| Literature DB >> 30452784 |
Hans-Dirk Düngen1, Lars Kober2, Savina Nodari3, Morten Schou4, Christiane Otto5, Michael Becka6, Friederike Kanefendt7, Bernhard R Winkelmann8, Gunnar Gislason9, Frank Richard10, Olav Wendelboe Nielsen11, Mihai Gheorghiade12, Michele Senni13.
Abstract
The chymase inhibitor fulacimstat is developed as a first-in-class treatment option for the inhibition of adverse cardiac remodeling in patients with left ventricular dysfunction (LVD) after acute myocardial infarction (MI). The aim of the study was to examine the safety and tolerability of fulacimstat in patients with LVD after remote MI. A multicenter, multinational randomized, placebo-controlled study was performed in clinically stable patients (40-79 years of age, left ventricular ejection fraction ≤ 45% because of MI in medical history) who were on stable evidence-based standard-of-care therapies for LVD post-MI including an angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitor or angiotensin receptor blocker at doses of at least half the recommended target dose. Patients were treated for 2 weeks with either placebo (n = 12) or 4 different doses of fulacimstat (5 mg twice daily, n = 9; 10 mg twice daily, n = 9; 25 mg twice daily, n = 10; 50 mg once daily, n = 9). Fulacimstat was safe and well tolerated at all examined doses. There were no clinically relevant effects on vital signs or potassium levels compared with placebo treatment. Mean plasma concentrations of fulacimstat increased with the administered dose and reached exposures predicted to be therapeutically active. The safety profile and the absence of effects on blood pressure or heart rate in a chronic patient population having similar comorbidities and receiving similar comedication as patients after acute MI support future clinical trials with fulacimstat in patients after acute MI.Entities:
Keywords: BAY 1142524; chymase inhibitor; fulacimstat; left ventricular dysfunction; safety; tolerability
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30452784 DOI: 10.1002/cpdd.633
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Pharmacol Drug Dev ISSN: 2160-763X