Literature DB >> 32944293

Neprilysin as a Biomarker: Challenges and Opportunities.

Noemi Pavo1, Suriya Prausmüller1, Philipp E Bartko1, Georg Goliasch1, Martin Hülsmann1.   

Abstract

Neprilysin (NEP) inhibition is a successful novel therapeutic approach in heart failure with reduced ejection fraction. Assessing individual NEP status might be important for gathering insights into mechanisms of disease and optimising individualised patient care. NEP is a zinc-dependent multisubstrate-metabolising oligoendopeptidase localised in the plasma membrane with the catalytic site facing the extracellular space. Although NEP activity in vivo is predominantly tissue-based, NEP can be released into the circulation via ectodomain shedding and exosomes. Attempts to determine circulating NEP concentrations and activity have not yet resulted in convincingly coherent results relating NEP biomarkers to heart failure disease severity or outcomes. NEP is naturally expressed on neutrophils, opening up the possibility of measuring a membrane-associated form with integrity. Small studies have linked NEP expression on neutrophils with inflammatory state and initial data might indicate its role in heart failure with reduced ejection fraction. Future studies need to assess the regulation of systemic NEP activity, which is assumed to be tissue-based, and the relationship of NEP activation with disease state. The relationship between tissue NEP activity and easily accessible circulating NEP biomarkers and the impact of the latter remains to be established.
Copyright © 2020, Radcliffe Cardiology.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Neprilysin; angiotensin receptor neprilysin inhibitor; biomarker; heart failure; sacubitril/valsartan

Year:  2020        PMID: 32944293      PMCID: PMC7479538          DOI: 10.15420/cfr.2019.21

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Card Fail Rev        ISSN: 2057-7540


Neprilysin (NEP) was more or less unrecognised by the cardiovascular community until 2014 when the Prospective Comparison of ARNi With ACEi to Determine Impact on Global Mortality and Morbidity in Heart Failure (PARADIGM-HF) study reported impressive clinical benefits resulting from the combination of an angiotensin receptor blocker (ARB) with a neprilysin inhibitor (angiotensin receptor neprilysin inhibitor [ARNi]) over angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibition in heart failure with reduced ejection fraction (HFrEF).[1] The study was stopped prematurely due to the positive results. The first ARNi holds a class IB recommendation for stable systolic heart failure (HF) with a left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) of ≤35% in individuals who remain symptomatic on recommended doses of ACE inhibitors/ARBs and have elevated natriuretic peptide levels according to current treatment guidelines.[2] More recent data suggest that an extended spectrum of HFrEF patients, including those with moderately-to-mildly reduced LVEF, might also benefit from the therapy. Although the Efficacy and Safety of LCZ696 Compared to Valsartan on Morbidity and Mortality in Heart Failure Patients with Preserved Ejection Fraction (PARAGON-HF) study, which tested ARNi in HF patients with LVEF 45% or higher, missed its primary endpoint, subgroup analysis implied it had a beneficial effect in patients with lower LVEF and, interestingly, women.[3] The Comparison of Sacubitril/Valsartan Versus Enalapril on Effect on NT-proBNP in Patients Stabilized from an Acute Heart Failure Episode (PIONEER-HF) and Comparison of Pre- and Post-discharge Initiation of LCZ696 Therapy in HFrEF Patients After an Acute Decompensation Event (TRANSITION) studies imply that initiation in decompensated HF patients is safe and effective.[4,5] The new guidelines of the European Society of Cardiology are egarely awaited, especially concerning a potential upvaluation of ARNi within the therapeutic algorithm for treating HF. The success of this new therapeutic strategy has encouraged research into the role of NEP in HF, the regulation NEP and the mechanism of action of NEP inhibition. Understanding NEP regulation would probably enable the assessment of an individual patient’s NEP status, which is potentially useful for risk stratification and therapy guidance, and may reveal previously unrecognised pathomechanisms of HF, paving the way for novel therapies.

