| Literature DB >> 22557967 |
Stephanie Schulz1, Ronald J Wong, Hendrik J Vreman, David K Stevenson.
Abstract
Metalloporphyrins are structural analogs of heme and their potential use in the management of neonatal hyperbilirubinemia has been the subject of considerable research for more than three decades. The pharmacological basis for using this class of compounds to control bilirubin levels is the targeted blockade of bilirubin production through the competitive inhibition of heme oxygenase (HO), the rate-limiting enzyme in the bilirubin production pathway. Ongoing research continues in the pursuit of identifying ideal metalloporphyrins, which are safe and effective, by defining therapeutic windows and targeted interventions for the treatment of excessive neonatal hyperbilirubinemia.Entities:
Keywords: bilirubin; heme oxygenase; hemolysis; neonatal hyperbilirubinemia
Year: 2012 PMID: 22557967 PMCID: PMC3337460 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2012.00068
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
Figure 1Heme degradation pathway. The turnover of hemoglobin (Hb) and other hemoproteins yields heme. This heme is metabolized to equimolar quantities of carbon monoxide (CO), iron (Fe2+), and biliverdin. Biliverdin is subsequently reduced to form bilirubin. CO is bound to circulating red blood cells (RBC) and is excreted through the lungs, where it can be measured as the rate of total body CO excretion (VeCO) or as a concentration in end-tidal breath, corrected for ambient CO (ETCOc). Modified from Vreman et al. (2001).
Figure 2Ribbon diagram of HO-1. The N-terminus is blue and the C-terminus is red, with green in the middle. Heme is shown by the arrow. Adapted from Schuller et al. (1999).
Figure 3Basic porphyrin IX structure with central metal and two ring substitution sites (R). Oxidation of susceptible porphyrins, catalyzed by HO, occurs at the α-position to yield a tetrapyrrole. Modified from Vreman et al. (2001).
Clinical studies using metalloporphyrins.
| Subjects | Mp(s) | Doses | Outcomes | Side effects | Reference | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 28 Healthy adults (men from 23 to 62 years-old) | SnPP | 0.001–1.0 μmol/kg BW i.v., i.m., p.o. | Pharmacokinetics | Mild to moderate erythema after sunlight and long-wave ultraviolet light exposure in four subjects | Anderson et al. ( | |
| Log-linear clearance | ||||||
| t1/2 ≈ 4 h | ||||||
| Excretion: rapidly in the urine (0.1–5.6%), more gradually in feces (3.7–11.3%) | Discomfort at injection side after i.m. administration | |||||
| i.m. administration similar to i.v. | ||||||
| Not orally absorbable | ||||||
| Patients with primary biliary cirrhosis ( | SnPP | 0.025–2.0 μmol/kg BW i.v. | Plasma bilirubin declined | Mild to moderate erythema in three subjects | Anderson et al. ( | |
| Biliary cirrhosis → 7–25% | ||||||
| Gilbert syndrome → 29–43% | ||||||
| 10 Healthy adults (men and women 21–48 years-old) | SnPP | 1–2 μmol/kg BW i.v. in two doses | Plasma bilirubin declined 38% (mean) for at least 4 days | None mentioned | Berglund et al. ( | |
| t1/2 ≈ 3.4 h | ||||||
| Heme excreted in the bile | ||||||
| Term newborns with direct Coombs-positive ABO incompatibility (69 controls, 53 treated) | SnPP | 0.5–2.25 μmol/kg BW i.m. in one to three doses | Moderated postnatal plasma bilirubin increase | Transient erythema in two babies who also received phototherapy | Kappas et al. ( | |
| Diminished intensity of hyperbilirubinemia | ||||||
| Decreased phototherapy use | ||||||
| t1/2 of SnPP in term babies different from adults: t1/2 ≈ 1.6 h | ||||||
| Six patients with biliary cirrhosis, four patients with idiopathic hemochromatosis | SnPP | 1–2 μmol/kg BW i.v. in two doses | Plasma bilirubin declined | Transient photosensitizing effects | Berglund et al. ( | |
| Biliary cirrhosis → 20% | ||||||
| Hemochromatosis → 32% | ||||||
| Decrease in biliary bilirubin | ||||||
| t1/2 ≈ 3.4 h | ||||||
| Heme excreted in the bile | ||||||
| 24 Healthy adult subjects (men) | SnMP | 1 μmol/kg BW i.v., i.m., p.o. | Pharmacokinetics | Transient photosensitizing effects after sunlight exposure in three out of four subjects | Galbraith and Kappas ( | |
| Log-linear clearance | ||||||
