| Literature DB >> 33713178 |
Domenico D'Amario1,2, Donato Cappetta3, Luigi Cappannoli2, Giuseppe Princi2, Stefano Migliaro2, Giovanni Diana2, Karim Chouchane2, Josip A Borovac4, Attilio Restivo2, Alessandra Arcudi2, Antonella De Angelis3, Rocco Vergallo1,2, Rocco A Montone1, Mattia Galli2,5, Giovanna Liuzzo6,7, Filippo Crea8,9.
Abstract
Inflammation is the main pathophysiological process involved in atherosclerotic plaque formation, progression, instability, and healing during the evolution of coronary artery disease (CAD). The use of colchicine, a drug used for decades in non-ischemic cardiovascular (CV) diseases and/or systemic inflammatory conditions, stimulated new perspectives on its potential application in patients with CAD. Previous mechanistic and preclinical studies revealed anti-inflammatory and immunomodulatory effects of colchicine exerted through its principal mechanism of microtubule polymerization inhibition, however, other pleiotropic effects beneficial to the CV system were observed such as inhibition of platelet aggregation and suppression of endothelial proliferation. In randomized double-blinded clinical trials informing our clinical practice, low doses of colchicine were associated with the significant reduction of cardiovascular events in patients with stable CAD and chronic coronary syndrome (CCS) while in patients with a recent acute coronary syndrome (ACS), early initiation of colchicine treatment significantly reduced major adverse CV events (MACE). On the other hand, the safety profile of colchicine and its potential causal relationship to the observed increase in non-CV deaths warrants further investigation. For these reasons, postulates of precision medicine and patient-tailored approach with regards to benefits and harms of colchicine treatment should be employed at all times due to potential toxicity of colchicine as well as the currently unresolved signal of harm concerning non-CV mortality. The main goal of this review is to provide a balanced, critical, and comprehensive evaluation of currently available evidence with respect to colchicine use in the setting of CAD.Entities:
Keywords: Cardiovascular events; Colchicine; Efficacy and safety; Ischemic heart disease; Personalized medicine; Tailored therapy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33713178 PMCID: PMC8484100 DOI: 10.1007/s00392-021-01828-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Res Cardiol ISSN: 1861-0684 Impact factor: 5.460
Fig. 1Colchicine mechanism of action—colchicine primarily causes tubulin disruption and prevents microtubule formation, thus resulting in neutrophils inhibition, antinflammatory effects, beneficial cardiovascular effects and inhibiting endothelial cells proliferation. IL interleukin; NLRP3 NLR family pyrin domain containing 3; tumor necrosis factor alpha; VEGF vascular endothelial growth factor
Molecular and biological effects of colchicine and clinical implications
| Colchicine mechanisms of action | Clinical implications |
|---|---|
Disruption of tubulin and anti-mitotic effect (primary mechanism of action) Inhibition of the NALP3 inflammasome Inhibition of CASPASE-1 and downstream release of IL-1β Enhances dendritic cells maturation and their antigen presentation to naive CD4 + lymphocytes | Treatment and prevention of recurrent pericarditis and reduction of postpericardiotomy syndrome after cardiac surgery |
| Prevention of atrial fibrillation incidence after cardiac surgery and recurrence after ablation | |
Inhibition of macrophages release of ROS, TNF-α, NO, and IL-1β Inhibition of neutrophil activation, mobilization, chemotaxis and release of IL-1β, IL-8, superoxide, chemotactic factors and L-selectin Inhibition of intimal hyperplasia and leukocyte VEGF expression in angioplasty model in dogs Inhibition of VEGF expression/release and endothelial proliferation Reduction of endothelial cells E-selectin expression and neutrophil adhesion inhibition (low doses) | Reduction of plaque inflammation, progression and rupture Prevention of acute cardiovascular events and restenosis after PCI is performed |
| Increase of Bcl-2 expression and suppression of Caspase-3 | Reduces kidney tubulointerstitial fibrosis |