Biology of Neprilysin

The human genome covers about 686 putative peptidases that regulate the breakdown of bioactive peptides involved in key biological processes.[6] The zinc-dependent metallopeptidases form a large group of enzymes that includes NEP, ACE, carboxypeptidases and collagenases, among others.[7] Human endopeptidase NEP shows a highly conserved sequence homology with other species, including rodents and pigs.[8] It consists of 749 amino acid residues and, as a type II integral membrane protein, is located in the plasma membrane with the active site facing the extracellular space. This multisubstrate-metabolizing enzyme generally hydrolyses peptides of up to about 50 amino acids long, preferring the amino-terminal side of hydrophobic residues; it sometimes acts more efficiently as a dipeptidyl carboxypeptidase than a true endopeptidase.[7] Given the diverse range of substrates, NEP has been discovered in many different enzymatic contexts in the past, resulting in it having multiple names, including membrane metalloendopeptidase EC 3.4.24.11, neutral endopeptidase 24.11, endoprotease 24.11, common acute lymphoblastic leukaemia antigen (CALLA), neutrophil antigen cluster differentiation antigen 10 (CD10) and enkephalinase. NEP is believed to be involved in the degradation of natriuretic peptides, including atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) and B-type natriuretic peptide (BNP), adrenomedullin, endothelin-1 and angiotensin II, as well as primarily non-vasoactive peptides, such as glucagon, glucagon-like peptide, enkephalins and somatostatin.[9] The specificity of NEP is determined by the length and subsites of the substrate and the dissociation rate of the two metabolites formed on release from the active site.[7] Although the affinity of NEP towards its putative substrates may be predicted to some degree, and turnover rates have been investigated for some peptides, its singular functional relevance is difficult to forecast in vivo. Moreover, NEP is a fairly ubiquitous enzyme. It is found in the highest concentrations within the kidneys, followed by the gastrointestinal tract, liver, male genital organs, lungs and adipose tissue, and has also been detected in the brain and heart.[10] NEP is expressed on a variety of cells, including epithelial cells, endothelial cells, fibroblasts, smooth muscle cells and cardiac myocytes.[11]

Neprilysin Inhibition by Sacubitril/Valsartan

PARADIGM-HF was the first study definitively proving that NEP inhibition is beneficial in HFrEF, after decades of research investigating the effects of different NEP inhibitors in animal models, as well as human HF and hypertension. NEP inhibition consistently resulted in an increase in circulating natriuretic peptides (ANP and BNP), and was related to natriuretic peptide effects via elevated cyclic guanosine monophosphate concentrations, vasodilation and natriuresis.[12-15] The enhanced activity of bradykinin, another substrate of NEP, might contribute to the beneficial effects, but this effect is still to be investigated in combination with an ARB/ARNi.[16] NEP inhibition was regarded to primarily affect the natriuretic peptide system, whereas simultaneously activated the renin–angiotensin system (RAS). The inhibition of NEP was subsequently discussed as a beneficial cardiovascular target alongside the use of ACE inhibitors, which again alleviate the non-desirable activation of RAS. Encouraging preclinical data have led to the NEP inhibitor omapatrilat being tested in HF. In the Inhibition of Metalloprotease by omapatrilat in a Randomized Exercise Symptoms Study with heart failure (IMPRESS), omapatrilat reduced the composite endpoint compared to lisinopril in symptomatic HF patients already on an ACE inhibitor.[17] However, when compared to enalapril in the Phase III Omapatrilat Versus Enalapril Randomized Trial of Utility in Reducing Events (OVERTURE), omapatrilat failed to show a reduction in the primary endpoint in symptomatic HF patients already on an ACE inhibitor.[18] The increased risk of severe angioedema, probably due to excess bradykinin, led to the cessation of vasopetidase, that is, a NEP inhibitor plus an ACE inhibitor, development. This problem could be overcome by combining a NEP inhibitor with ARB instead of an ACE inhibitor in ARNi. In healthy controls, the administration of sacubitril/valsartan results in dose-dependent increases in ANP, cyclic guanosine monophosphate, renin concentration and activity, as well as angiotensin II.[19] An increase in renin and angiotensin II is also observed in HFrEF patients shortly after therapy initiation.[20] Notably, angiotensin II actions are assumedly sufficiently blocked by the ARB component. Moreover, NEP inhibition in HFrEF leads to increased circulating levels of NEP substrates, such as ANP, glucagon-like peptide 1 and substance-P.[21] Beyond these changes in plasma levels of bioactive peptides, which might be based on direct or indirect effects of NEP inhibition, more clinically apparent features of ARNi therapy have been described. ARNi results in a long-term improvement in echocardiographic parameters, might improve functional mitral regurgitation, exerts nephroprotective effects and improves glycaemic control.[22-25] The precise mechanisms underlying these clinical features and, most interestingly, how NEP inhibition reduces cardiovascular mortality and HF hospitalisation remain elusive. Understanding NEP regulation in HF conditions and the effects during treatment with NEP inhibitors would grant profound insight into the pathophysiology of HFrEF, which is necessary for the progression of HF therapy.

