| Literature DB >> 32698853 |
Frank M P van Haren1,2, Clive Page3, John G Laffey4,5, Antonio Artigas6, Marta Camprubi-Rimblas7, Quentin Nunes8, Roger Smith9, Janis Shute10, Mary Carroll11, Julia Tree12, Miles Carroll12, Dave Singh13, Tom Wilkinson11, Barry Dixon9.
Abstract
Nebulised unfractionated heparin (UFH) has a strong scientific and biological rationale and warrants urgent investigation of its therapeutic potential, for COVID-19-induced acute respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS). COVID-19 ARDS displays the typical features of diffuse alveolar damage with extensive pulmonary coagulation activation resulting in fibrin deposition in the microvasculature and formation of hyaline membranes in the air sacs. Patients infected with SARS-CoV-2 who manifest severe disease have high levels of inflammatory cytokines in plasma and bronchoalveolar lavage fluid and significant coagulopathy. There is a strong association between the extent of the coagulopathy and poor clinical outcomes.The anti-coagulant actions of nebulised UFH limit fibrin deposition and microvascular thrombosis. Trials in patients with acute lung injury and related conditions found inhaled UFH reduced pulmonary dead space, coagulation activation, microvascular thrombosis and clinical deterioration, resulting in increased time free of ventilatory support. In addition, UFH has anti-inflammatory, mucolytic and anti-viral properties and, specifically, has been shown to inactivate the SARS-CoV-2 virus and prevent its entry into mammalian cells, thereby inhibiting pulmonary infection by SARS-CoV-2. Furthermore, clinical studies have shown that inhaled UFH safely improves outcomes in other inflammatory respiratory diseases and also acts as an effective mucolytic in sputum-producing respiratory patients. UFH is widely available and inexpensive, which may make this treatment also accessible for low- and middle-income countries.These potentially important therapeutic properties of nebulised UFH underline the need for expedited large-scale clinical trials to test its potential to reduce mortality in COVID-19 patients.Entities:
Keywords: ARDS; COVID-19; Nebulised heparin; SARS; SARS-CoV-2; Unfractionated heparin
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32698853 PMCID: PMC7374660 DOI: 10.1186/s13054-020-03148-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Fig. 1a Lung injury in coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19). Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) binds to angiotensin-converting enzyme 2 (ACE-2) primarily on type II alveolar cells. After endocytosis of the viral complex, surface ACE-2 is downregulated, resulting in unopposed angiotensin II accumulation. SARS-CoV-2 further causes lung injury through activation of residential macrophages, lymphocyte apoptosis and neutrophils. The macrophages produce cytokines and chemokines, resulting in a cytokine storm. Inflammatory exudate rich in plasma-borne coagulation factors enters the alveolar space, followed by expression of tissue factor by alveolar epithelial cells and macrophages and the formation of fibrin and the hyaline membrane. Neutrophils in the alveoli cause formation of NETs, composed of extracellular DNA, cytotoxic histones and neutrophil elastase, which cause further lung injury. COVID-19 also induces microvascular endothelial damage leading to increased permeability, expression of tissue factor with coagulation activation and thrombus formation. b Proposed effects of inhaled nebulised unfractionated heparin (UFH) in COVID-19 lung injury. UFH prevents SARS-CoV-2 from binding to ACE-2 and from entering the alveolar cells. UFH reduces formation of the hyaline membrane and microvascular thrombosis, counteracts the hyperinflammation and the formation of NETs, increases NO release with vasodilation and also has mucolytic properties. NETs, neutrophil extracellular traps; SARS-CoV-2, severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2; ACE-2, angiotensin-converting enzyme 2; COVID-19, coronavirus disease 2019. Permission was granted by © Beth Croce, Bioperspective.com to reuse this figure
Pre-clinical studies of nebulised heparin treatment for acute lung injury
| Dosage (Timing) | Species | Model (Sacrifice) | Nebulizer | Outcomes | Side effects | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1000 IU/kg (30min before injury and every 6h) | Rat | it. Streptococcus pneumoniae (40h) | Aeroneb Pro Nebulizer | ↓ Pulmonary coagulation | NR | Hofstra et al, 2009 [ |
1000 IU/kg (30min before, 6h and 12h after injury) | Rat | iv. LPS (7.5 mg/kg) (16h) | Aeroneb Pro Nebulizer | ↓ Coagulation | NR | Hofstra et al, 2010 [ |
1000 IU/kg (30min before injury and every 6h) | Rat | it. Pseudomonas aeruginosa (16h) | Aeroneb Pro Nebulizer | = | NR | Cornet et al, 2011 [ |