| t1/2 = 3.8 h (i.v.) | ||||||
| Excretion: urinary and fecal <1% | ||||||
| Not orally absorbable | ||||||
| Significant decreased plasma bilirubin after 24–48 h | ||||||
| Three patients with porphyria | SnPP | 4 μmol/kg BW; | SnPP significantly reduced excretion of ALA, porphobilinogen, and porphyrins | All three displayed photosensitivity after exposure to fluorescent and sunlight | Galbraith and Kappas ( | |
| SnMP | 2 μmol/kg BW; each in four doses | SnMP significantly reduced ALA and porphyrins (two patients) | ||||
| 20 Healthy adults; seven with primary biliary cirrhosis; four with idiopathic hemochromatosis | SnPP | 1–2 μmol/kg BW i.v. in two doses; | Study designed to look at side effects of SnPP and SnMP treatment | Substantial, but transiently increased serum ferritin levels | Berglund et al. ( | |
| SnMP | 1.0 μmol/kg BW | |||||
| Two boys with Crigler–Najjar type I | SnMP | 40 doses of 0.5 μmol/kg BW and 70 doses of 1.0 μmol/kg BW i.v. during a period of 425 days | Decreased plasma bilirubin levels and rebound hyperbilirubinemia, which occurred after plasmapheresis | Episodic mild reversible cutaneous photosensitivity after sun exposure | Galbraith et al. ( | |
| Prolonged treatment was well-tolerated | Hemoglobin, hematocrit, mean corpuscular volume, changed similar to an iron deficiency | |||||
| Plasma iron-binding proteins increased | ||||||
| 517 Preterm newborns (30– ≤ 36 weeks of gestation) | SnMP | 1–6 μmol/kg BW i.m. | Reduced mean peak incremental plasma bilirubin levels by 41% | Mild, transient erythema, which disappeared without sequelae, in 13 newborns of 127 who required phototherapy together with SnMP treatment | Valaes et al. ( | |
| Reduction was equal for control (receiving phototherapy if needed) and SnMP groups | ||||||
| Phototherapy requirement decreased by 76% compared to control subjects given 6-μmol/kg BW | ||||||
| Male term infants, near-term infants of both genders (42 pairs of SnMP and phototherapy treatment) | SnMP | 6 μmol/kg BW i.m. | Effectively controlled hyperbilirubinemia and was superior to phototherapy in the majority of cases (time interval between enrollment and closure of case was reduced by >24 h with SnMP treatment) | Slight erythema in one infant after sun exposure | Kappas et al. ( | |
| Two control infants who just received phototherapy developed erythema | ||||||
| No neurodevelopmental adverse effects after 18-month follow-up | ||||||
| G6PD-deficient neonates ( | SnMP | 6 μmol/kg BW i.m. | Effectively controlled hyperbilirubinemia | None of the 86 neonates developed photosensitivity erythema | Valaes et al. ( | |
| None of the 86 infants needed phototherapy | ||||||
| Preventive use of SnMP was superior to therapeutic use | ||||||
| 84 Full-term breastfed newborns ( | SnMP | 6 μmol/kg BW i.m. | Effectively controlled hyperbilirubinemia No supplemental phototherapy needed 27% of controls needed phototherapy Reduced use of medical resources | No erythema observed in control or SnMP-treated groups | Martinez et al. ( | |
| No differences in liver function tests | ||||||
| Two Jehovah Witness newborns with hemolytic disease | SnMP | 6 μmol/kg BW i.m. at the time when exchange transfusion would have been initiated | Effectively terminated the progression of hyperbilirubinemia | Mild, short-lasting erythema in one case | Kappas et al. ( | |
| 230 G6PD-deficient newborns | SnMP | 6 μmol/kg BW i.m. | Treatment on the first day of life significantly lowered plasma bilirubin compared to G6PD-deficient controls | No systemic or local reactions at injection site | Kappas et al. ( | |
| Decreased plasma bilirubin even in relation to G6PD-normal infants | No evidence of untoward effects in physical, neuromotor, and mental development, at 18-month follow-up | |||||
| No need for phototherapy in the SnMP-treated group | ||||||
| Very-low-birth-weight infant | SnMP | 4.5 mg/kg BW (or 6 μmol/kg BW) i.m. | Plasma bilirubin declined within 10 h after administration and avoided the need of exchange transfusion | No erythema reported | Reddy et al. ( | |
ALA, δ-aminolevulinic acid; BW, body weight; G6PD, glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase; i.m., intramuscular; i.v., intravenous; Mps, metalloporphyrins; p.o., oral; t.
