| Literature DB >> 27898011 |
Aldo Bonaventura1, Luca Liberale2, Alessandra Vecchié3, Matteo Casula4, Federico Carbone5, Franco Dallegri6,7, Fabrizio Montecucco8,9,10.
Abstract
After an acute ischemic stroke (AIS), inflammatory processes are able to concomitantly induce both beneficial and detrimental effects. In this narrative review, we updated evidence on the inflammatory pathways and mediators that are investigated as promising therapeutic targets. We searched for papers on PubMed and MEDLINE up to August 2016. The terms searched alone or in combination were: ischemic stroke, inflammation, oxidative stress, ischemia reperfusion, innate immunity, adaptive immunity, autoimmunity. Inflammation in AIS is characterized by a storm of cytokines, chemokines, and Damage-Associated Molecular Patterns (DAMPs) released by several cells contributing to exacerbate the tissue injury both in the acute and reparative phases. Interestingly, many biomarkers have been studied, but none of these reflected the complexity of systemic immune response. Reperfusion therapies showed a good efficacy in the recovery after an AIS. New therapies appear promising both in pre-clinical and clinical studies, but still need more detailed studies to be translated in the ordinary clinical practice. In spite of clinical progresses, no beneficial long-term interventions targeting inflammation are currently available. Our knowledge about cells, biomarkers, and inflammatory markers is growing and is hoped to better evaluate the impact of new treatments, such as monoclonal antibodies and cell-based therapies.Entities:
Keywords: auto-antibodies; biomarkers; inflammation; injury; ischemic stroke; neutrophils
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27898011 PMCID: PMC5187767 DOI: 10.3390/ijms17121967
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Mechanisms of neuronal death in acute ischemic stroke. After brain ischemia occurs, a reduction in the oxygen and glucose supply is carried out leading to the depolarization of membranes and finally to a great increase in intracellular calcium concentration and release of glutamate. Glutamate receptors, once activated, are responsible for the further increase in calcium concentration. The detrimental effects of this huge calcium concentration are proteolysis, lipolysis, mitochondrial damage, and increase in nitric oxide synthase activity. Despite the re-oxygenation should favor the recovery, it triggers reactive oxygen species production, amplifying the damage, ultimately leading to death of neuronal cells. Ca2+: calcium. NOS: nitrix oxide synthase. ROS: reactive oxygen species.
Figure 2Inflammatory cells in post-ischemic brain injury and reparation. Inflammatory mediators released by the ischemic zone promote neutrophil activation and recruitment with a resulting effect on the blood-brain barrier and brain parenchyma. Resident macrophages of the brain (microglia) and circulating monocytes are early involved in the inflammatory response through an M1-switching with production of inflammatory mediators, such as reactive oxygen species, matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs), cytokines, and chemokines. Both neutrophils and macrophages (in particular M2 phenotype) are involved in late resolution through the production of anti-inflammatory and pro-angiogenic mediators. The adaptive immunity contribution is partly mediated by lymphocytes. CD4+, CD8+, and γδ T cells play a detrimental role, while Treg and Breg lymphocytes are involved in the resolution phase. IL: interleukin; TNF-α: tumour necrosis factor α; CCL: C-C motif chemokine ligand; VEGF: vascular endothelial growth factor; TGF-β: transforming growth factor β; IFN-γ: interferon γ.
Figure 3Estimated pathways mediated by oxidative stress. ROS can activate a great variety of cell signaling pathways within a neuronal cells with contrasting properties. Pathways involved in the promoting of cell death are represented by p38, c-Jun N-terminal kinase, p53, and extracellular signal-regulated kinase, while protective pathways are those mediated by phosphoinositide 3-kinase/Akt, hypoxia-inducible factor 1, and heat shock transcription factor 1. ROS: reactive oxygen species. JNK: c-Jun N-terminal kinase. ERK: extracellular signal-regulated kinase. MAPK: mitogen-activated protein kinase. ASK-1: apoptosis signal-regulating kinase-1. PKC: protein kinase C. JAK: Janus kinase. STAT: signal transducer and activator of transcription. ATM: ataxia telangectasia mutated. PI3K: phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase. NFκB: nuclear factor kappa-light-chain-enhancer of activated B cell. PCLγ1: phospholipase C gamma 1. HSF1: heat shock transcription factor 1. HIF1: hypoxia-inducible factor 1.
Brain-specific inflammatory biomarkers potentially useful in stroke diagnosis, response to treatment, and outcome.
