| Literature DB >> 35456912 |
Arnela Saljic1,2, Jordi Heijman1,3, Dobromir Dobrev1,4,5.
Abstract
Atrial fibrillation (AF), the most common cardiac arrhythmia worldwide, is driven by complex mechanisms that differ between subgroups of patients. This complexity is apparent from the different forms in which AF presents itself (post-operative, paroxysmal and persistent), each with heterogeneous patterns and variable progression. Our current understanding of the mechanisms responsible for initiation, maintenance and progression of the different forms of AF has increased significantly in recent years. Nevertheless, antiarrhythmic drugs for the management of AF have not been developed based on the underlying arrhythmia mechanisms and none of the currently used drugs were specifically developed to target AF. With the increased knowledge on the mechanisms underlying different forms of AF, new opportunities for developing more effective and safer AF therapies are emerging. In this review, we provide an overview of potential novel antiarrhythmic approaches based on the underlying mechanisms of AF, focusing both on the development of novel antiarrhythmic agents and on the possibility of repurposing already marketed drugs. In addition, we discuss the opportunity of targeting some of the key players involved in the underlying AF mechanisms, such as ryanodine receptor type-2 (RyR2) channels and atrial-selective K+-currents (IK2P and ISK) for antiarrhythmic therapy. In addition, we highlight the opportunities for targeting components of inflammatory signaling (e.g., the NLRP3-inflammasome) and upstream mechanisms targeting fibroblast function to prevent structural remodeling and progression of AF. Finally, we critically appraise emerging antiarrhythmic drug principles and future directions for antiarrhythmic drug development, as well as their potential for improving AF management.Entities:
Keywords: atrial fibrillation; ectopic activity; fibroblast; pharmacology
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35456912 PMCID: PMC9029767 DOI: 10.3390/ijms23084096
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 6.208
Figure 1Key pathways for formation of AF. Triggered activity is common in all 3 forms of AF, which includes Ca2+ handling abnormalities, RyR2-channel dysfunction and triggered activity in form of DADs. Re-entry activity is commonly observed in patients with cAF, but less frequent and consistent in patients with POAF and pAF. The NLRP3 inflammasome is upregulated in all forms of AF, but plays the biggest role as an acute trigger in patients that present with POAF. AP, action potential; APD, action potential duration; cAF, chronic atrial fibrillation; CaMKII, Ca2+-calmodulin protein kinase II; DAD, delayed afterdepolarization EAD, early afterdepolarization; JPH-2, junctophilin-2; PKA, protein kinase A; ERP, effective refractory period; NCX, Na+/Ca2+-exchanger; NLRP3 inflammasome, NACHT, LRR and PYD domains-containing protein 3; pAF, paroxysmal AF; PLB, phospholamban; POAF, post-operative AF; RyR2, ryanodine receptor type-2; SCaE, spontaneous Ca2+-release events; SERCA, sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase type-2a; SR, sarcoplasmic reticulum.
Experimental evidence of antiarrhythmic efficacy of emerging drugs for atrial fibrillation.