Neprilysin as a Biomarker

Given the convincing clinical benefit of NEP inhibition in HFrEF, it should be assumed that individual NEP regulation is associated with disease severity, therapy response, the occurrence of side-effects and outcome. The precise determination of NEP regulation could therefore be of great importance, especially as the number of patients treated with the drug is growing rapidly. Biomarker-guided strategies might enable the monitoring and optimisation of therapies in individuals. NEP inhibition is excitingly successful in HF, but also seems to exert beneficial effects on other conditions, such as chronic kidney disease (CKD) and diabetes.[1,23] Understanding how NEP is regulated and the mechanisms involved in NEP inhibition might cast light on the pathomechanisms of HF and systemic disease, possibly pointing to novel therapeutic targets. To date, the clinical utility of measuring circulating NEP, that is, NEP concentrations or activity or neutrophil NEP expression, is hypothetical. Establishing reliable analytical methods for determining NEP concentrations and actions are a prerequisite. Yet, the determination of NEP – or at least its concentration – seems to be challenging.

Circulating Neprilysin

Circulating plasma biomarkers represent the most convenient and feasible approach to addressing this issue. NEP, like many other membrane-bound metalloproteases, can be released from the cell surface by ectodomain shedding into the extracellular milieu, resulting in a non-membrane-associated ‘soluble’ form containing the catalytically active site. The processes responsible for the externalisation of the enzyme are largely unknown. A disintegrin and metalloprotease 17 (ADAM-17) plays a role in NEP release.[26] Endothelial cells and human adipose-derived mesenchymal stem cells may also secrete NEP-bound exosomes.[26,27] NEP is not only ubiquitously expressed in various tissues but can also be found on peripheral blood cells (called CD10 here), primarily on neutrophils. illustrates the relationship between tissue NEP and its mebrane and non-membrane associated circulating forms. The following section summarises data on the possible use of different forms of circulating NEP as a biomarker, with a focus on cardiovascular diseases.