| Inhibition of TGF-β1 expression | Reduces peritoneal sclerosis |
Bcl-2 B-cell lymphoma 2; IL interleukin; NALP3 NACHT-LRRPYD-containing protein 3; NO nitric oxide; ROS reactive oxygen species; TGF-β1 transforming growth factor beta-1; TNFα tumor necrosis factor alpha; VEGF vascular endothelial growth factor
Currently ongoing clinical trials studying colchicine in ischemic heart disease
| TRIAL | NCT No | Study design | Clinical setting | Interventions | Outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CLEAR SYNERGY (OASIS 9) | NCT03048825 | Randomized, quadruple blinded, with factorial assignment | STEMI and high risk NSTEMI | Colchicine or spironolactone | Incidence of cardiovascular death, recurrent myocardial infarction, or stroke |
| CLEAR SINERGY Neutrophil Substudy | NCT03874338 | Observational, prospective | STEMI | Colchicine | Soluble L-selectin; other soluble markers of neutrophil activity; markers of systemic inflammation |
| COVERT-MI | NCT03156816 | Randomized, parallel, quadruple-blinded | MI | Colchicine | Infarct size (at CMR); LVEF; Microvascular obstruction |
| COPMAN | NCT04139655 | Randomized, parallel, triple-blinded | MI and myocardial injury in non-cardiac surgery | Colchicine 0.6 mg/day | Incidence of Myocardial Injury after Non- Cardiac Surgery (MINS); Adverse Events; infectious complications |
| DRC-04 | NCT03376698 | Randomized, parallel, quadruple-blinded | T2DM and CAD | Colchicine 0.5 mg/day or Colchicine 0.25 mg/day | Change in serum hs-CRP, FMD, adhesive ability of white blood cell and plasma myeloperoxidase level |
CAD coronary artery disease; CMR cardiac magnetic resonance; FMD flow-mediated dilatation; hs-CRP high sensitive C-reactive protein; LVEF left ventricle ejection fraction; MI myocardial infarction; NSTEMI Non ST Elevation Myocardial Infarction; STEMI ST Elevation Myocardial Infarction
Major interactions of colchicine with common use CV and non-CV drugs
| Drug (or class) interacting | Interaction | Collateral effects | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Carvedilol | Increase colch | Neuromyopathy, rhabdomyolysis, hepato- and nephrotoxicity, cardiotoxicity | [ |
| Ranolazine | |||
| Spironolactone | |||
| Ticagrelor | Reduced colchicine clearance due to inhibition of CYP450 3A4, by which colchicine is metabolized | Colchicine toxicity (nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, fatigue, myalgia, paresthesia) | [ |
| Digoxin | Increase concentrations of both drugs due to competitive inhibition of P-gp efflux transporter in the intestine, renal proximal tubule and liver | Rhabdomyolysis, digoxin and colchicine toxicity (arrhythmias, GI symptoms, fatigue, myalgia, paresthesia) | 7[ |
| Antiarrhythmic drugs | |||
| Amiodarone | Increase colchicine serum concentrations due to intestinal, renal and liver P-gp inhibition | Neuromyopathy, rhabdomyolysis, hepato- and nephrotoxicity, cardiotoxicity | [ |
| Quinidine | |||
| Diltiazem | Coadministration with inhibitors of CYP450 3A4 may significantly increase the serum concentrations of colchicine, which is primarily metabolized by the isoenzyme | Myopathy, neuropathy, multiorgan failure, and pancytopenia | [ |
| Verapamil | |||
| Dronedarone | |||
| Statins | Pharmacodynamic and pharmacokinetic interactions. HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors have in fact individually myotoxic effects (additive to those of colchicine) but are also substrates of the CYP450 3A4 isoenzyme and P-glycoprotein efflux transporter, thus competitive inhibition may occur resulting in increased drug absorption and decreased excretion | Muscle weakness and markedly elevated creatine kinase levels; myopathy up to rhabdomyolysis resulting in myoglobinuric and acute renal failure | [ |
| Hydroxychloroquine | Additive pharmacodynamic risk of peripheral neuropathy | Peripheral neuropathy | [ |
| Antibiotics | |||
| Clarithromycin | Inhibition of the CYP450 3A4-mediated metabolism and P-glycoprotein (P-gp)-mediated colchicine transport by clarithromycin resulting in significantly serum colchicine increase | Myopathy, neuropathy, multiorgan failure, pancytopenia | [ |