| Author | Year | Study Design | Biomarker | Outcome | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Astroglial activation | |||||
| Dassan et al. [ | 2009 | Systematic review (13 longitudinal studies) | S100B | IS diagnosis HT mRS | S100B may be useful in predicting clot lysis ( |
| Ye et al. [ | 2015 | Meta-analysis (10 pooled case-control studies enrolling 773 patients with IS and 438 healthy controls) | S100B | IS diagnosis | Serum levels of S100B were higher in IS patients as compared to controls (SMD = 1.71 [95% CI 0.62–2.79]; |
| Kazmierski et al. [ | 2015 | Prospective observational (458 IS patients) | S100B | HT | HT was associated with higher serum concentrations of S100B (AUC = 0.746; sensitivity 92.9%, specificity 48.1%). |
| Tsai et al. [ | 2014 | Case-control (100 IS patients and 80 healthy subject) | TBARS thiol | 3-month NIHSS | As compared to controls, IS patients had higher TBARS and low free thiol. Furthermore, serum levels of thiol were lower in large- than small-vessel disease. TBARS at day 7 was identified as independent predictor of poor neurological outcome (OR 1.37 [95% CI 1.14–1.65]; |
| Lorente et al. [ | 2015 | Case-control (50 IS patients and 100 healthy controls) | MDA | 30-day mortality | MDA levels were significantly higher in IS patients as compared to healthy controls, as well as in non-surviving IS patients than in survivors ( |
| Neuronal cell injury | |||||
| Bharosay et al. [ | 2012 | Case-control (150 IS patients and 101 controls) | NSE | NIHSS at days 1–7 | NSE was higher in IS patients ( |
| Singh et al. [ | 2013 | Case-control (100 IS patients and 101 controls) | NSE | NIHSS at admission | Serum NSE was higher in IS group, also correlating with IS severity ( |
| Zaheer et al. [ | 2013 | Prospective observational (75 IS patients) | NSE | 30-day mRS | A positive correlation was found between NSE infarct size ( |
| Kim et al. [ | 2014 | Prospective observational (83 IS patients) | NSE | HT | In patients with HT, NSE time course was characterized by two peak levels. This specific pattern was significantly associated with the occurrence of HT (OR 6.84 [95% CI 1.12–41.70]; |
| Lu et al. [ | 2015 | Prospective observational (74 IS patients) | NSE | 3-month mRS | NSE sowed predictive accuracy toward poor neurological outcome (77.1% sensitivity and 59.4% specificity). However, the adjusted RR for NSE was not effective in predicting poor neurological outcome. |
| Haupt et al. [ | 2016 | Prospective observational (31 IS patients) | NSE | mRS days 7 and 10 | NSE peak at day 4 in the good outcome patients, whereas a continuous increase was observed in those with poor outcome. Sensitivity of NSE analysis showing an increase over time to >90% at day 4. |
| Park et al. [ | 2013 | Case-control (111 IS patients and 127 controls) | H-FABP | Stroke diagnosis | H-FABP was significantly higher in the IS group (OR 1.08 [95% CI 1.02–1.13]; |
HT: hemorrhagic transformation; IS: ischemic stroke; SMD: standardized mean differences; CI: confidence interval; AUC: area under the curve; TBARS: thiobarbituric acid-reactive substances; OR: odds ratio; MDA: malonildyaldeide; NSE: neuron-specific enolase; NIHSS: National Institute of Health Stroke Scale; mRS: modified Rankin Scale; H-FABP: heart-type fatty acid binding protein.
Non-specific inflammatory biomarkers potentially useful in stroke diagnosis, response to treatment, and outcome.
| Author | Year | Study Design | Biomarker | Outcome | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ozkan et al. [ | 2013 | Prospective observational (62 IS patients) | CRP | Stroke subtype 3 months NIHSS | CRP was unable to predict IS subtype and functional disability at 3 months after IS. |
| Taheraghdam et al. [ | 2013 | Prospective observational (102 IS patients) | CRP | 3 months mRS | Early CRP measurement failed to predict IS outcome. |
| VanGilder et al. [ | 2014 | Systematic review (5 longitudinal/case-control studies) | CRP | 3 months mRS | In all studies, acutely elevated CRP was positively associated with long-term (30 days to 3 months) unfavorable outcome (OR ranging from 2.3 to 3.5; |
| Karlinski et al. [ | 2014 | Prospective observational (301 IS patients undergoing thrombolysis) | CRP | HT 3 months mRS | CRP measurement failed to independently predict the outcome of IS patients treated with thrombolysis. |
| Pandey et al. [ | 2014 | Case control (880 IS patients, 32 HS and 50 healthy controls) | CRP | Day 7 NIHSS | CRP was significantly higher in stroke patients as compared to controls ( |
| Li et al. [ | 2015 | Prospective observational (374 IS patients) | PCT CRP | 1-year mortality | Serum PCT levels were higher in non-survival patients ( |
| Rocco et al. [ | 2015 | Prospective observational (1242 IS patients) | CRP | 3 months mRS | Follow-up CRP, assessed during the first 7 days showed significant predictive value toward worse mRS (OR 2.67 [95% CI 1.76–4.06]) and mortality (OR 2.53 [95% CI 1.50–4.25]), with a c-statistic of 0.71 and 0.70, respectively. |
| Deng et al. [ | 2015 | Case control (378 IS patients and 200 controls) | PCT | 3-month mRS | Serum PCT was higher in IS group and correlated with lesion size and NIHSS ( |
| Wang et al. [ | 2016 | Case-control (376 IS patients and 200 controls) | PCT CRP | 1-year mRS 1-year mortality | Serum PCT was higher in patients with IS, and correlated with lesion size ( |