| Compound | Target | Mode of Action | Study | Animal | Antiarrhythmic Effects |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| RyR2 channels | Reduces open probability of RyR2 channels by an open-state blocking mechanism that increases Ca2+ spark mass, but reduces frequency of RyR2-mediated cell-wide Ca2+ waves. The antiarrhythmic properties of flecainide can also largely be attributed to its the Nav1.5 blocking effect | Watanabe et al. (2009) [ | Mouse | Flecainide prevents arrhythmias in a mouse model of CPVT by inhibiting RyR2-mediated Ca2+-release events |
| ↓DADs | Verrier | Pig | Inhalable flecainide causes rapid (3.5–6.5 min) AF cardioversion | ||
|
| RyR2 channels | Reduces open probability of RyR2 channels by an open-state blocking mechanism that increases Ca2+ spark mass, but reduces frequency of RyR2-mediated cell-wide Ca2+ waves. The antiarrhythmic properties of flecainide can also largely be attributed to its the Nav1.5 blocking effect | Faggioni | Mouse | R-propafenone prevents AF induction in calsequestrin 2 knockout mice |
| ↓DADs | In vitro | R-propafenone reduces frequency, amplitude and propagation speed of Ca2+ waves in isolated atrial myocytes from calsequestrin 2 knockout mice. In the same cells, R-propafenone reduces the incidence of pacing induced spontaneous Ca2+ waves and prevents triggered beats | |||
|
| RyR2 channels | Reduces open probability of RyR2 channels, desensitizes Ca2+-dependent RyR2 activation and prevents cytosolic Ca2+ oscillations. The antiarrhythmic properties of flecainide can also largely be attributed to its the Nav1.5 blocking effect | Parikh | Rabbit | Ranolazine suppresses EADs in Langendorff-perfused rabbit hearts |
| ↓EADs | Carstensen et al. (2018) [ | Horse | Ranolazine displays a 25% cardioversion rate in horses with acutely induced AF and does not change the atrial ERP. | ||
|
| RyR2 channels | Dual effect caused by β-AR block and antioxidant actions that reduce phosphorylation and oxidation of RyR2, along with an open state channel block, all decreasing RyR2-mediated Ca2+-release events | Zhou | Mouse | Analogues prevent stress-induced VT in RyR2-mutated mice |
| Maruyama et al. (2014) [ | Mouse Rabbit | VK-II-36 inhibits VTs by preventing EADs and DADs in Langendorff-perfused hearts | |||
| ↓EADs and DADs | Zhang | Mouse | R-carvedilol suppresses spontaneous Ca2+ waves and CPVT in RyR2-mutated mice | ||
|
| RyR2 channels | Stabilizes the close-state of RyR2 channels by improving the interaction between the | Avula | Sheep | Dantrolene suppresses spontaneous AF episode in AMI sheeps |
| Pabel | Mouse | Dantrolene suppresses AF inducibility in mice overexpressing CaMKIIδC | |||
| ↓EADs and DADs | Hartmann et al. (2017) [ | In vitro | Dantrolene reduces SR Ca2+ spark frequency and diastolic SR Ca2+ leak in human atrial AF and ventricular HF cardiomyocytes, but does not affect the APD in these cardiomyocytes | ||
|
| RyR2 channels | Stabilizes the interaction between calstabin2 (FKBP12.6) and RyR2, reducing open probability of RyR2 | Shan | [ | S107 reduces diastolic SR Ca2+ leak and decreases AF inducibility |
| ↓DADs | |||||
|
| CaMKII | ATP-competitive CaMKII inhibitor | No preclinical studies focusing on rimacalib and atrial arrhythmias | ||
|
| CaMKIIδ | ATP-competitive CaMKIIδ-inhibitor. | Zhang | Mouse | Hesperadin improves I/R- and overexpressed CaMKII-δ9-induced myocardial damage and HF in mice and stem cell-derived cardiomyocytes |
|
| CaMKII | ATP-competitive CaMKII inhibitor. Reduces SR Ca2+ leak, diastolic tension and increased SR Ca2+ content | Mustroph et al. (2020) [ | Mouse | Oral RA608 significantly reduces inducibility of atrial and ventricular arrhythmias in CaMKIIδ transgenic mice 4 h after administration |
| In vitro | RA608 reduced SR Ca2+ leak, diastolic tension and increased SR Ca2+ content | ||||