| Other Macrolides | Coadministration with inhibitors of CYP450 3A4 may significantly increase the serum concentrations of colchicine, which is primarily metabolized by the isoenzyme | ||
| Ciprofloxacin | |||
| Antiviral | |||
| Darunavir/ Ritonavir | [ | ||
| Boceprevir/Telaprevir | |||
| Antimycotic | [ | ||
| Fluconazole | |||
| Ketoconazole | |||
CV cardiovascular; GI gastrointestinal; P-gp glycoprotein P
Main studies published on colchicine and its CV implications
| TRIAL (year) | LoDoCo [ | COLIN [ | LoDoCo2[ | COLCHICINE-PCI [ | COPS [ | COLCOT [ |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Patients enrolled | 535 (473 male) | 44 (35 male) | 5522 (4676 male) | 400 (374 male) | 795 (632 male) | 4745 (3836 male) |
| Median follow-up | 3 years | 1 month | 28.6 months | 1 month | 12 month | 22.6 months |
| Setting | CCS | ACS | CCS | ACS/CCS | ACS | ACS |
| Study design and aims | Randomized, prospective, observer-blinded endpoint trial to assess efficacy of continuous low-dose of colchicine treatment in patients with stable CAD in reducing CV events | Randomized, prospective, open-label, controlled trial to assess effect of colchicine plus OMT or OMT alone in STEMI patients | Randomized, controlled, double-blind trial to further assess the effect of colchicine in patients with chronic coronary disease | Randomized, double-blinded, placebo-controlled trial to determine the effects of acute preprocedural oral administration of 1.8 mg of colchicine on PCI-related myocardial injury | Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial to assess the effect of oral colchicine on CV events in patients presenting with ACS | Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, investigator-initiated trial to assess the effects of colchicine on CV outcomes and its safety profile in patients with recent MI (within 30 days) |
Colchicine dosing regimen | 0.5 mg QD | 1 mg QD for 1 month | 0.5 mg QD | Acute preprocedural oral use of 1.8 mg of colchicine | 0.5 mg BID for first month followed by 0.5 mg QD for 11 months | 0.5 mg QD |
| Primary endpoint | Composite of ACS, fatal or nonfatal out-of-hospital cardiac arrest, or noncar- dioembolic ischemic stroke | CRP peak during the index hospitalization | Composite of cardiovascular death, spontaneous (non- procedural) MI, ischemic stroke, or ischemia-driven coronary revascularization | PCI-related myocardial injury | Composite of death from any cause, ACS (STEMI/NSTEMI/UA), ischemia-driven urgent revascularization and non-cardioembolic ischemic stroke | Composite of death from CV causes, resuscitated cardiac arrest, MI, stroke, or urgent hospitalization for angina leading to coronary revascularization in a time-to-event analysis |
| Secondary endpoints | Components of the primary outcome and the components of ACS unrelated to stent disease | Troponin peak, tolerance of colchicine, hospitalization duration, MACE at 1-month follow-up; cardiac remodeling | Composite of cardiovascular death, spontaneous MI, or ischemic stroke | MACEs at 30 days; composite of the earliest occurrence of death from any cause, nonfatal MI, or target vessel revascularization; PCI-related MI; change in plasma inflammatory markers concentration between baseline and post-PCI | Components of the primary endpoint and hospitalization for chest pain | Components of the primary efficacy end point; composite of death from CV causes, resuscitated cardiac arrest, MI, or stroke; total mortality in time to-event analyses |
| Primary endpoint reached | YES 5.3%—colchicine 16.0%—placebo HR 0.33 (95% CI 0.18–0.59) P < 0.0001 | NO 29.03 mg/L – colchicine 21.86 mg/L – control group P = 0.36 | YES 6.8%—colchicine 9.6%—placebo HR 0.69 (95% CI 0.57–0.83) P < 0.001 | NO 57.3%—colchicine 64.2%—placebo P = 0.19 | NO 24 events – colchicine (24/396) 38 events – placebo (38/399) P = 0.09 | YES 5.5%—colchicine 7.1%—placebo HR 0.77 (95% CI 0.61–0.96) P = 0.02 |
ACS acute coronary syndromes; CAD coronary artery disease; CI confidence interval; CRP C-reactive protein; CV cardiovascular; HR hazard ratio; MI myocardial infarction; NS non-significant; OMT optimized medical therapy; RR relative risk; UA unstable angina