| Literature DB >> 29601487 |
Fumihiro Sanada1, Yoshiaki Taniyama2, Jun Muratsu3,4, Rei Otsu5, Hideo Shimizu6, Hiromi Rakugi7, Ryuichi Morishita8.
Abstract
The World Health Organization announced that cardiovascular disease is the number one cause of death globally, representing 31% of all global deaths. Coronary artery disease (CAD) affects approximately 5% of the US population aged 40 years and older. With an age-adjusted prevalence of approximately 12%, peripheral artery disease (PAD) affects at least 8 to 12 million Americans. Both CAD and PAD are caused by mainly atherosclerosis, the hardening and narrowing of arteries over the years by lipid deposition in the vascular bed. Despite the significant advances in interventions for revascularization and intensive medical care, patients with CAD or PAD who undergo percutaneous transluminal angioplasty have a persistent high rate of myocardial infarction, amputation, and death. Therefore, new therapeutic strategies are urgently needed for these patients. To overcome this unmet need, therapeutic angiogenesis using angiogenic growth factors has evolved in an attempt to stimulate the growth of new vasculature to compensate for tissue ischemia. After nearly 20 years of investigation, there is growing evidence of successful or unsuccessful gene therapy for ischemic heart and limb disease. This review will discuss basic and clinical data of therapeutic angiogenesis studies employing angiogenic growth factors for PAD patients and will draw conclusions on the basis of our current understanding of the biological processes of new vascularization.Entities:
Keywords: angiogenesis; gene therapy; hepatocyte growth factor
Year: 2018 PMID: 29601487 PMCID: PMC6024305 DOI: 10.3390/medicines5020031
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Medicines (Basel) ISSN: 2305-6320
Human clinical trials of angiogenic growth factors for patients with peripheral artery disease (PAD).
| Trials [Reference] | Vector and Promoter | Delivery Route | Phase | Enrollment | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baumgartner et al. [ | phVEGF165/MIEhCMV | Intramuscular | I | 9 | Tolerated |
| Makinen et al. [ | phVEGF165/MIEhCMV | Intra-arterial | II | 54 | Tolerated, increased vascularity |
| AdVEGF165/MIEhCMV | |||||
| RAVE [ | AdVEGF121/MIEhCMV | Intramuscular | II | 95 | No improvement of exercise performance or QOL |
| Groningen [ | phVEGF165/not reported | Intramuscular | II | 54 | No reduction in amputation rate |
| Comerota et al. [ | phFGF-1/MIEhCMV | Intramuscular | I | 107 | Tolerated |
| TALISMAN [ | phFGF-1/MIEhCMV | Intramuscular | II | 125 | Reduction in amputation rate |
| TAMARIS [ | phFGF-1/MIEhCMV | Intramuscular | III | 525 | No improvement of QOL or ABI, no reduction in amputation rate or death |
| Morishita et al. [ | phHGF/MIEhCMV | Intramuscular | I/IIa | 22 | Tolerated |
| Makino et al. [ | phHGF/MIEhCMV | Intramuscular | I/IIa | 22 | Improvement of ABI, reduction in rest pain and ulcer size up to 2 years |
| HGF-STAT [ | phHGF/MIEhCMV | Intramuscular | II | 104 | Improvement in TcPO2 |
| TREAT-HGF [ | phHGF/MIEhCMV | Intramuscular | III | 40 | Improvement in rest pain and ABI, reduction in ulcer size |
ABI: ankle-brachial index, TcPO2: transcutaneous oxygen tension, MIEhCMV, major immediate-early enhancer/promoter from human cytomegalovirus.
Gene delivery system.
| Strategy | Methods | Advantage | Disadvantage |
|---|---|---|---|
| Naked DNA plasmid | Direct injection | Easy to produce and use | Low efficacy, transient expression |
| Low cost | |||
| Plus ultrasound | Improves delivery of plasmid DNA | Not well optimized | |
| Viral vector | |||
| Adenoviral vectors | Direct injection/intra | High multiplicity of infection | Activation of inflammatory and immune response |
| Vascular injection | High levels of expression | Transient expression | |
| High cloning capacity | |||
| Broad cell tropism (infection of both quiescent and proliferating cell) | |||
| Retroviruses vectors | Direct injection | Long-term gene expression | Insertional mutagenesis |
| (Lentivirus and retrovirus) | Low immunogenicity | Limited cloning capacity | |
| Integrative in both quiescent and proliferative cells | |||
| Adeno-associated virus (AAV) vectors | Direct injection/intra | Low immunogenicity | Limited cloning capacity |
| Site-specific integration | Difficult to produce pure viral stocks | ||
| Vascular injection | Specific tropism for skeletal and cardiac muscle | ||
| Easy propagation in high titers | |||
| Long-term gene expression |