Non-membrane-associated Serum/Plasma Neprilysin Concentrations

Non-membrane-associated NEP has been detected in serum/plasma in addition to urine, cerebrospinal and synovial fluid.[28,29] Circulating NEP concentrations have been evaluated in several types of HF and some other cohorts. summarises the studies investigating circulating NEP in distinct diseases. Although there is a reasonable rationale as to why serum/plasma NEP might be related to disease states and prognosis in various cohorts, NEP levels were rarely observed to be associated with disease severity and outcomes. NEP is a type II integral membrane protein with the active site facing the extracellular space (ectoenzyme). It generally hydrolyses peptides up to about 50 amino acids long, preferring the amino-terminal side of hydrophobic residues. NEP has a broad range of substrates and is believed to be essentially involved in the degradation of natriuretic peptides, including ANP, BNP, CNP, bradykinin, ADM, ET-1, AngII and primarily non-vasoactive peptides, such as amyloid-beta, glucagon, glucagon-like peptide 1, insulin-like growth factor, enkephalins, somatostatin or substance P (the latter not shown). NEP can be released into the circulation by ectodomain shedding, resulting in a non-membrane-associated ‘soluble’ form eventually containing the catalytically active site. The processes responsible for externalisation of the enzyme are largely unknown. Endothelial cells and human adipose-derived mesenchymal stem cells may also secrete NEP-bound exosomes. In addition to circulating NEP derived from the plasma membrane of tissues, NEP can be found on the surface of peripheral blood cells, primarily on neutrophils (CD10). ADM = adrenomedullin; AngII = angiotensin II; ANP = atrial natriuretic peptide; BNP = B-type peptide; CNP = C-type natriuretic peptide; ET-1 = endothelin-1; NEP = neprilysin. Reproduced with permission from Servier Medical Art. The figure was created using Servier Medical Art licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 (https://smart.servier.com). To date, seven studies have been conducted in HF cohorts: four included stable HFrEF, one acute decompensated HF and two HF with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF). The first and largest study, which included 1,069 HFrEF patients reported a significant direct association between serum NEP concentrations and cardiovascular mortality with NEP as a risk factor, but no correlation between serum NEP and HF disease severity, as assessed by left ventricular ejection fraction, New York Heart Association class or N-terminal pro hormone BNP (NT-proBNP) levels.[30] The same group reported data in an equally large, mostly HFrEF population, where elevated circulating NEP concentrations were associated with increased all-cause and HF hospitalisations.[31] Again, circulating NEP concentrations were not related to HF severity or treatment.[31] Circulating NEP concentrations were lower in decompensated HF than stable HF in another study.[32] The initiation of ARNi therapy in HFrEF did not alter plasma NEP concentrations.[21,33] For HFpEF, plasma NEP concentrations could not be associated with functional status or outcome.[34,35] With regard to non-HF cohorts, plasma NEP concentrations did not correlate with NT-proBNP, haemodynamic parameters or outcome in pulmonary hypertension.[36] In ST-elevation MI patients, plasma NEP levels did not change significantly in the early phase or 1 month after reperfusion and there was no association with infarct size, inflammation or outcome at 1 year.[37] For patients with CKD, plasma NEP concentrations were not associated with hospitalisation for HF or atherosclerotic cardiovascular events.[38] In contrast to these neutral results, elevated plasma NEP concentrations were associated with higher all-cause mortality in out-of-hospital cardiac arrest patients, albeit NEP levels were not related to lactate.[39] In a relatively large community-based population study including 1,536 individuals, circulating NEP concentrations were not associated with natriuretic peptides or outcomes; however, a link between low NEP levels and an adverse cardiovascular risk profile was suggested.[40] NEP is thought to play a major role in cancer development and progression.[41] Nevertheless, there were no differences in plasma NEP concentrations for distinct tumour entities or stages, whereas it seemed to be a risk factor for mortality in myelodysplastic disease.[42] It seems that plasma NEP concentrations are poor predictors of outcomes in HF and other diseases and might not be ideal biomarkers. The major limitation in interpreting these data is the lack of consistency between the different immunoassays used, as also there are no data available on pre-analytics, constitution of NEP fragments and corresponding antibodies.[16]

Non-membrane-associated Circulating Neprilysin Activity

Circulating NEP retains some of its catalytic activity, as NEP activity is detectable in plasma. It has been suggested that plasma NEP activity might correlate with circulating concentrations of NEP fragments.[43] However, the study investigating chronic and decompensated acute HF patients found no correlation between plasma NEP concentrations and activity.[32] Plasma NEP concentrations were not related to activity in CKD patients either.[38] In contrast, NEP inhibition in HFrEF patients receiving ARNi therapy resulted in decreased plasma NEP activity.[21] In CKD, higher plasma NEP activity, but not concentration, was associated with a lower incidence of hospitalisation for HF or cardiovascular events.[38] Plasma NEP activity has also been implicated in other non-HF contexts. Plasma NEP activity increased with indices of metabolic syndrome, such as insulin resistance, homeostatic model assessment index and BMI, in 318 otherwise-healthy adults in a previously published study.[44] In patients with juvenile idiopathic arthritis, plasma NEP activity was lower than in control subjects.[45] AHF = acute heart failure; BNP = B-type natriuretic peptide; CHF = chronic heart failure; HFpEF = heart failure with preserved ejection fraction; HFrEF = heart failure with reduced ejection fraction; JIA = juvenile idiopathic arthritis; NT-proBNP = N-terminal pro hormone BNP; NYHA = New York Heart Association; OHCA = out-of-hospital cardiac arrest; STEMI = ST-elevation MI. Membrane-associated and circulating NEP exhibit similar affinity for inhibitors, optimal pH and Km (Michaelis constant) range, although the maximum reaction rate of circulating NEP is lower than its membrane-associated equivalent; therefore, in vivo NEP activity is believed to be predominantly tissue-based.[46,47] In vivo measurement of tissue NEP activity has not been established and is not feasible. Circulating NEP activity might better reflect tissue NEP regulation, suggesting its superior ability as a biomarker when compared to circulating NEP concentrations. However, the contribution of different tissues to systemic NEP actions remains unclear. As NEP has a wide anatomical distribution and diverse biological functions, it can be assumed that its regulation is complex and that altered levels might be found in many disease types. Cardiac disease-specific changes might be difficult to outline.