| Matsuo et al. [ | 2016 | Prospective observational (3653 IS patients) | CRP | 3 months mRS | At multivariate analysis, CRP was associated with a poor outcome (OR 2.03 [95% CI 1.55–2.67]). |
| Geng et al. [ | 2016 | Prospective observational (301 IS patients) | CRP | Discharge mRS Recurrent IS | At multivariate analysis, poor outcome at discharge was independently predicted by CRP (OR 4.89 [95% CI 3.06–7.81]). |
| Whiteley et al. [ | 2009 | Systematic review (4 longitudinal studies) | IL-6 | 3-month mRS | Il-6 was identified as independent predictor of poor neurological outcome after IS (OR 1.05 [1.01–1.09]). |
| Park et al. [ | 2013 | Prospective observational (175 IS patients) | IL-6 | 3-month mRS | In multivariate analysis IL-6 was independently associated with poor outcome (OR 1.75 [1.25–2.25]; |
| Bustamante et al. [ | 2014 | Meta-analysis (24 pooled longitudinal studies enrolling 4523 patients) | IL-6 | 1 to 6 months mRS | The highest quartile of IL-6 was an independent predictor of poor outcome (OR 2.35 [1.81–3.03], |
| Pusch et al. [ | 2015 | Case-control study (76 patients with IS, 44 with carotid stenosis and 66 with Parkinson disease) | IL-6 | Post-IS infection | High concentration of IL-6, MCP-1, and S100B at 6 h, and increase of P-selectin during the first 72 h were associated with post-stroke infections. Specifically, IL-6 predict the occurrence of post-stroke infection with an AUC of 0.920. |
| Lehmann et al. [ | 2015 | Case-control study (95 patients with IS and 96 controls) | IL-6 CRP MMP-9 | Stroke subtype | As compared to controls, LAAS, LAC and CEI had higher serum levels of IL-6, CRP, and MMP-9 ( |
| Worthmann et al. [ | 2015 | Prospective observational (56 IS patients) | IL-6 IL-10 CRP | Post-IS infection | IL-10, IL-6 and CRP show a different time course in patients with and without post-stroke infection. Furthermore, post-stroke infection is independently predicted by serum IL-10 (AUC 0.76) and CRP (AUC 0.74). |
| Fahmi et al. [ | 2016 | Case-control (50 IS patients and 20 healthy controls) | IL-6 | 15-day NIHSS | At multivariate regression analysis, IL-6 was identified as independent predictor of short-tern neurological outcome (β = 0.451; |
| Rodríguez-Yáñez et al. [ | 2013 | Prospective observational (184 thrombolysed IS patients) | IL-10 | 3-month mRS | High levels of IL-10 predicted good functional outcome with a specificity of 88% and a sensibility of 86% (OR 2.86 [1.06–7.82]). |
| Ashour et al. [ | 2016 | Case-control (60 IS patients and 30 healthy control) | IL-10 | Post-IS infection | The occurrence of infectious was independently predicted by increased levels of IL-10 (OR 6.01 [1.53–23.51]; |
| Inzitari et al. [ | 2013 | Prospective observational (327 thrombolysed IS patients) | MMP-9 | HT 3-months death 3-month mRS | Overtime MMP-9 variations (during 24 h across thrombolysis) significantly predicted HT (OR 1.40 [1.02–1.92]) and death (OR 1.58 [1.11–2.26]). |
| Carbone et al. [ | 2015 | Case-control (60 thrombolysed IS patients and 30 not) | MMP-9 | HT | Peak of MMP-9 (and also MMP-8 and MPO) at day 1 in thrombolysed patients was associated with increased rate of early HT ( |
IS: ischemic stroke; NIHSS: National Institute of Health Stroke Scale; CRP: C-reactive protein; mRS: modified Rankin Scale; OR: odds ratio; HT: hemorrhagic transformation; PCT: procalcitonin; CI: confidence interval; AUC: area under the curve; IL: interleukin; MMP-9: matrix metalloproteinase; LAAS: large artery atherosclerotic stroke; LAC: lacunar stroke; CEI: cardio-embolic stroke; MPO: myeloperoxidase.
Vascular biomarkers potentially useful in stroke diagnosis, response to treatment, and outcome.
| Author | Year | Study Design | Biomarker | Outcome | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wiseman et al. [ | 2014 | Meta-analysis (42 pooled case-control studies enrolling 2196 lacunar IS and 2500 healthy controls) | t-PA, PAI-1, vWF | Stroke subtype | As compared to other subtypes, lacunar IS was characterized by higher markers of coagulation/fibrinolysis (t-PA, PAI-1, and |
| Liu et al. [ | 2016 | Case-control (317 IS of different subtypes) | Stroke subtype | ||
| Yuan et al. [ | 2014 | Prospective observational (300 IS patients) | Stroke subtype Day 14 NIHSS | Serum levels of | |
| Yang et al. [ | 2014 | Prospective observational (220 IS patients) | 3-month mRS 3-month mortality | Admission | |
| Richard et al. [ | 2015 | Prospective observational (100 IS patients) | E-, P-selectin ICAM-1 VCAM-1 | 3-month mRS | Early after SI, E-selectin was found to be an independent predictor of poor outcome (OR = 24.95 [95% CI 2–354]; |
| Wang et al. [ | 2016 | Case-control (1173 IS patients) | 30-day mRS | ||
| Hsu et al. [ | 2016 | Retrospective observational (307 thrombolysed IS patients) | 3-month mRS HT | At adjusted analysis, higher levels of |
t-PA: tissue-type plasminogen activator; PAI: plasminogen activator inhibitor; vWF: Von Willebrand factor; ICAM: intracellular adhesion molecule; VCAM: vascular cell adhesion molecule; CE: cardio-embolic; OR: odds ratio; CI: confidence interval; IS: ischemic stroke; NIHSS: National Institute of Health Stroke Scale; mRS: modified Rankin Scale; AUC: area under the curve; ADMA: asymmetric dimethylarginine; HT: hemorrhagic transformation.
