additive benefit beyond NCEP guidelines. However, we always encourage clinicians to treat known risks to goal levels before adding additional goals for treatment. In a future article we will provide further detail on treatment options for novel biomarkers.

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Other related articles on this Open Access Online Scientific Journal include the following:

Fight against Atherosclerotic Cardiovascular Disease: A Biologics not a Small Molecule – Recombinant Human lecithin-cholesterol acyltransferase (rhLCAT) attracted AstraZeneca to acquire AlphaCore

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/04/03/fight-against-atherosclerotic-cardiovascular-disease-a-biologics-not-a-small-molecule-recombinant-human-lecithin-cholesterol-acyltransferase-rhlcat-attracted-astrazeneca-to-acquire-alphacore/

Cholesteryl Ester Transfer Protein (CETP) Inhibitor: Potential of Anacetrapib to treat Atherosclerosis and CAD

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http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/04/07/cholesteryl-ester-transfer-protein-cetp-inhibitor-potential-of-anacetrapib-to-treat-atherosclerosis-and-cad/

Hypertriglyceridemia concurrent Hyperlipidemia: Vertical Density Gradient Ultracentrifugation a Better Test to Prevent Undertreatment of High-Risk Cardiac Patients

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/04/04/hypertriglyceridemia-concurrent-hyperlipidemia-vertical-density-gradient-ultracentrifugation-a-better-test-to-prevent-undertreatment-of-high-risk-cardiac-patients/

High-Density Lipoprotein (HDL): An Independent Predictor of Endothelial Function & Atherosclerosis, A Modulator, An Agonist, A Biomarker for Cardiovascular Risk

Aviva Lev-Ari, PhD, RN

http://pharmaceuticalintelligence.com/2013/03/31/high-density-lipoprotein-hdl-an-independent-predictor-of-endothelial-function-artherosclerosis-a-modulator-an-agonist-a-biomarker-for-cardiovascular-risk/

 

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