Functional Membrane Neprilysin Expression on Neutrophils

As discussed, there are currently no data on the relationship between tissue NEP activity and plasma NEP concentrations or activity. Based on the poor association of plasma NEP measures with clinically relevant parameters and the unknown mechanisms involved in enzyme release, it may be assumed that tissue NEP is not related to plasma NEP measures. Consequently, the assessment of functional, membrane-associated NEP might be more reasonable. As discussed, NEP is ubiquitously expressed in various tissues and on peripheral blood cells (here called CD10), primarily on neutrophils. NEP on neutrophils may play a role in chemotaxis and neutrophil responsiveness to inflammatory stimuli.[48,49] It has been shown to modulate neutrophil function by regulating concentrations of ANP and BNP.[50] NEP expression on neutrophils has rarely been investigated, and in different settings immunoreactive NEP expression on neutrophils was upregulated on the addition of stimulating agents and neutrophil NEP fluorescence was elevated in the early phase of acute MI, returning to normal values 7 days after the event.[50,51] Patients with severe infections showed a marked decrease in neutrophil NEP expression; septic patients were characterised by decreased neutrophil CD10 expression capacity.[51,52] NEP null mice appeared developmentally normal but were sensitive to endotoxic shock.[53] A study of 99 patients with HFrEF confirmed the abundant expression of NEP on granulocytes.[53] NEP fluorescence intensities were inversely correlated with HF disease severity, that is, NT-proBNP levels and New York Heart Association class, whereas higher expression levels seemed to be associated with better overall survival.[54] In summary, against the background of beneficial effects of NEP inhibition, the association between increased NEP expression and better disease state seems counterintuitive. Interesingly, data from the PARADIGM study imply that more stable patients, who might be characterised by higher NEP expression, profit more from NEP inhibition than those with more advanced disease.[55] Within this context, the role of neutrophil NEP expression and its possible relationship with proinflammatory state remains to be understood. Whether neutrophil NEP expression could be a surrogate for systemic tissue NEP activity or may be associated with HFrEF outcomes through its reflection of inflammatory predisposition needs to be investigated in future studies.

Urinary Neprilysin and Neprilysin in Cerebrospinal Fluid

For the sake of completeness on non-tissue-based NEP measurements, determination of NEP in urine and cerebrospinal fluid will be discussed shortly. NEP expression is highest in the kidneys, yet the main location of the enzyme is within the brush border of the proximal tubule on the luminal site. Urinary NEP concentrations are increased in critically ill patients with acute kidney injury and in patients with diabetes, especially those with microalbuminuria, suggesting that urinary NEP might be an indicator of acute and chronic kidney injury.[56,57] However, urinary concentrations are not correlated with plasma concentrations, resulting in questions about the contribution of kidney NEP regulation to plasma NEP levels.[56] NEP in cerebrospinal fluid has been investigated in Alzheimer’s disease. This disease is characterised by amyloid-beta deposits resulting from a disturbed balance between amyloid-beta biosynthesis and clearance.[58] NEP is a member of the amyloid degrading enzyme family and seems to be the major enzyme responsible for amyloid-beta breakdown in the brain.[59] A meta-analysis showed that NEP expression and activity are reduced in the cortex of individuals with Alzheimer’s disease.[60] Accordingly, these patients have lower NEP activity levels in the cerebrospinal fluid compared to controls.[61] NEP upregulation could therefore be a valuable therapeutic target in combatting Alzheimer’s disease. However, unselective upregulation of NEP might have deleterious effects on the cardiovascular system. The long-term effects of NEP inhibition by sacubitril/valsartan, with the potential promotion of amyloid accumulation in the brain, need to be fully assessed.