Dose conversion factor: μmol/kg BW = 1.33 × mg/kg BW.
Major advantages and disadvantages of promising metalloporphyrins.
| Mps | Advantages | Reference | Disadvantages | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SnMP | Highly potent | Drummond et al. ( | Photosensitizer (animal/human studies) | Galbraith and Kappas ( |
| Well-studied | Kappas ( | Phototoxic (animal studies) | Hintz et al. ( | |
| Clinical efficacy shown | Kappas et al. ( | Affects NOS, sGC, CYP450 | Appleton et al. ( | |
| Activates HO-1 gene transcription | Abate et al. ( | |||
| Not orally absorbable in rat and human studies | Galbraith and Kappas ( | |||
| Crosses the blood–brain barrier (controversial) | Boni et al. ( | |||
| Long-term treatment possibly leads to iron deficiency | Boni et al. ( | |||
| Long-term tissue deposition. Long duration of HO inhibitory action (could also be advantageous under certain circumstances) | Bundock et al. ( | |||
| ZnPP | Contains an essential metal atom | Least potent in this group | Morioka et al. ( | |
| Naturally occurring | Affects NOS, hematopoiesis | Appleton et al. ( | ||
| Not phototoxic at doses ≤60 μmol/kg BW | Hintz et al. ( | Incorporates into RBCs | Labbe et al. ( | |
| Effective in rhesus monkey | Maines ( | Activates HO-1 gene transcription | Zhang et al. ( | |
| May not cross the blood–brain barrier | Qato and Maines ( | Not orally absorbed | Vreman et al. ( | |
| Long-term deposition in tissue (see above) | Qato and Maines ( | |||
| ZnMP | Contains an essential metal atom | Binds tightly to human serum albumin | Bundock et al. ( | |
| Not phototoxic at doses ≤45 μmol/kg BW | Hintz et al. ( | Long-term deposition in tissue (see above) | Russo et al. ( | |
| May not cross the blood–brain barrier | Russo et al. ( | Affects hematopoiesis | Lutton et al. ( | |
| Activates HO-1 gene transcription | Hou et al. ( | |||
| Less well-studied | ||||
| ZnBG | Highly potent | Photosensitizer (animal studies) | Schulz et al. ( | |
| Contains an essential metal atom | Phototoxic (animal studies) | Schulz et al. ( | ||
| Only minimally affects NOS, sGC | Appleton et al. ( | Rapid onset with a short duration of action (may require multiple dosing, can also be advantageous in cases of infants with protracted hemolysis) | Katayama et al. ( | |
| Only minimally affects HO-1 transcription | He et al. ( | Less well-studied | ||
| Orally absorbed | Vallier et al. ( | |||
| Short duration of action | He et al. ( | |||
| No known long-term tissue deposition | Katayama et al. ( | |||
| May not or minimally cross the blood–brain barrier | He et al. ( |
Mps, metalloporphyrin; NOS, nitric oxide synthase; sGC, soluble guanylyl cyclase; CYP.