|
| SK channels | SK channel inhibitor | Diness | Pig | AP30663 cardioverts vernakalant-resistant AF and prevents AF reinduction |
| ↑ERP | |||||
| ↓Substrate for re-entry | Bentzen | Guinea pig | AP30663 prolongs atrial ERP in isolated guinea pig hearts and anaesthetized rats | ||
|
| TASK-1 | TASK-1 channel inhibitor | Wiedmann et al. (2021) [ | Pig | Doxapram cardioverts induced AF and prevents occurrence of inducible AF. Doxapram given daily prevents AF induced shortening of atrial ERP |
| ↑APD and ↑ERP | |||||
| ↓Substrate for re-entry | |||||
|
| TGF-β1 | TGF-β1 inhibitor reducing fibroblast activation, atrial fibrosis and structural remodeling | Lee | Canine | Pirfenidone attenuates the arrhythmogentic left atrium remodeling by reducing conduction heterogeneity and atrial fibrosis, thereby decreasing duration of inducible AF |
| ↓Substrate for re-entry | |||||
|
| TGF-β | Selective TGF-β receptor-1/ALK5 inhibitor. Reduction in structural remodeling. | Oliveira | Mouse | GW788388 reverses the loss of Cx43 and reduces cardiac fibrosis in models of Chagas’ heart disease |
| ↓Substrate for re-entry | Tan | Rat | GW788388 attenuates systolic dysfunction, phosphorylated Smad2, and reduces α-SMA and collagen I in a rat model of MI | ||
|
| TRPC3 | TRPC3 inhibitor preventing fibroblast proliferation and atrial fibrosis | Harada | Canine | Pyrazole-3 suppresses AF, increases ERP, and reduces fibroblast proliferation and atial fibrosis |
| ↓Substrate for re-entry | |||||
|
| TRMP7 | TRPM7 inhibitor preventing fibroblast proliferation and atrial fibrosis | Li | Rabbit | LBQ657 reverses atrial enlargement, fibrosis, atrial ERP shortening and decreasesAF inducibility. It decreases collagen I and III, NT-proBNP, ST2, calcineurin, and prevents the downregulation of Cav1.2 |
| ↓Substrate for re-entry | |||||
|
| ERK | Inhibitor of ERK-phosphorylation | Künzel | Mouse | Mesalazine normalizes OPN expression and prevents atrial fibrosis and dilation PLK2 knockout mice |
| ↓Substrate for re-entry | |||||
|
| AMPK | Activates AMPK and inhibits differentiation of fibroblasts, thereby reducing cardiac fibrosis | No preclinical studies focusing on metformin and atrial arrhythmias | ||
| ↓Substrate for re-entry | |||||
|
| Rac1/LOX | HMG-CoA reductase inhibitor. Inhibits Rac1 activation | Adam | Mouse | Statin reduces LOX expression, deposition of insoluable collagen and collagen cross-linking |
| ↓Substrate for re-entry | |||||
|
| NLRP3 | Inhibits ASC oligomerization and NLRP3 assembly | Yao | Mouse | MCC950 attenuates spontaneous premature atrial contractions and incidence of inducible AF in knock-in mice with cardiomyocyte-restricted NLRP3 activation |
| ↓Atrial ectopy and ↓Substrate for re-entry | |||||
|
| NLRP3 | Microtubuli disruption preventing NLRP3 inflammasome assembly | Wu et al. (2020) [ | Rat | Colchicine reduces the duration of inducible AF and prevents AF reinduction in rats with sterile pericarditis, along with a reduction in neutrophil infiltration, expression of IL-6, TGF-β, and TNF-α, atrial fibrosis and fibrosis-related genes, and signaling molecules (STAT3, P38, and AKT) |
| ↓Substrate for re-entry | |||||
|
| IL-1β | Neutralizing monoclonal IL-1β antibody | No preclinical studies focusing on canakinumab and atrial arrhythmias | ||
| ↓Substrate for re-entry (?) | |||||
|
| IL-1 receptor | IL-1 decoy receptor | No preclinical studies focusing on rilonacept and atrial arrhythmias | ||
| ↓Substrate for re-entry (?) | |||||
|
| IL-1 receptor | IL-1R antagonist | De Jesus | Mouse | Anakinra improves conduction velocity, decreases APD and APD dispersion, Ca2+ alternans and prevents pacing induced ventricular arrhythmia in a MI model. Anakinra also preserves the Cx43 expression and increased SERCA expression in the model |