Future Directions

The utility of non-membrane-associated circulating NEP concentrations and activity as biomarkers of NEP regulation are limited, as the physiological actions of NEP are localised to the tissues. Further studies are needed to investigate tissue NEP regulation in HF and establish a relationship with HF disease states and outcomes. Membrane-associated neutrophil NEP expression may be a surrogate for tissue NEP regulation or proinflammatory state.
Table 1:

Summary of Studies Investigating Circulating Neprilysin Concentrations and Activity as Biomarkers in Heart Failure Patients and Other Cohorts

Clinical settingStudySize of CohortNT-proBNP (ng/l)MatrixAssay for NEP ConcentrationNEP Concentration (pg/ml)Assay for NEP ActivityNEP ActivityAssociationsMain Findings
Heart failure cohorts
HFrEFBayes-Genis et al. 2015[30]1,0691,302 (531–2,935)SerumAviscera Bioscience642 (385–1,219)No correlation: estimated glomerular filtration rate, left ventricular ejection fraction, NT-proBNP, NYHA, blood pressurePlasma NEP concentration is a risk factor for cardiovascular mortality and the composite endpoint, i.e. cardiovascular mortality or heart failure hospitalisation
Heart failure with mostly HF reduced ejection fraction (<40% left ventricular ejection fraction in 88%)Nunez et al. 2017[31]1,0211,248 (538–2,825)SerumAviscera Bioscience640 (390–1,220)Negative association: age, hypertension, ischaemic aetiology No association: sex, BMI, NYHA, NT-proBNP, estimated glomerular filtration rate, heart failure treatmentElevated plasma NEP concentrations were associated with increased all-cause, cardiovascular or AHF admissions for ambulatory patients with HFrEF
HFrEFRevuelta-Lopez et al. 2020[32]105925 (374–1,700)SerumAviscera Bioscience582 (160–772)No significant changes in plasma NEP concentrations following angiotensin receptor NEP inhibitor initiation
HFrEFNougue et al. 2018[21]731,201 (571–1,997)EDTA plasma (+Zn)Uscn Life Science241 (205–303)Fluorimetry340 (254–445) pmol/ml/minSacubitril/valsartan reduced plasma NEP activity, but not plasma NEP concentration
AHFVodovar et al. 2015[32]AHF: 468 CHF: 46 Non-AHF: 169920 (irBNP)EDTA plasmaUscn Life ScienceCHF: 352 (325–380) AHF: 314 (257–377) Non-AHF: 256 (58–339)FluorimetryCHF: 0.29 (0.22–0.35) nmol/ml/min AHF: 0.22 (0.13–0.34) nmol/ml/min Non-AHF: 0.37 (0.3–0.5) nmol/ml/minNo correlation: plasma NEP concentration and activity Negative correlation: plasma NEP activity and immunoreactive BNPInhibitory effect of BNP and proBNP on plasma NEP activity?
HFpEFGoliasch et al. 2016[34]1441,148 (539–2,002)EDTA plasmaUscn Life Science2,862 (2,068–3,827)No association: sex, age, BMI, NYHA, glomerular filtration rate, fibrosis, 6-minute walk test Negative association: NT-proBNPPlasma NEP concentrations are not associated with cardiovascular mortality or HF hospitalisation
HFpEFLyle et al. 2019[35]HFpEF: 242 Control: 891497 (149–1,075)SerumR&D System1,550 (500–25,000)No association: left atrium size Negative association: dyslipidaemia, statin usePlasma NEP concentrations in HFpEF are lower compared to controls
Other Cohorts
General populationReddy et al. 2019[40]1,53670 (29–142)EDTA plasmaR&D System3,900 (1,000–43,000)No correlation: age, glomerular filtration rate, BMI, NT-proBNP, BNPPlasma NEP concentrations are not associated with all-cause mortality or HF hospitalisation
General populationStandeven et al. 2010[44]318Plasma not specifiedFluorimetry0.155 (0.048–0.310) nmol/l 0.358 (0.233–0.719) nmol/l divided by medianPositive correlation: BMI, homeostatic model assessment index, insulin resistancePlasma NEP activity is associated with cardiometabolic risk
OHCAZelniker et al. 2018[39]1441,774 (348–5,572)SerumR&D System1,105 (565–2,047)No correlation: glomerular filtration rate, NT-proBNP, lactatePlasma NEP concentrations were a risk factor for all-cause mortality (Q4 versus Q1–Q3)
STEMIBernelin et al. 2019[37]203SerumR&D SystemBaseline: 88 (14–375)No correlation: age, gender, BMI, creatininePlasma NEP concentrations were not related to infarct size, inflammation or adverse outcomes at 1 year. No change of plasma NEP concentrations early or at 1 month post-reperfusion
Pulmonary hypertensionYoshihisa et al. 2019[36]79578 (151–1,482) and 746 (120–1,371)Plasma not specifiedELH-Neprilysin-1, RayBiotech760 (510–930) 2,320 (1,840–4,010) divided by medianNo correlation: age, creatinine, BMI, NT-proBNP, BNPPlasma NEP concentrations were not associated with all-cause mortality
Chronic kidney disease, stage 2–4Emrich et al. 2018[38]542207Plasma not specifiedUscn Life Science309 (231–444)Fluorimetry0.204 (0.156–0.285) nmol/ml/minNo correlation (plasma NEP concentration): age, estimated glomerular filtration rate, BMI, proBNP, BNP, plasma NEP activityNot predictive for cardiovascular outcome
Treatment-naive cancerPavo et al. 2019[42]555128 (64–279)EDTA plasmaR&D System276 (0–5,981)No correlation: BMI, sexPlasma NEP concentrations are not associated with all-cause mortality. Risk factor for myelodysplastic malignancies
JIASimonini et al. 2005[45]JIA: 58 Control: 52Heparin plasmaFluorimetryControl: 76.5 ± 24.0 pmol/ml/min JIA: 42.0 ± 16.6 pmol/ml/minN/APlasma NEP concentrations were lower and synovial NEP concentrations higher in patients with JIA

