| Literature DB >> 35621872 |
Krzysztof J Filipiak1, Stanisław Surma2,3, Monika Romańczyk2, Bogusław Okopień2.
Abstract
Heart failure (HF) is a global epidemic that contributes to the deterioration of quality of life and its shortening in 1-3% of adult people in the world. Pharmacotherapy of HF should rely on highly effective drugs that improve prognosis and prolong life. Currently, the ESC guidelines from 2021 indicate that ACEI, ARNI, BB, and SGLT2 inhibitors are the first-line drugs in HF. It is also worth remembering that the use of coenzyme Q10 brought many benefits in patients with HF. Coenzyme Q10 is a very important compound that performs many functions in the human body. The most important function of coenzyme Q10 is participation in the production of energy in the mitochondria, which determines the proper functioning of all cells, tissues, and organs. The highest concentration of coenzyme Q10 is found in the tissue of the heart muscle. As the body ages, the concentration of coenzyme Q10 in the tissue of the heart muscle decreases, which makes it more susceptible to damage by free radicals. It has been shown that in patients with HF, the aggravation of disease symptoms is inversely related to the concentration of coenzyme Q10. Importantly, the concentration of coenzyme Q10 in patients with HF was an important predictor of the risk of death. Long-term coenzyme Q10 supplementation at a dose of 300 mg/day (Q-SYMBIO study) has been shown to significantly improve heart function and prognosis in patients with HF. This article summarizes the latest and most important data on CoQ10 in pathogenesis.Entities:
Keywords: coenzyme Q10; heart failure
Year: 2022 PMID: 35621872 PMCID: PMC9143244 DOI: 10.3390/jcdd9050161
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cardiovasc Dev Dis ISSN: 2308-3425
Figure 1Survival of patients with HF. Based on information from [9]. HF—heart failure.
Figure 2Chemical structure and transformations of coenzyme Q10.
Figure 3The role of coenzyme Q10 in the energy metabolism of the heart muscle. NADH2/NAD—nicotinamide-adenine dinucleotide (reduced/oxidized); CQ10—coenzyme Q10; Cyt-c—cytochrome c; ATP-S—ATP synthase; ATP—adenosine triphosphate.
Functions of coenzyme Q10 in the human body. Based on information from [16,20,21,22]. e−—electrons; UCP—uncoupling protein; NFκ−B—nuclear factor kappa-light-chain-enhancer of activated B cells; LDL—low density lipoprotein; NO—nitric oxide; DHODH—dihydroorotate dehydrogenase; NADH—nicotinamide-adenine dinucleotide.
| Coenzyme Q10 Function |
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Mitochondrial respiratory chain ( |
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Participation in extra-mitochondrial |
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Endogenously synthesized, lipid-soluble antioxidant |
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Regulation of mitochondrial permeability transition pores |
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Required for activation of mitochondrial UCP |
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CoQ10 exerts multiple anti-inflammatory effects by influencing the expression of NFκ−B-dependent genes and by inflammasome modulating |
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Regulation of the physicochemical properties of membranes |
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Protecting LDL from oxidation (antiatherogenic properties) and recycling of antioxidants such as vitamin C or vitamin E |
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Modulation of the amount of h2-integrins on the surface of blood monocytes which counteracts monocyte–endothelial cell interactions |
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Improvement of endothelial dysfunction (by increasing NO) |
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It is required for the biosynthesis of pyrimidine nucleotides because it is an essential co-factor for DHODH |
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Mitophagy modulator |
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Regulation of cell growth (via coenzyme Q-dependent NADH-oxidase which is a transporter of |
Figure 4Changes in the concentration of coenzyme Q10 in the heart tissue depending on human age. Based on information from [24].
Figure 5Changes in the concentration of coenzyme Q10 in the heart tissue depending on the severity of heart failure according to the NYHA scale. Based on information from [26].
Figure 6Relationship between plasma concentration of coenzyme Q10 in patients with HF and survival. Based on information from [27]. HF—heart failure.
Figure 7Cardioprotective properties of coenzyme Q10. Based on information from [10,15]. TNF-α—tumor necrosis factor α; hs-CRP—high sensitivity C-reactive protein; HbA1C—glycated hemoglobin; FBG—fasting blood glucose; ATP—adenosine triphosphate; ROS—reactive oxygen species.