Figure 4Diagnostic and prognostic markers in ischemic stroke. APN: adiponectin. CRP: C-reactive protein. H-FABP: heart-type fatty acid binding protein. HMGB: high mobility group box. IL: interleukin. MDA: malonildyaldeide. MMP: matrix metalloproteinase. MPO: myeloperoxidase. NSE: neuron-specific enolase. PCT: procalcitonin. TBARS: thiobarbituric acid reactive substances. VCAM: vascular cell adhesion molecule. “?” stands for putative or uncertain role.
New candidate inflammatory biomarkers potentially useful in stroke diagnosis, response to treatment, and outcome.
| Author | Year | Study Design | Biomarker | Outcome | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Schulze et al. [ | 2013 | Prospective observational (114 IS patients) | HMGB1 | 3-month mRS | Plasma HMGB1 weakly correlated with infarct volume and stroke severity at day 3 after IS. However, HMGB1 failed to independently predict long-term outcome. |
| Huang et al. [ | 2013 | Prospective observational (338 IS patients) | HMGB1 | 1-year mRS | HMGB1 was independently associate with worse clinical outcome (OR 2.21 [95% CI 1.13–4.20]; |
| Sapojnikova et al. [ | 2014 | Case-control (42 IS patients and 32 healthy controls) | HMGB1 | GOS | The increased HMGB1 levels and plasma MMP-9 are associated with a poor functional outcome and significantly correlated with each other ( |
| Marousi et al. [ | 2010 | Prospective observational (82 IS patients) | Adiponectin | mRS at 1 and 6 months | Higher Adiponectin was indicative worse outcome on month 1 (OR = 1.14 [95% CI 1.01–1.29]; |
| Kuwashiro et al. [ | 2013 | Case-control (171 IS patients and 171 healthy controls) | Adiponectin | 3-month mRS | As compared to controls, average adiponectin values at onset were significantly lower and higher in patients with ATBI ( |
| Carbone et al. [ | 2015 | Prospective observational (35 non-obese ATBI patients) | Adiponectin Leptin | 3-month mRS | Serum leptin and leptin/adiponectin ratio at day 1 inversely correlated with both radiological and clinical parameters. Leptin/adiponectin ratio also independently predicted worse neurological outcome (OR = 0.15 [95% CI 0.03–0.83]; |
mRS: modified Rankin Scale; HMGB1: high-mobility group box-1; IS: ischemic stroke; OR: odds ratio; CI: confidence interval; AUC: area under the curve; NIHSS: National Institute of Health Stroke Scale; GOS: Glasgow outcome scale; MMP: matrix metalloproteinase; ATBI: atherothrombotic stroke; CE: cardio-embolic; HT: hemorrhagic transformation.
Figure 5Anti-inflammatory treatments in stroke pathophysiology. Inflammatory and immune-mediated mechanisms of neuronal injury have been fully investigated in last years. As a result, many drugs modulating these pathways have been tested initially in animal models of stroke and then in humans. Neuronal depolarization and excitotoxicity are main targets for citalopram and donepezil. Edaravone mainly acts as a reactive oxygen species scavenger, while statins share several mechanisms with other drugs and furthermore promote angiogenesis. BBB: blood-brain barrier; CD: cluster of differentiation; COX: cyclooxygenase; IL: interleukin; O2−: superoxyde ion; TNF: tumor necrosis factor; Ra: receptor agonist.
Anti-inflammatory treatments in ischemic stroke: evidence from preclinical studies.