AHF = acute heart failure; BNP = B-type natriuretic peptide; CHF = chronic heart failure; HFpEF = heart failure with preserved ejection fraction; HFrEF = heart failure with reduced ejection fraction; JIA = juvenile idiopathic arthritis; NT-proBNP = N-terminal pro hormone BNP; NYHA = New York Heart Association; OHCA = out-of-hospital cardiac arrest; STEMI = ST-elevation MI.

  60 in total

1.  Inhibition of endopeptidase EC 24.11 in humans. Renal and endocrine effects.

Authors:  M Richards; E Espiner; C Frampton; H Ikram; T Yandle; M Sopwith; N Cussans
Journal:  Hypertension       Date:  1990-09       Impact factor: 10.190

2.  Renin-Angiotensin System Fingerprints of Heart Failure With Reduced Ejection Fraction.

Authors:  Noemi Pavo; Raphael Wurm; Georg Goliasch; Johannes Franz Novak; Guido Strunk; Mariann Gyöngyösi; Marko Poglitsch; Marcus D Säemann; Martin Hülsmann
Journal:  J Am Coll Cardiol       Date:  2016-12-27       Impact factor: 24.094

3.  Angiotensin-Neprilysin Inhibition in Acute Decompensated Heart Failure.

Authors:  Eric J Velazquez; David A Morrow; Adam D DeVore; Carol I Duffy; Andrew P Ambrosy; Kevin McCague; Ricardo Rocha; Eugene Braunwald
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2018-11-11       Impact factor: 91.245

4.  Effects of sacubitril/valsartan on neprilysin targets and the metabolism of natriuretic peptides in chronic heart failure: a mechanistic clinical study.

Authors:  Hélène Nougué; Théo Pezel; François Picard; Malha Sadoune; Mattia Arrigo; Florence Beauvais; Jean-Marie Launay; Alain Cohen-Solal; Nicolas Vodovar; Damien Logeart
Journal:  Eur J Heart Fail       Date:  2018-12-06       Impact factor: 15.534

5.  Chronic inhibition of endopeptidase 24.11 in essential hypertension: evidence for enhanced atrial natriuretic peptide and angiotensin II.