| ↓Substrate for re-entry (?) | |||||
|
| TNFα | TNFα decoy receptor inhibitor. | Aschar-Sobbi | Mice | Etanercept abolishes exercise-induced NFκB-driven increases in gene transcription and reduces atrial fibrosis and the susceptibility to AF |
| ↓Substrate for re-entry | |||||
AF, atrial fibrillation; AMI, acute myocardial infarct; AMPK, AMP-activated protein kinase; APD, action potential duration; ATP, adenosine triphosphate; CaMKII, Ca2+-calmodulin protein kinase II; CPVT, catecholaminergic polymorphic ventricular tachycardia; Cx43, connexin 43; DAD, delayed afterdepolarization; EAD, early afterdepolarization; ERK, extracellular signal-regulated kinase; ERP, effective refractory period; HF, heart failure; I/R, ischemia/reperfusion; IL-6, interleukin 1; IL-6, interleukin 6; IL-1β, interleukin 1β; LOX, lysyl oxidase; NLRP3 inflammasome, NACHT, LRR and PYD domains-containing protein 3; NT-proBNP, N-terminal-proB-type natriuretic peptide; OPN, osteopontin; PLK2, polo like kinase 2; RyR2, ryanodine receptor type-2; SERCA, sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase type-2a; SR, sarcoplasmic reticulum; SERCA, sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+-ATPase type-2a; SR, sarcoplasmic reticulum; αSMA, α smooth muscle actin; SR, sarcoplasmic reticulum; TGF-β1, transforming growth factor-β1; TNFα, tumor necrosis factor α; TRPC3, transient receptor potential canonical-3; TRPM7, transient receptor potential melastatin-related 7; VT, ventricular fibrillation.
Clinical evidence of antiarrhythmic efficacy of emerging drugs for atrial fibrillation.
| Compound | Study | Aim | Patient Cohort | Outcomes | Adverse Events | Potential Use in AF |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| NCT03539302 | Inhalation of flecainide for cardioversion of recent onset symptomatic AF | 101 patients with symptomatic AF | 48% cardioversion rate within 90 min | Cardiac adverse events were uncommon including post-conversion pause, bradycardia and AFL. Extra-cardiac adverse events were mild and transient and included cough, throat, pain, throat irritation | POAF, pAF |
|
| NCT05039359 | Inhalation of flecainide for cardioversion of recent onset symptomatic AF | Recruiting | Phase 2 ongoing | See above | POAF, pAF |
|
| NCT02710669 | Comparison of R- and S- propafenone for prevention of AF recurrence following AF ablation procedure | Terminated (study halted/terminated prematurely due to COVID) | Terminated | Terminated | POAF, pAF |
|
| NCT04571385 | Evaluating the efficacy and safety of AP30663 for AF cardioversion | 47 healthy male volunteers | Phase 1 completed | Phase 1: Concentration dependent increase in the QTc interval (+18.8 ± 4.3 ms for highest dose) | POAF, pAF, cAF |
|
| 2018-002979-17 | Use of doxapram as a new antiarrhythmic drug for atrial-selective AF therapy | Recruiting | Phase 1 and 2 ongoing | Trial ongoing | POAF, pAF, cAF |
|
| NCT01805960 | Use for canakinumab for the prevention of recurrent AF after electrical cardioversion in patients with persistent AF | 24 patients (11 placebo and 13 receiving canakinumab) | Canakinumab caused a trend of non-significant reduction in AF recurrence rate | One infection-related hospitalization | pAF, cAF |
|
| NCT04625946 | Metformin for prevention of recurrent atrial arrhythmias after ablation | Recruiting | Phase 4 ongoing | Trial ongoing | pAF, cAF |
| NCT03603912 | Metformin and/or lifestyle/risk factor modifications to reduce AF burden and AF progression | Recruiting | Phase 4 ongoing | Trial ongoing | pAF, cAF | |
| NCT02931253 | Metformin as an upstream therapy for AF prevention after catheter ablation | Terminated (recruitment issues: enrollment expectations not met) | Terminated | Terminated | pAF, cAF | |
|
