| Literature DB >> 31417544 |
Alison R Clarke1, Brandon R Christophe1, Anadjeet Khahera1, Justin L Sim1, E Sander Connolly1.
Abstract
Stroke is a leading cause of death and disability worldwide and an increasing number of ischemic stroke patients are undergoing pharmacological and mechanical reperfusion. Both human and experimental models of reperfused ischemic stroke have implicated the complement cascade in secondary tissue injury. Most data point to the lectin and alternative pathways as key to activation, and C3a and C5a binding of their receptors as critical effectors of injury. During periods of thrombolysis use to treat stroke, acute experimental complement cascade blockade has been found to rescue tissue and improves functional outcome. Blockade of the complement cascade during the period of tissue reorganization, repair, and recovery is by contrast not helpful and in fact is likely to be deleterious with emerging data suggesting downstream upregulation of the cascade might even facilitate recovery. Successful clinical translation will require the right clinical setting and pharmacologic strategies that are capable of targeting the key effectors early while not inhibiting delayed repair. Early reports in a variety of disease states suggest that such pharmacologic strategies appear to have a favorable risk profile and offer substantial hope for patients.Entities:
Keywords: cerebral blood flow; complement; complement activation; complement cascade; stroke therapy; vascular disorders
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31417544 PMCID: PMC6682670 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2019.01723
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
The Role of the complement cascade in central nervous system cell clearance, viability, and cerebral tissue repair as well as in experimental cerebral ischemia reperfusion injury and human stroke.
| Yes (15–16) | No (44–46) | Yes (27–9) | Yes (26) | No | |
| – | Yes (39, 45, 47, 49) | – | – | Yes (70, 72, 74–6, 78) | |
| – | Yes (40, 41, 43, 48) | – | – | ||
| Yes (16) | Yes (40, 41, 45) | Yes (23) | Yes (30, 36, 74) | Yes (66, 69, 84) | |
| No | Yes (54, 56–7) | Yes (57, 64) | Yes (17, 21, 24) | Yes (67) | |
| Yes | – | – | – | No | |
| Yes | Yes (41) | – | – | No | |
| – | – | Yes (28) | – | No | |
| – | Yes (63) | – | – | Yes (81) | |
| No | Yes (62) | – | Yes (22, 25, 31) | Yes (71) | |
| Yes | No (48) | Maybe | Yes (27) | Yes (86) |
Complement inhibitors in clinical development with potential utility in clinical stroke (94).
| Classical pathway | x | |||||||||||||
| Lectin pathway | x | x | ||||||||||||
| Alternate pathway (factor B) | x | x | ||||||||||||
| Alternate pathway (factor D) | x | x | x | |||||||||||
| C3 | x | x | x | |||||||||||
| C3a/3aR | ||||||||||||||
| C5 | x | x | x | x | ||||||||||
| C5a/5aR | x | |||||||||||||
| Company | Pharming behring shire | Omeros | Achillion | Novartis | Achillion | Novartis | RaPharma | Apellis | Amyndas | Inflazyme | Alexion | Alnylam | Akari | Chemocentryx |