| Literature DB >> 25848859 |
Aung Myat, Satpal Arri, Deepak L Bhatt, Bernard J Gersh, Simon R Redwood, Michael S Marber.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Glucagon-like peptide-1 is an incretin hormone essential for normal human glucose homeostasis. Expression of the glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor in the myocardium has fuelled growing interest in the direct and indirect cardiovascular effects of native glucagon-like peptide-1, its degradation product glucagon-like peptide-1(9-36), and the synthetic glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonists. Preclinical studies have demonstrated cardioprotective actions of all three compounds in the setting of experimental myocardial infarction and left ventricular systolic dysfunction. This has led to Phase 2 trials of native glucagon-like peptide-1 and incretin-based therapies in humans with and without Type 2 diabetes mellitus. These studies have demonstrated the ability of glucagon-like peptide-1, independent of glycaemic control, to positively modulate the metabolic and haemodynamic parameters of individuals with coronary artery disease and left ventricular systolic dysfunction. We aim to add to this growing body of evidence by studying the effect of chronic glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor activation on exercise-induced ischaemia in patients with chronic stable angina managed conservatively or awaiting revascularisation. The hypothesis being liraglutide, a subcutaneously injectable glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonist, is able to improve exercise haemodynamics in patients with obstructive coronary artery disease when compared with saline placebo. METHODS ANDEntities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25848859 PMCID: PMC4358711 DOI: 10.1186/s12933-015-0193-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cardiovasc Diabetol ISSN: 1475-2840 Impact factor: 9.951
Evidence for GLP-1-mediated cardioprotection in humans
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| Nikolaidis et al. 2004 [ | Myocardial ischaemia/reperfusion injury | GLP-1 (N=10) | Standard therapy post PPCI (N=11) | Can a 72-hour infusion of GLP-1 improve global and regional LV function for post infarct myocardial dysfunction following successful PPCI? | • GLP-1 therapy improved global LVEF (p<0.01) | • Small, single-centre, nonrandomized pilot study |
| • GLP-1 improved regional (p<0.001) and global (p<0.001) WMSI | • Truncated 4-day follow-up window does not allow for extrapolation of results | |||||
| • Improvements seen in diabetics and non-diabetics and after anterior and non-anterior MI | ||||||
| • GLP-1 reduced hospital stay significantly (p<0.02) | ||||||
| Sokos et al. 2006 [ | Dilated Cardiomyopathy | GLP-1 (n=12) | Maximum standard therapy (n=9) | Can a 5-week subcutaneous infusion of GLP-1 improve both LVEF and functional capacity? | • LVEF improved significantly in the GLP-1 arm ((p<0.001) and was unchanged in the control arm | • Small, single-centre, open-label, nonrandomised study |
| • Type I diabetics excluded but not Type II – potential source of confounding and increased incidence of hypoglycaemia | ||||||
| • 6MWT distance improved significantly in the GLP-1 arm (p<0.001) | ||||||
| • Quality of life improved significantly with GLP-1 (p<0.001) | • No mention of exact infusion volume – essential in a heart failure cohort | |||||
| • Functional improvements seen in diabetics and non-diabetics | ||||||
| Sokos et al. 2007 [ | CABG surgery | GLP-1 (n=12) | Standard therapy (n=12) | Can peri- and postoperative GLP-1 administration improve haemodynamic recovery after CABG surgery? | • No difference in LVEF or cardiac index between the groups | • Small numbers despite randomisation |
| • Control group required greater use of inotropic and vasoactive infusions | • Hypothesis-generating | |||||
| • More frequent arrhythmias seen in control group | ||||||
| Halbirk et al. 2010 [ | Ischaemic cardiomyopathy | GLP-1 (n=10 crossover) | Saline (n=10 crossover) | GLP-1 can improve cardiac function and exercise capacity in non-diabetic patients with heart failure. | • Cardiac index and LVEF remained unchanged | • Small, single-centre study |