Dose NR (5 min after injury) | Mouse | inh. Chlorine (400 ppm for 30min) (6h) | AirLife Brand Misty Max 10 | ↓ Decreased inflammation | No side effects | Zarogiannis et al, 2014 [ |
1000 IU/kg (4h and 8h after injury or 30min before, 4h and 8h after injury) | Rat | it. LPS (10μg/g) (24h) | Aeroneb Pro Nebulizer | ↓ Pulmonary coagulation and inflammation | NR | Chimenti et al, 2017 [ |
| 10000 IU (1h after injury, every 4h) | Sheep | Smoke inh. and it. Pseudomonas aeruginosa (24h) | AirLife Brand Misty Max 10 | ↓ Lung injury and airways obstruction ↑ PaO2 | No side effects | Murakami et al, 2002 [ |
| 10000 IU (30min after injury, every 4h for 24h) or combined with intravenous 10 mg/kg/h lisofylline | Sheep | Smoke inh. (48h) | AirLife Brand Misty Max 10 | ↓ Need for MV ↑ PaO2 | No side effects | Tasaki et al, 2002 [ |
| 10000 IU (2h after injury, every 4h) or combined with nebulized 290 IU recombinant antithrombin | Sheep | Cutaneous burn and smoke inh. (48h) | AirLife Brand Misty Max 10 | Combination: ↓ Pulmonary inflammation and airways obstruction ↑ PaO2 | No side effects | Enkhbataar et al, 2007 [ |
| 10000 IU (1h after injury, every 4h) combined with intravenous 0.34 mg/kg/h recombinant antithrombin | Sheep | Cutaneous burn and smoke inh. (48h) | AirLife Brand Misty Max 10 | ↓ Inflammation, oedema, airways obstruction ↑ PaO2 | No side effects | Enkhbataar et al, 2008 [ |
| 10000 IU (2h after injury, every 4h) combined with intravenous 6 IU/kg/h recombinant antithrombin (from 1h after injury until the end of the study) and nebulized 2 mg tissue plasminogen inhibitor (4h after injury, every 4h) | Sheep | Cutaneous burn and smoke inh. (48h) | AirLife Brand Misty Max 10 | ↓ Lung injury, oedema and airways obstruction ↑ PaO2 | No side effects | Rehberg et al, 2014 [ |
| 1000 IU/kg (4h, 12h and 28h after injury) combined with nebulized 500 IU/kg antithrombin (4h and 28h after injury) | Rat | it. HCl and LPS (30 μg/g) (72h) | Aeroneb Pro Nebulizer | ↓ Pulmonary coagulation and inflammation | No side effects | Camprubí-Rimblas et al, 2020 [ |
↓: reduced, ↑: increased, =: equal, inh inhalation, it. intratracheal, iv. intravenous, LPS lipopolysaccharide, MV mechanical ventilation, NR not reported
Clinical studies of nebulised heparin treatment for acute lung injury
| Dosage (Timing) | Patients | n | Nebulizer | Outcomes | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 50000-400000 IU/day (two days) | MV ARDS Open-label phase 1 trial | 16 | Aeroneb Pro Nebulizer | ↓systemic coagulation (↓ pulmonary coagulation, 400000 IU) | Dixon et al, 2008 [ |
| 25000 IU (every 4h or 6h, max 14 days) | > 48h MV RCT | 50 | Aeroneb Pro Nebulizer | ↓systemic coagulation ↑ Free days MV | Dixon et al, 2010 [ |
| 5000 IU (four times a day until cease MV or discharge from the UCI) | > 48h MV Phase 2 RCT | 214 | Aeroneb Pro Nebulizer | = | Bandeshe et al, 2016 [ |
| 50000 IU (one day) | Elective cardiac surgery RCT | 40 | Aeroneb Pro Nebulizer | ↓ alveolar dead space fraction and tidal volumes | Dixon et al, 2016 [ |
| 25000 IU (every 6h, 10 days) | MV ARDS RCT | 256 | Aeroneb Pro Nebulizer | ↓Lung injury ↑ 60 day survivors at home | Dixon et al, 2020 (submitted for publication) |
| 5000 IU combined with N-acetylcysteine and bronchodilator (every 4h for 7 days) | Burn patients paediatric Retrospective | 90 (children) | NR | ↓atelectasis, reintubation and mortality | Desai et al, 1999 [ |
| 5000 IU combined N-acetylcystine and bronchodilator (every 4h for 7 days) | Burn patients Retrospective | 150 (children/adults) | NR | = | Holt et al, 2008 [ |
| 10000 IU combined N-acetylcystine and bronchodilator (every 4h for 7 days) | Burn patients Retrospective | 30 | NR | ↓ lung injury ↓ mortality ↑ oxygenation | Miller et al, 2009 [ |
| 5000 IU combined N-acetylcystine and bronchodilator (every 4h for 7 days) | Burn patients Retrospective | 63 | NR | = | Yip et al, 2011 [ |
| 5000 IU combined N-acetylcystine and bronchodilator (every 4h for 7 days) | Burn patients Retrospective | 40 | NR | = | Kashefi et al, 2014 [ |
| 10000 IU combined N-acetylcystine and bronchodilator (every 4h for 7 days) | Burn patients Retrospective | 72 | NR | ↑ free days MV | McIntire et al, 2017 [ |
| 25000 IU (every 4h for 14 days) | Burn patients RCT (terminated, insufficient recruitment of patients and high costs associated with the purchase and blinding of study medication) | 160 | Aeroneb Pro Nebulizer | Not available | Glas et al, 2014 [ |
| 25000 IU (every 6h for 10 days) | SARS CoV 2 infection, on MV | RCT ACTRN: 12620000517976 | Aeroneb Pro Nebulizer | On-going | Dixon et al, 2020 [ |
| 25000 IU (every 6h up to 21 days) | SARS CoV 2 infection, pre-ICU | RCT EudraCT: 2020-001736-95 | Aeroneb Pro Nebulizer | On-going | ACCORD-2 (NHS UK) |
↓: reduced, ↑: increased, =: equal, MV mechanical ventilation, RCT randomized controlled trial, NR not reported