| Study | Year | Treatment | Sample Size | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| IL-1Ra | ||||
| Garcia et al. [ | 1995 | 13 with pMCAO and treated with IL-1Ra; 13 with pMCAO and treated with CSE buffer or placebo group ( | 30 outbred male Wistar rats and fed Agway rat chow during the 4–6 quarantine days | IL-1Ra in rats with pMCAO significantly decreased the number of necrotic neurons both at 24 h and 7 days after the arterial occlusion ( |
| Yamasaki et al. [ | 1995 | 60 min of tMCAO followed by reperfusion; first IL-1β, then anti-IL1β was injected | 120 adult male Wistar rats | tMCAO induced an increase in brain water content, necrosis, and neutrophilic infiltration in the cortex perfused by the MCA and the DCP and VCP. rIL-1β into the left lateral ventricle immediately after reperfusion markedly enhanced ischemic brain edema formation and infarction size in MCA zone, DCP, and VCP in a dose-dependent manner ( |
| Relton et al. [ | 1996 | MCAO or sham surgery. Animals were injected subcutaneously with either vehicle or rIL-1Ra at 0, 4, 8, 12, and 18 h after ischemia. In separate experiments, initial treatment was delayed until 30 min, 1 h, or 4 h after ischemia and treatments were repeated until 18 h | Male Sprague-Dawley rats | rIL-1Ra significantly inhibited infarct size by 46% at 24 h ( |
| Pradillo et al. [ | 2012 | Lean and Cp rats received placebo or IL-1Ra (25 and 12.5 mg/kg) subcutaneously at reperfusion and 6 h later and allocated to different groups: lean + tMCAO + placebo; lean + tMCAO + IL-1Ra; Cp + tMCAO + placebo; and Cp + tMCAO + IL-1Ra. For the delayed administration study, animals were injected subcutaneously with placebo or IL-1Ra at 3 h of reperfusion and again 3 h later | Male, lean and Cp rats | IL-1Ra at reperfusion resulted in a 50% reduction of infarct volume as measured by MRI both in lean and Cp compared with placebo-treated animals ( |
| Statins | ||||
| Endres et al. [ | 1998 | After tMCAO followed by reperfusion, mice were injected subcutaneously with 0.1 mL of activated simvastatin or lovastatin (0.2–20 mg/kg) or a corresponding volume of PBS once daily for 3 or 14 days | Not declared | In a concentration-dependent manner, simvastatin for 14 days reduced cerebral infarct size by 18, 27 and 46% ( |
| Kawashima et al. [ | 2003 | Two groups, one statin-treated (cerivastatin 2 mg/kg by gavage once daily) and another vehicle-treated | Stroke-prone spontaneously hypertensive rats (4 weeks of age) | The incidence of stroke and stroke size decreased ( |
| Amin-Hanjani et al. [ | 2001 | Two groups: mevastatin at a dose of 2 or 20 mg/kg daily and a corresponding concentration of vehicle for 7, 14, or 28 days before tMCAO | Wild-type male mice and eNOS-deficient male mice | Mevastatin increased levels of eNOS mRNA and protein, reduced infarct size, and improved neurological deficits in a dose- and time-dependent manner especially with 14- and 28-day high-dose treatment (26% and 37% infarct reduction, respectively, |
| Prinz et al. [ | 2008 | After tMCAO followed by reperfusion, mice were treated with intravenously or intraperitoneally rosuvastatin given up to 6 h after MCAO (0.02–20 mg/kg) | Wild-type mice aged 6 to 8 weeks | Intravenous rosuvastatin significantly reduced lesion size up to 4 h after MCAO in doses as low as 0.2 mg/kg ( |
| Asahi et al. [ | 2005 | Heterologous blood clots were used to induce MCAO after long-term simvastatin (20 mg/kg), atorvastatin (20 mg/kg) or vehicle treatment subcutaneously | Male SV-129 mice and male C57Bl/6 mice | In wild-type mice, both simvastatin and atorvastatin reduced ischemic lesions and residual clot after 14 days ( |
| Chen et al. [ | 2003 | 24 h after MCAO, rats were fed atorvastatin (1, 3 or 8 mg/kg) daily for 7 days. Rats were also treated with simvastatin 1 mg/kg with the same protocol | 48 Adult male Wistar rats | Rats treated with 1 and 3 mg/kg atorvastatin and 1 mg/kg simvastatin improved functional recovery ( |
| Sironi et al. [ | 2003 | Two groups of rats were treated with vehicle alone or simvastatin for 3 days before MCAO, while other two groups underwent MCAO and were treated with vehicle or simvastatin at 3 and 25 h after the induction of the injury. The brain infarct size was evaluated using MRI | Male Sprague-Dawley rats | Treatment with simvastatin (20 mg/kg) after MCAO prevented the increase in brain infarct volume occurring at 24 h and induced a 46.6% reduction after 48 h ( |
| Reuter et al. [ | 2015 | Cultured hBMECs pretreated with simvastatin and subjected to OGD | hBMECs | Simvastatin significantly blocked the expression of MMP-2 under OGD ( |