Authors:  A M Richards; G A Wittert; I G Crozier; E A Espiner; T G Yandle; H Ikram; C Frampton
Journal:  J Hypertens       Date:  1993-04       Impact factor: 4.844

6.  Angiotensin-Neprilysin Inhibition in Heart Failure with Preserved Ejection Fraction.

Authors:  Scott D Solomon; John J V McMurray; Inder S Anand; Junbo Ge; Carolyn S P Lam; Aldo P Maggioni; Felipe Martinez; Milton Packer; Marc A Pfeffer; Burkert Pieske; Margaret M Redfield; Jean L Rouleau; Dirk J van Veldhuisen; Faiez Zannad; Michael R Zile; Akshay S Desai; Brian Claggett; Pardeep S Jhund; Sergey A Boytsov; Josep Comin-Colet; John Cleland; Hans-Dirk Düngen; Eva Goncalvesova; Tzvetana Katova; Jose F Kerr Saraiva; Małgorzata Lelonek; Bela Merkely; Michele Senni; Sanjiv J Shah; Jingmin Zhou; Adel R Rizkala; Jianjian Gong; Victor C Shi; Martin P Lefkowitz
Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2019-09-01       Impact factor: 91.245

7.  Production of soluble Neprilysin by endothelial cells.

Authors:  Sanjaya Kuruppu; Niwanthi W Rajapakse; Dmitriy Minond; A Ian Smith
Journal:  Biochem Biophys Res Commun       Date:  2014-02-02       Impact factor: 3.575

8.  Association of Change in N-Terminal Pro-B-Type Natriuretic Peptide Following Initiation of Sacubitril-Valsartan Treatment With Cardiac Structure and Function in Patients With Heart Failure With Reduced Ejection Fraction.

Authors:  James L Januzzi; Margaret F Prescott; Javed Butler; G Michael Felker; Alan S Maisel; Kevin McCague; Alexander Camacho; Ileana L Piña; Ricardo A Rocha; Amil M Shah; Kristin M Williamson; Scott D Solomon
Journal:  JAMA       Date:  2019-09-17       Impact factor: 56.272

9.  2016 ESC Guidelines for the diagnosis and treatment of acute and chronic heart failure: The Task Force for the diagnosis and treatment of acute and chronic heart failure of the European Society of Cardiology (ESC)Developed with the special contribution of the Heart Failure Association (HFA) of the ESC.

Authors:  Piotr Ponikowski; Adriaan A Voors; Stefan D Anker; Héctor Bueno; John G F Cleland; Andrew J S Coats; Volkmar Falk; José Ramón González-Juanatey; Veli-Pekka Harjola; Ewa A Jankowska; Mariell Jessup; Cecilia Linde; Petros Nihoyannopoulos; John T Parissis; Burkert Pieske; Jillian P Riley; Giuseppe M C Rosano; Luis M Ruilope; Frank Ruschitzka; Frans H Rutten; Peter van der Meer
Journal:  Eur Heart J       Date:  2016-05-20       Impact factor: 29.983

10.  Soluble Neprilysin in the General Population: Clinical Determinants and Its Relationship to Cardiovascular Disease.

Authors:  Yogesh N V Reddy; Seethalakshmi R Iyer; Christopher G Scott; Richard J Rodeheffer; Kent Bailey; Gregory Jenkins; Anthony Batzler; Margaret M Redfield; John C Burnett; Naveen L Pereira
Journal:  J Am Heart Assoc       Date:  2019-07-26       Impact factor: 5.501

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  1 in total

1.  Soluble neprilysin and survival in critically ill patients.

Authors:  Max Lenz; Konstantin A Krychtiuk; Mira Brekalo; Dominik F Draxler; Noemi Pavo; Christian Hengstenberg; Kurt Huber; Martin Hülsmann; Gottfried Heinz; Johann Wojta; Walter S Speidl
Journal:  ESC Heart Fail       Date:  2022-01-18
  1 in total

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