Studies evaluating the effectiveness of CoQ10 supplementation in the treatment of HF. The only studies with multicenter, prospective, randomized, double blinded, placebo controlled, soft and hard endpoints protocols are bolded; the ones with all-cause mortality reduction positive results are in red among those. Superiority (smiling, green faces) on the contrary to inferiority ones (non-smiling, orange faces) were put by the authors judging objectively the findings of coenzyme Q10 action in the particular study. HF—heart failure; NYHA—New York Heart Association; CQ10—coenzyme Q10; SV—stroke volume; EF—ejection fraction; HFrEF—heart failure with reduced ejection fraction; LVEF—left ventricular ejection fraction; LVESD—left ventricular end-systolic diameter; FS—fractional shortening; RCT—randomized controlled trial; CI—cardiac index; LVDV—left ventricular diastolic volume; LFSV—left ventricular systolic volume; SI—stroke index; PCWP—pulmonary capillary wedge pressure; PAP—pulmonary artery pressure; HR—hazard ratio; TNF-α—tumor necrosis factor α; IL-6—interleukin 6; hs-CRP—high-sensitivity C-reactive protein; MDA—malondialdehyde; LVED—left ventricular end-diastolic diameter; LAVI—left atrial volume index; MACE—major adverse cardiovascular events; HFpEF—heart failure with preserved ejection fraction; NT-proBNP—N-terminal pro B-type natriuretic peptide.
| Author, Year; Ref. # | Type of Study | Sample Size | Intervention | Key Findings | Effects |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Langsjoen P.H. | Double-blind and double-crossover trial | 18 patients with HF; NYHA class: III-IV | CQ10 33 mg 3×/day per 3 months | Significant improvement of:
SV ( EF ( |
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| Morisco C. | Double-blind placebo-controlled trial | 641 HFrEF patients NYHA class: III–IV | CQ10 50 mg 2×/day or 3×/day vs. placebo per 1 year |
Decreased hospitalization for HF ( Decreased episodes of pulmonary edema ( Decreased episodes of cardiac asthma ( |
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| Rengo F. | Single-blind placebo randomized trial | 60 HFrEF patients NYHA class: III | CQ10 100 mg/day vs. placebo per 7 months |
Increase of LVEF % (by 15.79% vs. baseline; Decrease of LVESD (by 2%; Increase of FS (by 15.6%; |
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| Baggio E. | Multicenter, open, non-comparative trial | 2664 HF patients NYHA class: II and III | CQ10 50–150 mg/day per 3 months | Significant improvement in: Blood pressure Heart rate and respiratory rate Clinical signs and symptoms (at least 3 symptoms in 52.2% of patients) |
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| Morisco C. et al., 1994; [ | Double-blind RCT | 6 patients with chronic HF | CQ10 50 mg 3×/day or placebo per 4 weeks |
Significant increase EF both at rest ( The same trends were recorded for the stroke volume and the cardiac output |
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| Hofman-Bang C. | Double-blind, crossover placebo-controlled trial | 79 patients with stable HFrEF | CQ10 50 mg 3×/day vs. placebo per 3 months | Significant improvement in: EF during a slight volume load: 25% ± 13% vs. 23% ± 12% ( EF at rest (mean value: 0.5; 95% CI: 1.0–2.0) Increase of maximal exercise capacity: 100 ± 34 W vs. placebo 94 ± 31 W ( Total score for the quality of life assessment: vs. placebo ( |
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| Watson P.S. | Double-blind, crossover placebo-controlled trial | 30 patients with HFrEF | CQ10 33 mg 3×/day vs. placebo per 3 months | No significantly difference in: EF ( CI ( LVDV ( Quality of life |
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| Munkholm H. | Double-blind placebo-controlled randomized trial | 22 patients with HF | CQ10 100 mg 2×/day vs. placebo per 1 year | Improvement of: SI ( PCWP ( PAP ( |
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| Khatta M. | Double-blind RCT | 55 patients with HFrEF | CQ10 200 mg/day vs. placebo per 6 months | No significantly difference in: Maximal oxygen consumption EF measured by radionuclide ventriculography |