| Fingolimod (FTY720) | ||||
| Rolland et al. [ | 2013 | Fingolimod was given intraperitoneally at a dose of 1 mg/kg as single dose 1 h after ICH induction or daily administration 1, 24, and 48 h after ICH induction | 103 male CD-1 mice and 28 male Sprague-Dawley rats | Fingolimod enhanced neurological functions and reduced brain edema at 24 and 72 h following experimental ICH in CD-1 mice ( |
| Campos et al. [ | 2013 | 3 cohorts: pMCAO not treated with t-PA; tMCAO followed by early (30 min after thrombin) t-PA administration; and tMCAO followed by delayed (3 h after thrombin) t-PA administration. Each of these cohort received fingolimod at different time points | C57BL/6 male mice | Fingolimod reduced neurological deficits and infarct volume after in situ thromboembolic MCAO ( |
| Donepezil | ||||
| Wang et al. [ | 2014 | 3 groups: the sham operation group (SO), the model group (MG) and the treatment group (TG). Pathological appearance of the hippocampal CA1 region and calpain I and CDK5/p25 expression were observed on the 4th, 6th and 8th week from I/R surgery | 250 3-month old male mice | At each postoperative time point, the normal neuron count of the hippocampal CA1 region in the treatment group increased significantly ( |
| Min et al. [ | 2012 | After transient global ischemia, donepezil (5 mg/kg once a day) was administered intragastrically for 21 days | Male Mongolian gerbils | Donepezil significantly inhibited delayed neuronal death in the hippocampal CA1 region ( |
| Yuan et al. [ | 2011 | Cultured cells were exposed to both OGD and electrophysiological experiment | HEK293 cells from a human embryonic kidney cell line | Donepezil showed to attenuate OGD-induced apoptosis in Kv2.1/HEK293 cells and to inhibit Kv2.1 currents in a dose-dependent manner under normoxic condition ( |
| Akasofu et al. [ | 2008 | Prolonged opening of sodium channels with veratridine led to depolarization-induced neuronal cell injury, which was prevented by 0.1 µM tetrodotoxin | Cortical cell cultures from fetal rats of the Wistar strain | Pre-treatment with donepezil (0.1–10 µM) for 1 day significantly decreased cell death and increased cell viability in a concentration-dependent manner ( |
| Lee et al. [ | 2007 | After permanent ligation of bilateral common carotid arteries, rats were administered cilostazol (30 mg/kg/day orally) and donepezil (0.3 mg/kg/day intraperitoneally) | Rats | Concurrent treatment with cilostazol and donepezil prevented neuropathological alterations in the white matter by activation of phosphorylated CREB and Bcl-2, resulting in improvement of spatial learning memory ( |
| Citalopram | ||||
| Espinera et al. [ | 2013 | After focal ischemic stroke, citalopram 10 mg/kg was injected intraperitoneally 24 h after stroke and then daily for 7, 14, 21, or 28 days | Adult male C57 mice | Citalopram had no significant effect on infarct formation or edema 3 days after stroke, but enhanced sensorimotor functional recovery after 14 days ( |
| Kronenberg et al. [ | 2012 | Mice were subjected to 30-min MCAO/reperfusion and serial MRI scans; a subset of animals received citalopram from day 7 after MCAO | Male 129/SV mice | Delayed citalopram reversed the behavioral phenotype blocked the degeneration of dopaminergic midbrain neurons, and attenuated striatal atrophy after 4 months ( |
| Natalizumab | ||||
| Becker et al. [ | 2001 | Rats underwent 3 h of MCAO followed by 45 h of reperfusion. 2 h after ischemia, one group received anti-α4 integrin antibody intraperitoneally and another an isotype control antibody | Male Lewis rats | Neurological deficits were less frequent in treated rats at 24 ( |
| Relton et al. [ | 2001 | Rats underwent 1-h MCAO followed by 23-h reperfusion. 24 h before MCAO were injected intravenously with anti-α4 integrin antibody (2.5 mg/kg) or isotype control antibody | Male spontaneously hypertensive rats or Sprague-Dawley rats | Treated animals showed reduced total infarct volume ( |
| Liesz et al. [ | 2011 | 24 h before or 3 h after ischemia, mice were administered 300 mg of CD49d-specific monoclonal antibody intraperitoneally after; control animals received rat IgG2b isotype control monoclonal antibody | Male mice C57BL/6J aged 10–12 weeks | VLA-4 blockade improved outcome after 7 days from MCAO via the inhibition of cerebral leukocyte invasion and neurotoxic cytokine production ( |