| • BNP levels remained unchanged | • Active intervention with a 48-hour GLP-1 infusion may have been too short to mediate any improvement in cardiovascular indices | |||||
| • Hypoglycaemic events related to GLP-1 treatment were seen in 8 patients | ||||||
| • Trial protocol only completed in 75% of patients | ||||||
| Read et al. 2010 [ | Myocardial ischaemia (mediated by dobutamine stress) | Sitagliptin (n=14 crossover) | Placebo (n=14 crossover) | Increased availability of endogenous GLP-1 through DPP-4 inhibition will protect the heart against postischaemic LV dysfunction. | • Greater increase in myocardial performance after sitagliptin at peak stress (p=0.0001) | • Small study sample |
| • Myocardial stunning seen in controls after dobutamine stress whereas sitagliptin maintained LV function | • Hypothesis-generating | |||||
| • Sitagliptin had a greater beneficial effect on ischaemic vs. nonischaemic LV segments | ||||||
| Read et al. 2011 [ | Myocardial ischaemia/reperfusion injury | GLP-1 (n=10) | Saline (n=10) | Can GLP-1 protect the heart against ischaemic dysfunction associated with serial 1-minute coronary balloon occlusions during PCI and mitigate myocardial stunning? | • GLP-1 infusion improved recovery of LV systolic and diastolic function at 30 minutes post 1-minute coronary balloon occlusion compared with control (p=0.02) | • Study too small to assess any clinical endpoints |
| • Coronary flow not assessed | ||||||
| • GLP-1 infusion reduced LV dysfunction after a second 1-minute coronary balloon occlusion compared with control (p=0.01) | • Hypothesis-generating | |||||
| Read et al. 2012 [ | Myocardial ischaemia (mediated by dobutamine stress) | GLP-1 (n=14 crossover) | Saline (n=14 crossover) | Can GLP-1 protect the heart from ischaemic LV dysfunction and improve myocardial response to dobutamine stress? | • Greater increase in LVEF at peak stress during GLP-1 infusion | • Small study sample |
| • No myocardial stunning seen during GLP-1 infusion | • Study not powered to examine clinical end points | |||||
| • GLP-1 improved myocardial performance specifically in LV segments subtended by a stenosed vessel and did not in segments receiving an unobstructed blood supply | ||||||
| Lønborg et al. 2012 [ | Myocardial I/R injury | Exenatide (n=85) | Saline (n=87) | Can exenatide protect against reperfusion injury in STEMI patients following PPCI? | • Significantly greater myocardial salvage index in the exenatide group (p=0.003) post PPCI | • LVEF after 90 days was not significantly different between the two groups |
| • Patients in the exenatide group developed significantly smaller infarcts for an equivalent area at risk (p=0.011) | • Study cohort too small to detect a difference in 30-day clinical events | |||||
| McCormick et al. 2014 [ | Myocardial ischaemia (mediated by dobutamine stress) | Sitagliptin (taken for 4 weeks) (n=19) | Standard oral hypoglycaemic agents (n=19) | Can chronic DPP-4 inhibition with sitagliptin protect the heart from ischaemic LV dysfunction and improve myocardial response to demand ischaemia during dobutamine stress in Type 2 diabetes patients with CAD | • No difference in the rate pressure products at baseline, peak stress, or recovery between the sitagliptin and control scans | • Small study sample |
| • Cannot exclude degree of variation in individual response to dobutamine during 2 consecutive stress echocardiograms separated by a number of weeks | ||||||
| • At peak stress there was a greater increase in global ejection fraction following sitagliptin therapy (p<0.0001) | ||||||
| • At peak stress sitagliptin enhanced regional LV function – seen predominantly in ischaemic segments (p=0.001) whereas there was no effect in non-ischaemic segments (p=0.87) | • CAD defined by the presence of a single proximal stenosis >50% in at least 1 epicardial coronary artery – some might argue this level of obstruction would not be haemodynamically significant |
Key: GLP-1 = glucagon-like peptide-1; PPCI = primary percutaneous coronary intervention; LVEF = left ventricular ejection fraction; 6MWT = 6-minute walk test; WMSI = wall motion score index; BNP = brain natriuretic peptide; CABG = coronary artery bypass grafting; STEMI = ST-elevation myocardial infarction; PCI = percutaneous coronary intervention; DPP-4 = dipeptidyl dipeptidase-4; CAD = coronary artery disease.
