Literature DB >> 34678241

Characterization of a high throughput human stem cell cardiomyocyte assay to predict drug-induced changes in clinical electrocardiogram parameters.

Peter Kilfoil1, Shuyun Lily Feng1, Asser Bassyouni1, Tiffany Lee1, Derek Leishman2, Dingzhou Li3, David J MacEwan4, Parveen Sharma5, Eric D Watt3, Stephen Jenkinson6.   

Abstract

Human induced pluripotent stem cell derived cardiomyocytes (hIPSC-CM's) play an increasingly important role in the safety profiling of candidate drugs. For such models to have utility a clear understanding of clinical translation is required. In the present study we examined the ability of our hIPSC-CM model to predict the clinically observed effects of a diverse set of compounds on several electrocardiogram endpoints, including changes in QT and QRS intervals. To achieve this, compounds were profiled in a novel high throughput voltage-sensitive dye platform. Measurements were taken acutely (30 min) and chronically (24 h) to ensure that responses from compounds with slow onset kinetics or that affected surface ion channel expression would be captured. In addition, to avoid issues associated with changes in free drug levels due to protein binding, assays were run in serum free conditions. Changes in hIPSC-CM threshold APD90 values correlated with compound plasma exposures that produced a +10 ms change in clinical QTc (Pearson r2 = 0.80). In addition, randomForest modeling showed high predictivity in defining TdP risk (AUROC value = 0.938). Risk associated with QRS prolongation correlated with an increase in action potential rise-time (AUROC value = 0.982). The in-depth understanding of the clinical translatability of our hIPSC-CM model positions this assay to play a key role in defining cardiac risk early in drug development. Moreover, the ability to perform longer term studies enables the detection of compounds that may not be highlighted by more acute assay formats, such as inhibitors of hERG trafficking.
Copyright © 2021. Published by Elsevier B.V.

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Keywords:  Action potential; Clinical; QTc; Stem cell; Torsades de pointes

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Year:  2021        PMID: 34678241     DOI: 10.1016/j.ejphar.2021.174584

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Eur J Pharmacol        ISSN: 0014-2999            Impact factor:   4.432


  1 in total

Review 1.  Adventures and Advances in Time Travel With Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells and Automated Patch Clamp.

Authors:  Kadla R Rosholm; Beatrice Badone; Stefania Karatsiompani; David Nagy; Fitzwilliam Seibertz; Niels Voigt; Damian C Bell
Journal:  Front Mol Neurosci       Date:  2022-06-22       Impact factor: 6.261

  1 in total

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