| Langhauser et al. [ | 2014 | 24 h before or 3 h after cerebral ischemia (both tMCAO and pMCAO), mice were treated with 300 μg of a monoclonal antibody anti-CD49d | Male C57Bl/6 mice | VLA-4 blocking reduced T cell and neutrophil invasion after 5 days following MCAO and inhibited the up-regulation of VCAM-1 ( |
| Neumann et al. [ | 2015 | After focal cerebral ischemia was induced by pMCAO, anti-CD49d treatment was administered intravenously | LysM-eGFP mice | The systemic blockade of VLA-4 resulted in reduction of adherence of neutrophils ( |
| Llovera et al. [ | 2015 | After cMCAO (for small lesions confined to the cortex) or fMCAO (for lesions in the cortex and subcortical structures) was assessed, anti-CD49d treatment was administered intraperitoneally 3 h after stroke induction | 315 male C57BL/6J mice | Anti-CD49d treatment reduced infarct volume ( |
| Cyclosporine A | ||||
| Uchino et al. [ | 1998 | CsA was given intraperitoneally daily for 1 week before and 1 week after forebrain ischemia of 7 or 10 min duration | Rats | Systemically administered CsA ameliorated the damage to the CA1 sector of the hippocampus due to transient ischemia ( |
| Cho et al. [ | 2013 | Rats underwent MCAO and then randomly treated by intracarotid CsA 10 mg/kg 20 min before MCAO (pre-treatment group); intracarotid CsA 10 mg/kg immediately after reperfusion (post-treatment); and intracarotid saline immediately after reperfusion | 27 Sprague-Dawley rats | On day 1, a significant reduction of infarct size in the pre-treatment group compared to the post-treatment ( |
| Yu et al. [ | 2004 | Rats underwent MCAO then were randomly treated with either: low dose CsA, MP, low dose CsA plus MP, high dose CsA, or vehicle | Adult Sprague-Dawley rats | Animals receiving high dose CsA alone exhibited a minor motor asymmetry and less neurologic deficits 3 days after stroke ( |
| Yuen et al. [ | 2011 | Rats were equally divided into sham control, intraperitoneal physiological saline (at 0.5/24/48 h after stroke), CsA (20 mg/kg at 0.5/24 h intraperitoneally), EPO (5000 IU/kg at 0.5/24/48 h, subcutaneously), combined CsA and EPO after occlusion of distal left internal carotid artery | 50 adult-male Sprague-Dawley rats | On day 21, improvement in neurological function was found in CsA and EPO group ( |
| Edaravone | ||||
| Fujiwara et al. [ | 2016 | Before 90-min MCAO followed by reperfusion, rats were randomly assigned to intravenous vehicle or intravenous edaravone 3 mg/kg | Male Sprague-Dawley rats | Edaravone decreased infarct volume and edema formation and IL-1β and MMP-9 levels 3 h after ischemia levels ( |
| Yamashita et al. [ | 2015 | Thrombolysis was evaluated by using a He-Ne-laser-induced thrombosis model in mesenteric microvessels. 3 experimental groups (placebo, alteplase 0.6 mg/kg, alteplase 0.6 mg/kg + edaravone 10.5 mg/kg) | Male Wistar–ST rats | In the alteplase group, thrombus volume decreased ( |
| Wu et al. [ | 2014 | Rats were subjected to tMCAO and then administered edaravone 2.4 mg/kg; a subset of these animals were administered both edaravone 2.4 mg/kg and borneol 0.6 mg/kg | Sprague-Dawley rats | Edaravone was demonstrated to scavenge free radicals. Edavarone and borneol reduced the infarct area ( |
IL-1Ra: interleukin-1 receptor antagonist; pMCAO: permanent middle cerebral artery occlusion; CV: cardiovascular; PMN: polymorphonuclear; tMCAO: transient middle cerebral artery occlusion; DCP: dorsal area of caudate putamen; VCP: ventral area of the caudate putamen; rIL-1β: recombinant interleukin-1β; MRI: magnetic resonance imaging; MMP: metalloproteinase; CBF: cerebral blood flow; eNOS: endothelial nitric oxide synthase; t-PA: tissue-type plasminogen activator; VEGF: vascular endothelial growth factor; hBMEC: human brain microvascular endothelial cells; OGD: oxygen glucose deprivation; ICH: intracerebral hemorrhage; ICAM-1: intercellular adhesion molecule-1; IFN-γ: interferon-γ; IL: interleukin; I/R: ischemia/reperfusion; CDK5: cyclin-dependent kinase 5; SOD: superoxide dismutase; MDA: malondialdehyde; CaMKII: calmodulin-dependent protein kinase II; CREB: cyclic adenosine monophosphate responsive element binding protein; Kv channels: voltage-gated potassium channels; VCAM-1: vascular cell adhesion molecule-1; VLA-4: very late antigen-4; LysM–EGFP: lysozyme M promoter driving expression of enhanced green fluorescent protein; cMCAO: coagulation of the distal middle cerebral artery; fMCAO: occlusion of the middle cerebral artery with an endovascular filament; CsA: cyclosporine A; MP: methylprednisolone; EPO: erythropoietin.
Randomized clinical trials in ischemic stroke.
