| Literature DB >> 32944081 |
Joel P Giblett1, Heerajnarain Bulluck2.
Abstract
Protection against ischaemia-reperfusion injury after revascularisation in acute myocardial infarction remains an enigma. Many targets have been identified, but after the failure of the recent Effect of Remote Ischaemic Conditioning on Clinical Outcomes in ST-elevation Myocardial Infarction Patients Undergoing Primary Percutaneous Coronary Intervention (CONDI2/ERIC-PPCI) trial to show translation to clinical benefit, there is still no pharmacological or mechanical strategy that has translated to clinical practice. This article addresses the results of the CONDI2/ERIC-PPCI trial in the context of previous studies of ischaemic conditioning, and then considers the prospects for other potential targets of cardioprotection. Finally, the authors examine the pitfalls and challenges in trial design for future investigation of cardioprotective strategies. In particular, this article highlights the need for careful endpoint and patient selection, as well as the need to pay attention to the biology of cardioprotection during the study.Entities:
Keywords: Cardioprotection; MI; cyclosporine A; glucagon-like peptide 1; ischaemia–reperfusion injury; remote ischaemic conditioning; trial design
Year: 2020 PMID: 32944081 PMCID: PMC7479528 DOI: 10.15420/icr.2020.01
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Interv Cardiol ISSN: 1756-1485
The Flaws of Cardioprotective Trials
| Flaw | Explanation |
|---|---|
| Timing |
Must be administered during ischaemia or first moments of reperfusion to be effective Intervention administered after cardioprotective window is closed will not reduce infarct size For some interventions, however biologically attractive, timing may be impossible to practically achieve in the setting of AMI |
| Dose |
If the intervention does not achieve the required dose in the ischaemic tissue, it will not be effective Careful decisions regarding route and timing of administration are required to ensure biological effects can be exploited Animal and small-scale human dose finding studies will aid the design of larger scale trials |
| Patient selection |
Patients with both too little ischaemia and too long an ischaemic time are less likely to benefit from cardioprotective interventions Heterogenous groups included in trials (older people and people with diabetes) may have different thresholds of resistance to cardioprotection Optimising patient recruitment by including more high-risk patients may increase the chance of demonstrating benefit, as the cost of reduced applicability of the study to current practice |
| Animal studies |
Interventions with inconsistent effects in animal models need careful consideration before application to large-scale human trials Attention to biology demonstrated in these studies, including evidence in larger animal models with physiology more closely related to humans, will improve trial design |
| Concurrent medication |
Exclusion of patients on medications likely to reduce the effectiveness of the intervention (such as propofol in CABG RIC trials) may increase the chance of demonstrating benefit |
| Endpoints |
Inconsistent use of endpoints between trials make comparison more challenging Biomarker endpoints may be consistently reduced with cardioprotective interventions, but these may be of little clinical consequence Care must be taken when infarct size is corrected for area at risk, particularly when estimation of area at risk can be affected by the intervention itself |
AMI = acute MI; CABG = coronary artery bypass graft; RIC = remote ischaemic conditioning.
Randomised Trials of Ischaemic Conditioning in Primary Percutaneous Coronary Intervention
| Study | n | Endpoints | Results | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Botker et al. 2010[ | 333 | Myocardial salvage index (MPI) | Mean salvage index 0.69 (RIC) versus 0.57 (control), p=0.03 | RIC |
| Lonborg et al. 2010[ | 118 | Infarct size (CMR) | 17% reduction in infarct size as %LV with PostC | PostC |
| Sorrenson et al. 2010[ | 76 | Infarct size (CMR) | No difference in infarct size for overall group, | PostC |
| Freixa et al. 2012[ | 79 | Myocardial salvage index (CMR) | Lower myocardial salvage index in PostC group (18.9 ± 27.4 versus 30.9 ± 20.5%, p=0.038). No significant difference in infarct size or LV ejection fraction | PostC |
| Zhao et al. 2012[ | 62 | LV ejection fraction (Echo) | No difference between PostC and control at 1 week. Improved LV ejection fraction at 6-month follow-up in PostC group | PostC |
| Thuny et al. 2012[ | 50 | Infarct size (CMR) | Reduced infarct size after PostC (13 ± 7 g/m[ | PostC. Note: PostC also reduced myocardial oedema on CMR, suggesting this may not be reliable for area-at-risk calculation |
| Hahn et al. 2013[ | 700 | ST segment resolution at 30 minutes | No difference between PostC and control in ST segment resolution at 30 minutes or MACE | PostC |
| Sloth et al. 2014[ | 251 | MACE | Reduced MACE events with HR 0.49 (95% CI [0.27–0.89]); p=0.018 | All-cause mortality also improved in per protocol analysis |
| White et al. 2015[ | 83 | Infarct size (CMR) | Reduction in infarct size by 27% (p<0.01) | RIC. Also reduced myocardial oedema, and myocardial salvage index |
| Gaspar et al. 2018[ | 448 | Cardiovascular death or heart failure hospitalisation at long-term follow-up | Reduction in clinical events of composite endpoint at follow up (HR 0.35, 95% CI [0.15–0.78]) | RIC |
| Stiermaier et al. 2019[ | 696 | MACE | Combined RIC and PostC reduced events compared to control and PostC alone | 1:1:1 randomisation to control, PostC alone, or PostC and RIC |
| Hausenloy et al. 2019[ | 5,401 | Cardiovascular death or heart failure hospitalisation at 12 months | No difference between RIC and control (HR 1.10, 95% CI [0.91–1.32], p=0.32) | RIC |
CMR = cardiac magnetic resonance; LV = left ventricle; MACE = major adverse cardiovascular events; MPI = myocardial perfusion imaging; PostC = postconditioning; RIC = remote ischaemic conditioning; STEMI = ST-elevation MI.