| Literature DB >> 33158204 |
Maristella Donato1, Nicola Ferri1, Maria Giovanna Lupo1, Elisabetta Faggin2, Marcello Rattazzi2.
Abstract
Calcific aortic valve stenosis (CAVS), the most common heart valve disease, is characterized by the slow progressive fibro-calcific remodeling of the valve leaflets, leading to progressive obstruction to the blood flow. CAVS is an increasing health care burden and the development of an effective medical treatment is a major medical need. To date, no effective pharmacological therapies have proven to halt or delay its progression to the severe symptomatic stage and aortic valve replacement represents the only available option to improve clinical outcomes and to increase survival. In the present report, the current knowledge and latest advances in the medical management of patients with CAVS are summarized, placing emphasis on lipid-lowering agents, vasoactive drugs, and anti-calcific treatments. In addition, novel potential therapeutic targets recently identified and currently under investigation are reported.Entities:
Keywords: aortic valve; calcific aortic valve disease; calcification; stenosis; valvular interstitial cells
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33158204 PMCID: PMC7663524 DOI: 10.3390/ijms21218263
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1A simplified schematic representation of the pathophysiology of calcific aortic valve stenosis with targets under investigation for medical treatments and potential interventions (in red). The regular arrow means “activation”, the T-shaped arrow stands for “inhibition”.
Ongoing clinical trials involving patients with calcific aortic valve stenosis (CAVS).
| Trial Name | NCT | Treatment | Phase | Population | Enrolment (No. of Patients) | Primary Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| EAVaLL | NCT02109614 | Extended-release niacin vs. placebo | I | Aortic sclerosis or mild CAVS | 238 | Calcium score progression measured by cardiac CT at 2 years |
| NCT03051360 | PCSK9 inhibitor vs. placebo | II | Mild to moderate CAVS | 140 | Calcium score progression measured by cardiac CT and by NaF PET at 2 years | |
| NCT02481258 | Ataciguat vs. placebo | II | Moderate CAVS | 35 | Changes in AV calcium levels at 6 months | |
| SALTIRE II | NCT02132026 | Alendronate/denosumab vs. placebo | II | Peak aortic jet velocity >2.5 m/s and grade 2–4 calcification of the AV on echocardiography | 150 | Change in AV calcium score at 6 months and 2 years |
| AVADEC | NCT03243890 | Menaquinone-7 vs. placebo | - | AV calcification score above 300, but without clinical CAVS | 389 | Change in AV calcification at 2 years |
| BASIK2 | NCT02917525 | Vitamin K2 vs. placebo | II | Bicuspid AV and mild to moderate CAVS on prior echocardiography | 44 | Change in AV calcium metabolism measured by NaF PET at 6 months |
Figure 2A simplified schematic representation of potential novel targets (in black) and corresponding treatments (in red). The regular arrow means “activation”, the T-shaped arrow stands for “inhibition”.
Potential novel targets for CAVS and corresponding treatments with in vivo evidence.
| Target | Treatment | Effects | Model | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nox2 | Celastrol | Nox2 inhibition mitigates the severity of aortic valve fibrosis, calcification, and stenosis | rabbit | [ |
| ENPP1 | ARL67156 | The inhibition of ENPP1 prevents the development of CAVS | rat | [ |
| P2Y2 | 2-thioUTP | P2Y2 agonist promotes the regression of CAVS | mouse | [ |
| DPP-4 | Sitagliptin | DPP-4 inhibition prevents CAVS development | rabbit | [ |
| Cadherin-11 | SYN0012 | Cad-11-blocking antibody prevents Notch1-mediated CAVS | mouse | [ |
| PPARγ | Pioglitazone | PPARγ agonist attenuates the progression of aortic valve calcification | rabbit | [ |
| PPARγ agonist attenuates lipid deposition, calcification, and apoptosis in aortic valves | mouse | [ |