| Literature DB >> 23740214 |
Ulrich Hofmann1, Stefan Frantz.
Abstract
The prevalence of chronic heart failure is still increasing making it a major health issue in the 21st century. Tremendous evidence has emerged over the past decades that heart failure is associated with a wide array of mechanisms subsumed under the term "inflammation". Based on the great success of immuno-suppressive treatments in auto-immunity and transplantation, clinical trials were launched targeting inflammatory mediators in patients with chronic heart failure. However, they widely lacked positive outcomes. The failure of the initial study program directed against tumor necrosis factor-α led to the search for alternative therapeutic targets involving a broader spectrum of mechanisms besides cytokines. We here provide an overview of the current knowledge on immune activation in chronic heart failure of different etiologies, summarize clinical studies in the field, address unresolved key questions, and highlight some promising novel therapeutic targets for clinical trials from a translational basic science and clinical perspective.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 23740214 PMCID: PMC3709073 DOI: 10.1007/s00395-013-0356-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Basic Res Cardiol ISSN: 0300-8428 Impact factor: 17.165
Fig. 1Schematic overview depicting activation mechanisms of both innate and adaptive immunity and their central effector mechanism reviewed here
Fig. 2CD4+ regulatory T-cells modulate the function of T-effector cells and B-cells which leads to e.g., autoantibody production which has been found to contribute to cardiac dysfunction in several heart disease. Besides their classical regulatory role on adaptive immune response they have also been demonstrated to influence monocyte differentiation, which again influences fibrosis, and to attenuate myocardial hypertrophy
Randomized clinical studies evaluating immuno-modulating/anti-inflammatory treatments in CHF patients as discussed in the manuscript
| Therapeutic intervention | Study | Patient number | Mean EF | NYHA status | Etiology | Main outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| TNF-α binding | ||||||
| Etanercept | [ | 18 | 23/29 % | III | Mixed | Improved functional parameters and EF |
| [ | 47 | 16–21 % | III–IV | Mixed | ||
| [ | 2,048 | 22–24 % | III–IV | Mixed | Improved EF and remodeling parameters | |
| Infliximab | [ | 150 | 23–25 % | III–IV | Mixed | Combined analysis of RECOVER and RENAISSANCE trials: no effect on clinical composite endpoint |
| No clinical improvement, combined risk of death from any cause or hospitalization for heart failure increased in subgroup | ||||||
| Prednisone | [ | 102 | 18 % | nd | DCM | Transient improvement in EF |
| Prednisone + azathioprine | [ | 202 | 24 % | II–IV | DCM | Improved secondary endpoint of LV volume and EF |
| [ | 85 | 27 % | II–IV | Virus-negative myocarditis | Improved EF and NYHA class | |
| Thalidomide | [ | 56 | 25 % | II–III | Mixed | Improved EF |
| Rosuvastatin | [ | 5,011 | 31/33 % | II–IV | Mixed | No effect of primary combined endpoint |
| [ | 4,631 | 33 % | II–IV | Mixed | No effect of primary combined endpoint | |
| Pentoxifylline | [ | 39 | 24/25 % | II–III | DCM | Improved functional status after 6 months |
| [ | 49 | 23 % | II–III | DCM | Improved functional class, and EF | |
| [ | 28 | 25/22 % | II–III | DCM | Improved EF and functional status | |
| [ | 18 | 13/16 % | IV | DCM | Improved EF | |
| [ | 38 | 23/27 % | II–III | ICM | Functional improvement | |
| Isosorbide dinitrate + hydralazine | [ | 1,050 | 24 % | III–IV | Mixed | Improved composite endpoint in African–Americans. Study terminated prematurely for early benefit |
| Vitamin E | [ | 56 | 23 % | III–IV | Mixed | No clinical improvement, no effect on markers of oxidative stress after 12 weeks on treatment |
| Autologous modified blood | [ | 75 | 22 % | III–IV | Mixed | Reduced mortality and risk of hospitalization after 6 months |
| Polyunsaturated fatty acids | [ | 7,046 | 33 % | II–IV | Mixed | Improved composite endpoint |
| [ | 43 | 24 % | III–IV | Non-ICM | Dose-dependent improved EF | |
| Immuno-adsorption | [ | 22 | 28/27 % | III–IV | DCM | Improved EF, without control group |
| Immunoglobulins | [ | 40 | 26/28 % | II–III | Mixed | Improved EF |
| [ | 62 | 25 % | I–IV | DCM, myocarditis | No change in EF | |
| Intracoronary progenitor cells | [ | 92 | 43/39/41 % | I–III | ICM | Improved EF 3 months after infusion of bone marrow derived cells |
| [ | 109 | 27 % | II–IV | ICM | Improved functional status and EF 12 months after infusion of bone marrow derived cells | |
| [ | 110 | 24/26 % | III | DCM | Improved functional status and EF after 5 years of infusion of CD34+ cells | |
If mean EF was not equal, EF for placebo/treatment groups were indicated
nd not determined, ICM ischemic cardiomyopathy, DCM dilative cardiomyopathy