Serine Protease Inhibitor Nafamostat Given Before Reperfusion Reduces Inflammatory Myocardial Injury by Complement and Neutrophil Inhibition
Animal data strongly support a role for inflammation in myocardial ischemia reperfusion injury. Attempts at cardioprotection by immunomodulation (such as with the specific C5 antibody pexelizumab) in humans have been disappointing. We hypothesized that a broader spectrum antiinflammatory agent might...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of cardiovascular pharmacology 2008-08, Vol.52 (2), p.151-160 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Animal data strongly support a role for inflammation in myocardial ischemia reperfusion injury. Attempts at cardioprotection by immunomodulation (such as with the specific C5 antibody pexelizumab) in humans have been disappointing. We hypothesized that a broader spectrum antiinflammatory agent might yield successful cardioprotection. The serine protease inhibitor nafamostat (FUT-175), which is already in clinical use, is a potent antiinflammatory synthetic serine protease inhibitor with anticomplement activity that we tested in a well-established rabbit model of 1 hour of myocardial ischemia followed by 3 hours of reperfusion. Compared to vehicle-treated animals, nafamostat (1 mg/kg of body weight) administered 5 minutes before reperfusion significantly reduced myocardial injury assessed by plasma creatine kinase activity (38.1 ± 6.0 versus 57.9 ± 3.7I U/g protein; P < 0.05) and myocardial necrosis (23.6 ± 3.1% versus 35.7 ± 1.0%; P < 0.05) as well as myocardial leukocyte accumulation (P < 0.05). In parallel in vitro studies, Nafamostat was a significantly more potent broad spectrum complement suppressor than C1 inhibitor. Nafamostat appears to have capability as an inhibitor of both complement pathways and as a broad-spectrum antiinflammatory agent by virtue of its serine protease inhibition. Administration of nafamostat before myocardial reperfusion after ischemia produced significant, dose-dependant cardioprotection. Reduced leukocyte accumulation and complement activity seem involved in the mechanism of this cardioprotective effect. |
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ISSN: | 0160-2446 1533-4023 |
DOI: | 10.1097/FJC.0b013e318180188b |