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| Keogh A. | Double-blind RCT | 39 patients with HFrEF | CQ10 50 mg 3×/day vs. placebo per 3 months |
Difference in NYHA score in CQ10 group from baseline ( No difference in Canadian-specific activity scale score ( |
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| Sinatra S.T. | RCT | 32 patients with HFrEF awaiting HTx | CQ10 60 mg 2×/day vs. placebo per 3 months |
Improvement in 6 min walk test ( Improvement of NYHA class in CQ10 group from baseline ( No improvement in Fractional shortening |
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| Belardinelli R. | Double-blind, placebo-controlled crossover trial | 23 patients with HF | CQ10 100 mg 4×/day vs. placebo per 4 weeks | Significantly improvement of: Peak VO2 after CQ10 treatment and after CQ10 + exercise training vs. placebo ( Endothelium-dependent dilation of the brachial artery ( Resting LVEF ( |
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| Langsjoen P.H. and Langsjoen A.M.; 2008; [ | 7 patients with HF | Average of 580 mg/day of ubiquinol (450–900 mg/day) | Mean EF improved from 22% (10–35%) up to 39% (10–60%) and clinical improvement has been remarkable with NYHA class improving from a mean of IV to a mean of II (I to III) |
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| Fumagalli S. | Double-blind RCT | 67 patients with stable chronic HF | CQ10 320 mg + creatine 340 mg or placebo once daily per 8 weeks | Improved exercise tolerance, by enhancing peak oxygen consumption ( |
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| Turk S. | Prospective double-blind RCT | 22 hemodialysis patients | CQ10 200 mg/day or placebo per 8 weeks | CQ10 supplementation did not significantly improved diastolic heart functions compared with placebo |
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| Pourmoghaddas M. et al., 2014; [ | Double-blind RCT | 62 patients with HFrEF | CQ10 100 mg 2×/day with atorvastatin 10 mg/day vs. placebo per 4 months | Improvement of: EF ( NYHA classification ( |
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| Mortensen S.A. | Double-blind RCT | 420 patients with HFrEF | CQ10 100 mg 3×/d vs. placebo per 2 years |
Reduced risk of all-cause death in CQ10 group by 49% (HR = 0.51; 95% CI: 0.30–0.89; Reduced by 50% (HR = 0.50; 95% CI: 0.32–0.80; No difference between groups for NYHA functional class, 6 min walk test or functional status |
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| Zhao Q. | Double-blind RCT | 102 patients with HF | CQ10 2 mg/kg/day divided in 2 or 3 doses for 1 year |
Significant reduction of TNF-α, IL-6, hs-CRP and MDA plasma concentrations Significant increase of LVEF ( |
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| Sobirin M.A. | Unblinded RCT | 30 patients with HFpEF | CQ10 100 mg 3×/day per 30 days |
Decrease of E/e’ ratio Improvement in LAVI Increase of LVEF |
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| Mortensen A.L. | Double-blind RCT | 420 patients with moderate to severe HF | CQ10 300 mg/day vs. placebo in addition to standard therapy for 2 years |
Reduction by 77% (HR = 0.23; 95% CI: 0.11–0.51, Improvement of at least 1 grade of NYHA class after 2 years of CQ10 supplementation vs. placebo (48% vs. 25%, Significant improvement in CQ10 group of 6% from baseline in LVEF ( |
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| Kawashima C. | Double-blind RCT | 14 patients with stable HFrEF | CQ10 (ubiquinol) 400 mg/day or placebo per 3 months |
Significant improvement in peripheral endothelial function assessed by reactive hyperemia index ( |
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| Samuel T.Y. | Prospective, double-blind RCT | 39 patients with HFpEF | CQ10 (ubiquinol) 3×/day or placebo per 4 months | No significant effect of treatment on: Indices of diastolic function Serum NT-proBNP concentrations |
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Figure 8Results of Q-SYMBIO study: the influence of coenzyme Q10 supplementation on the prognosis of patients with HF. Based on information from Mortensen S. et al. [63]. HR (hazard ratio)—risk ratio; HF—heart failure.