| Deftereos et al. (2012) [ | Colchicine for prevention of AF recurrence following PVI | 161 (80 placebo and 81 receiving colchicine) | Colchicine reduces recurrence of AF at 3-month follow-up (16% occurrence in colchicine group vs. 33.5% in placebo group) | Gastrointestinal adverse effects | POAF, pAF |
| Zarpelon et al. (2016) [ | Colchicine for prevention of POAF in patients undergoing myocardial revascularization | 140 (71 placebo and 69 receiving colchicine) | Colchicine does not reduce the incidence of POAF (7% occurrence in colchicine group vs. 13% in placebo group | Postoperative infection (26.8% in the colchicine group vs. 8.7% in the placebo group | POAF, pAF | |
| NCT03021343 | Colchicine for prevention of AF in patients undergoing open heart surgery | 360 patients (181 placebo and 179 receiving colchicine) | Colchicine does not reduce the incidence of POAF (14% occurrence in colchicine group vs. 20% in placebo group | Gastrointestinal adverse effects | POAF, pAF | |
| COPPS-POAF | Colchicine for prevention of POAF | 360 (180 placebo and 180 receiving colchicine) | Colchicine reduced POAF (12% occurrence in colchicine group vs. 22% in placebo group | Gastrointestinal adverse effects ( | POAF, pAF | |
| NCT01552187 | Colchicine for prevention of post-pericardiotomy syndrome and POAF | 360 patients (180 placebo and 180 receiving colchicine) | Colchicine reduced post-pericardiotomy syndrome, but not the development of POAF (33.9% occurrence in colchicine group vs. 41.7% in placebo group | Gastrointestinal adverse effects | POAF, pAF | |
| NCT01985425 | Colchicine for prevention of perioperative AF in patients undergoing open heart surgery | 100 patients (51 placebo and 49 receiving colchicine) | New AF/flutter occurred in 5 (10.2%) patients in the colchicine group and 7 (13.7%) patients in the placebo group | Few (nausea and vomiting) and similar in both groups | POAF, pAF | |
| NCT03310125 | Colchicine for prevention of perioperative AF in patients undergoing open heart surgery | Recruiting | Phase 3 ongoing | Trial ongoing | POAF, pAF | |
| NCT04224545 | Colchicine for prevention of AF after cardiac surgery in the early post-operative phase | Recruiting | Phase 4 ongoing | Trial ongoing | POAF, pAF | |
| NCT04155879 | Colchicine for prevention of AF recurrence following electrical or pharmacological cardioversion | Not yet recruiting | Not yet recruiting | Not yet recruiting | POAF, pAF | |
| NCT04160117 | Colchicine for improvement of patient related outcomes after AF catheter ablation | Recruiting | Phase 2 ongoing | Trial ongoing | POAF, pAF | |
| NCT04906720 | Colchicine for reduction in post-AF ablation induced pericarditis and reduction in POAF | Recruiting | Phase 2 ongoing | Trial ongoing | POAF, pAF | |
| NCT04870424 | Colchicine for prevention of new-onset AF after transcatheter aortic valve implantation | Recruiting | Phase 3 ongoing | Trial ongoing | POAF, pAF | |
| NCT02260206 | Colchicine for prevention of AF recurrence after acute pericardial effusion following catheter ablation | Status unknown | Status unknown | Status unknown | POAF, pAF | |
| NCT02177266 | Colchicine for prevention of post-pericardiotomy syndrome and AF | Terminated (difficulties in patient recruitment) | Terminated | Terminated | POAF, pAF | |
| NCT03015831 | Colchicine for prevention of POAF following cardiac surgery | Terminated (statistical analysis of interim data showed no benefit of colchicine) | Terminated | Terminated | POAF, pAF | |
| NCT02582190 | Colchicine for prevention of AF recurrence post electrical cardioversion | Withdrawn (investigational medicinal product supplies) | Withdrawn | Withdrawn | POAF, pAF |
cAF, chronic atrial fibrillation; pAF, paroxysmal atrial fibrillation; POAF, post-operative atrial fibrillation; AFL, atrial flutter; PVI, pulmonary vein isolation.