Primary outcome measures
| • | Change in rate pressure product at 0.1 mV ST-segment depression during sequential exercise tolerance testing performed over a 6-week study period |
| • | Change in degree of ST-segment depression at peak exercise during sequential exercise tolerance testing performed over a 6-week study period |
Secondary outcome measures
| • | Change in total exercise time during sequential exercise tolerance testing performed over a 6-week study period |
| • | Change in time to 0.1 mV ST-segment depression during sequential exercise tolerance testing performed over a 6-week study period |
| • | Change in time to maximum ST-segment depression during sequential exercise tolerance testing performed over a 6-week study period |
| • | Change in recovery time to 0.05 mV ST-segment depression during sequential exercise tolerance testing performed over a 6-week study period |
| • | Evidence of hypoglycaemia through twice-daily home blood glucose monitoring and once-weekly random serum glucose measurements |
| • | Evidence of renal dysfunction through once-weekly monitoring of serum creatinine, electrolytes and estimated glomerular filtration rate |
| • | Evidence of acute pancreatitis through once weekly monitoring of serum amylase alongside telephone and once-weekly face-to-face study visits |
Inclusion criteria
| • | Men and women aged 18-80 |
| • | Patients must be able to walk confidently on an exercise treadmill |
| • | Patient must have a recent abnormal exercise tolerance test demonstrating >0.1 mV of planar or down-sloping ST-segment depression |
| • | Patients must have angiographic evidence of a >70% stenosis in a main epicardial coronary artery, with or without coronary stenoses elsewhere |
| • | Patients must have a normal resting electrocardiogram in sinus rhythm without bundle branch aberration or other conduction disturbance |
| • | Patients must have preserved left ventricular systolic function (ejection fraction ≥40%) |
Exclusion criteria
| • | An abnormal resting electrocardiogram including atrial fibrillation, bundle brunch aberration or other conduction disturbance |
| • | Pre-existing significant left ventricular systolic dysfunction (ejection fraction <40%) |
| • | Pre-existing ischaemic or non-ischaemic cardiomyopathy |
| • | Pre-existing haemodynamically significant valvular heart disease |
| • | Inability to safely negotiate an exercise treadmill |
| • | Patients with Type 1 diabetes mellitus |
| • | Patients with Type 2 diabetes mellitus taking oral and/or subcutaneous anti-diabetic therapy |
| • | Patients with a personal or family history of medullary thyroid carcinoma |
| • | Patients with Multiple Endocrine Neoplasia syndrome type 2 |
| • | Patients with acute renal failure or deteriorating renal function |
Figure 1The LIONESS Trial study design.
Laboratory tests
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| • | Full blood count |
| • | Creatinine and electrolytes |
| • | Estimated glomerular filtration rate |
| • | Liver function tests |
| • | Amylase |
| • | Corrected calcium |
| • | Random blood glucose |
| • | HBA1c (Week 3 and Week 6 only) |
| • | Random lipid profile (serum total cholesterol, low-density lipoprotein cholesterol, high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, and triglyceride) (Week 3 and Week 6 only) |
LIONESS trial flowchart of visits and procedures
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| Obtain informed consent, issue safety information card and patient diary | Yes | - | - | - | - | - | - | - |
| Randomisation to study agents | Yes | Perform first self-administration of study agent | - | - | - | - | - | - |
| Issue 7-day course of blinded study agent | - | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Stop all study medication |
| Check study drug compliance | - | - | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Withdraw protocol-mandated pre-existing patient medication | Tutorial and commence withdrawal | Complete withdrawal | - | - | - | - | - | Recommence pre-existing patient medication |
| Home Blood Glucose Monitoring | Tutorial and issue equipment | - | Record data from patient diary | Record data from patient diary | Record data from patient diary | Record data from patient diary | Record data from patient diary | Record data from patient diary |
| Physical examination | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Height measurement | Yes | - | - | - | - | - | - | - |
| Weight measurement | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Blood pressure measurement | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Electrocardiogram | Yes | - | - | - | - | - | - | - |
| Pre-specified blood tests | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Perform supervised exercise tolerance test (ETT) | Yes (if recent ETT unavailable) | - | - | Yes | Yes | - | Yes | Yes |