| Study | Year | Treatment | Sample Size | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| IL-1Ra | ||||
| Emsley et al. [ | 2005 | Within 6 h of the stroke onset, patients were randomized to rhIL-1ra (intravenously by a 100 mg loading dose over 60 s, followed by a 2 mg/kg/h infusion over 72 h.) or placebo. | 34 patients (17 rhIL-1Ra, 17 placebo) | Peripheral total white blood cell and neutrophil count, CRP, and IL-6 and neutrophil counts were lower in the rhIL-1ra-treated were lower in the treated group. The drug was safe and well tolerated. |
| Smith et al. [ | 2012 | Blood samples prior to treatment initiation, at 24 h and 5 to 7 days. LPS stimulation was made to assess cytokine production by leukocytes. | 34 patients (17 rhIL-1Ra, 17 placebo) | Induction of TNF-α ( |
| Statins | ||||
| Scandinavian Simvastatin Survival Study (4S) [ | 1994 | Patients with angina pectoris or previous MI and serum cholesterol 5.5–8.0 mmol/L on a lipid-lowering diet were randomized to double-blind treatment with simvastatin or placebo. | 4444 patients (2221 simvastatin, 2223 placebo) | Over 5.4 years, simvastatin improved lipid profile, with few adverse effects. The relative risk of death in the simvastatin group was 0.70 (95% CI 0.58–0.85, |
| Plehn et al. [ | 1999 | Enrolled patients: 21–75 years old who had experienced a myocardial infarction within the past 3 to 20 months, total cholesterol <240 mg/dL, LDL cholesterol between 115 and 174 mg/dL, and fasting triglycerides <350 mg/dL during 4 weeks of treatment. | 4159 patients (2081 pravastatin 40 mg daily and 2078 placebo) | Compared with placebo, pravastatin lowered total and LDL cholesterol, and triglycerides by 20%, 32%, and 14%, respectively. A total of 128 strokes (52 on pravastatin, 76 on placebo) and 216 strokes or TIAs (92 on pravastatin, 124 on placebo) were observed, representing a 32% reduction (95% CI, 4%–52%, |
| Montaner et al. [ | 2008 | Simvastatin (40 mg/day for the first week followed by a dose of 20 mg/day until day 90) or placebo were given at 3–12 h from symptom onset. | 60 patients (30 simvastatin, 30 placebo) | Simvastatin-treated group presented greater improvements at several time points ( |
| Sever et al. [ | 2003 | Hypertensive patients aged 40–79 years with at least 3 other cardiovascular risk factors. | 10305 (5168 atorvastatin 10 mg daily and 5137 placebo) | Treatment was stopped after a median follow-up of 3.3 years. In the atorvastatin group, less primary events occurred (HR 0.64, 95% CI 0.50–0.83, |
| Amarenco et al. [ | 2006 | Patients with previous stroke or TIA within one to six months, LDL cholesterol levels of 100 to 190 mg/dL, and no known coronary heart disease. | 4731 patients (2365 atorvastatin 80 mg daily and 2366 placebo) | During 4.9 years, 265 patients under atorvastatin and 311 under placebo had a fatal or non-fatal stroke (5-year absolute reduction in risk, 2.2%; adjusted HR 0.84, 95% CI, 0.71–0.99, |
| Shepherd et al. [ | 2002 | Patients aged 70–82 years with a history of or risk factors for vascular disease. | 5804 patients (2891 pravastatin 40 mg daily and 2913 placebo) | Pravastatin lowered LDL cholesterol and reduced the incidence of the primary endpoint (HR 0.85, 95% CI 0.74–0.97, |
| Ridker et al. [ | 2008 | Apparently healthy men and women with LDL cholesterol levels of less than 130 mg/dL and hs-CRP levels of 2.0 mg/L or higher. | 17802 patients (8901 rosuvastatin 20 mg daily and 8901 placebo) | Rosuvastatin reduced LDL cholesterol levels and hs-CRP levels. Rates of occurrence of the combined primary end point (MI, stroke, arterial revascularization, hospitalization for unstable angina, or death from cardiovascular causes) were 0.77 for rosuvastatin (HR 0.56, 95% CI: 0.46–0.69, |
| Donepezil | ||||
| Barrett et al. [ | 2011 | Adults with ischemic stroke treated within 24 h after onset of symptoms. | 33 patients receiving donepezil 5 mg daily for 30 days followed by an increase to 10 mg/day for 60 days | 15 participants had a favorable clinical outcome (NIHSS score ≤1 at day 90) ( |
| Cyclosporine A | ||||
| Nighoghossian et al. [ | 2015 | Patients aged 18–85 years with an anterior-circulation stroke and eligible for thrombolytic therapy and evaluation of infarct volume on MRI at 30 days. | 127 patients (61 CsA 2 mg/kg and 66 saline) | The reduction of infarct volume in CsA-treated patients was not significant ( |
| Edaravone | ||||
| Edaravone Acute Infarction Study Group [ | 2003 | Patients with acute ischemic stroke within 72 h from symptom onset. | 250 patients (125 edaravone 30 mg twice a day for 14 days and 125 placebo) | A significant improvement in functional outcome evaluated by the mRS was observed in the edaravone group ( |
| Kaste et al. [ | 2013 | Patients with acute ischemic stroke within 24 h from stroke onset. | 36 patients (12 edaravone with loading dose 0.08 mg/kg + 0.2 mg/kg/h; 13 edaravone loading dose 0.16 mg/kg + 0.4 mg/kg/h; 11 placebo) | Both doses of the new formulation and dosing regimen were well tolerated and showed clinical improvement based on NIHSS score. |
| Takenaka et al. [ | 2014 | Patients admitted to hospital for cerebral infarction within 3 h after the onset of infarction. | 48 patients (20 edaravone before rt-PA and 28 edaravone and rt-PA simultaneously) | NIHSS before rt-PA showed a statistically significant improvement after rt-PA administration ( |
rhIL-1Ra: recombinant human IL-1 receptor antagonist. LPS: lipopolysaccharide. TNF-α: tumor necrosis factor-α. IL: interleukin. MI: myocardial infarction. LDL: low density lipoprotein. TIA: transient ischemic attack. CI: confidence interval. OR: odds ratio. HR: hazard ratio. Hs-CRP: high sensitivity C-reactive protein. NIHSS: National Institute of Health Stroke Scale. CsA: cyclosporine A. MRI: magnetic resonance imaging. mRS: modified Rankin scale. rt-PA: recombinant tissue-type plasminogen activator.