| Literature DB >> 35890291 |
Leticia González1,2, Juan Francisco Bulnes3, María Paz Orellana3, Paula Muñoz Venturelli4,5, Gonzalo Martínez Rodriguez3.
Abstract
Inflammation is a key feature of atherosclerosis. The inflammatory process is involved in all stages of disease progression, from the early formation of plaque to its instability and disruption, leading to clinical events. This strongly suggests that the use of anti-inflammatory agents might improve both atherosclerosis progression and cardiovascular outcomes. Colchicine, an alkaloid derived from the flower Colchicum autumnale, has been used for years in the treatment of inflammatory pathologies, including Gout, Mediterranean Fever, and Pericarditis. Colchicine is known to act over microtubules, inducing depolymerization, and over the NLRP3 inflammasome, which might explain its known anti-inflammatory properties. Recent evidence has shown the therapeutic potential of colchicine in the management of atherosclerosis and its complications, with limited adverse effects. In this review, we summarize the current knowledge regarding colchicine mechanisms of action and pharmacokinetics, as well as the available evidence on the use of colchicine for the treatment of coronary artery disease, covering basic, translational, and clinical studies.Entities:
Keywords: NLRP3 inflammasome; acute coronary syndrome; atherosclerosis; colchicine; coronary artery disease; inflammation
Year: 2022 PMID: 35890291 PMCID: PMC9323936 DOI: 10.3390/pharmaceutics14071395
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmaceutics ISSN: 1999-4923 Impact factor: 6.525
Figure 1Atherosclerotic plaque development. Atherosclerosis starts with the accumulation of modified lipoproteins inside the vessel wall, which triggers the recruitment of leukocytes, monocytes and neutrophils from circulation. Once in the intima layer, monocytes differentiate into macrophages, which can now engulf the modified lipoproteins, becoming foam cells. Macrophages also continue to release inflammatory mediators—such as cytokines and chemokines—in response to the increased levels of cholesterol, further amplifying the response. Neutrophils also release pro-inflammatory mediators through granules and NETosis, contributing to an exacerbation of the inflammatory state within the vessel wall. Foam cells, apoptotic cells and cell debris, lipid droplets and extracellular cholesterol crystals (CCs) coalesce in the center of the growing plaque, forming the necrotic core, which is kept stable thanks to the fibrous cap: a structure made of smooth muscle cells and extracellular matrix proteins. The release of proteinases by macrophages and neutrophils weakens the fibrous cap, favoring plaque rupture and the exposure of the contents of the plaque to circulation, triggering blood coagulation and the clinical manifestations of atherosclerosis.
Pre-clinical studies.
| Study | Animal Model | Disease Induction | Colchicine | Length of Intervention | Main Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Wojcicki et al., 1986 [ | Rabbit | High-lipid diet | 0.2 mg/kg i.p. twice a week | 3 months | Reduction of circulating lipids, restoration of normal triglyceride levels and a protective effect on plaque development in the aorta |
| Lee et al., 1976 [ | Yorkshire Swine | Balloon-induced denudation of aortic endothelium plus hypercholesterolemic diet | 0.2 mg/kg/day | 6 months | Slight worsening of atherosclerosis development in the aorta. No effect on serum cholesterol levels |
| Huang et al., 2014 [ | Sprague–Dawley rats | High fat, high cholesterol diet for 6 weeks | 0.5 mg/kg body weight/day i.p. | 2 weeks | Reduction in circulating levels of C-reactive protein and lipoprotein associated phospholipase A2. Elevation of nitric oxide production. Effect was enhanced when administered along atorvastatin |
| Kaminiotis et al., 2017 [ | New Zealand White rabbits | High cholesterol diet (1% | 2 mg/kg body weight | 7 weeks | No effect of colchicine on atherosclerosis or IL-18 levels. Slight effect on triglyceride levels |
| Spartalis et al., 2021 [ | New Zealand White rabbits | High cholesterol diet (1% | 2 mg/kg body weight plus 250 mg/kg body weight/day fenofibrate or 15 mg/kg body weight/day N-acetylcysteine (NAC) | 7 weeks | Colchicine reduced aortic atherosclerosis especially when combined with NAC. Reduction in IL-6 and lower triglyceride levels were also reported |
| Mylonas et al., 2022 [ | New Zealand White rabbits | High cholesterol diet (1% | 2 mg/kg body weight plus 250 mg/kg body weight/day fenofibrate or 15 mg/kg body weight/day NAC | 7 weeks | Reduction in de novo atherogenesis in the aorta and reduction of KLF4 expression in thoracic aortas |
| Akodad et al., 2017 [ | C57BL/6 mice | Ligation of left coronary artery followed by reperfusion | 400 μg/kg i.p. | 25 min before reperfusion | Significant reduction of infarct size. Improvement of hemodynamic parameters. Decreased cardiac fibrosis |
| Mori et al., 2021 [ | Wistar Rats | Ligation of left coronary artery followed by reperfusion | 0.4 mg/kg/day i.p. | 7 days | Reduction in post acute MI inflammation, ventricular remodeling, and dysfunction |
| Fujisue et al., 2017 [ | C57BL/6J mice | Permanent ligation of left descending coronary artery | 0.1 mg/kg/day | 7 days port MI | Attenuation of pro-inflammatory cytokines and NLRP3 inflammasome components. Improved cardiac function, heart function and survival. |
| Cecconi et al., 2021 [ | New Zealand White Rabbit | balloon endothelial denudation plus high cholesterol diet | 0.2 mg/kg/day, 5 days/week, SQ | 18 weeks | Reduction of the increase in aortic wall volume and inflammation |
* Oral administration unless stated otherwise; i.p: intraperitoneal; NAC: N-acetylcysteine; NLRP3: nucleotide-binding oligomerization domain-like receptor, pyrin domain-containing 3; SQ: subcutaneous.
Phase 2 and 3 clinical studies.
| Trials | Setting | Key Inclusion Criteria | No. of Participants | Treatment | Main Results | Follow Up |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Giannopoulos et al. (2015) [ | CABG | Patients undergoing CABG | 59 | Colchicine 0.5 mg BID vs. placebo | ↓ 62% hsTnT and ↓ 52% CK-MB concentration | 48 h after surgery |
| Deftereos et al. (2015) [ | STEMI | STEMI ≤ 12 h from pain onset (treated with PCI) | 151 | Colchicine loading dose of 2 mg plus 0.5 mg BID vs. placebo | ↓ 49% of CK-MB and ↓ 57% of hsTnT AUC concentration ↓ 25% MI volume (MRI) | 9 days |
| COLIN (2017) [ | STEMI | STEMI with one main coronary artery occluded | 44 | Colchicine 1 mg QD vs. placebo | No significant effect on: hsCRP peak value | During hospitalization |
| Mewton et al. (2021) [ | STEMI | STEMI referred for PCI | 192 | Colchicine 2 mg loading dose plus 0.5 mg BID vs. placebo | No significant effect on: Infarct size at 5 days (MRI) LV end-diastolic volume change at 3 months (MRI) | 3 months |
| Vaidya et al. (2018) [ | ACS | ACS (<1 month) | 80 | Colchicine 0.5 mg QD plus OMT vs. OMT alone | ↓ Low attenuation plaque volume in CCTA (↓ 40.9% vs. ↓ 17%) | 12 months |
| Akrami et al. (2021) [ | ACS | ACS (with medical therapy or PCI) | 249 | Colchicine 0.5 mg QD vs. placebo | ↓ 71% MACE Decompensated HF Death from any cause Cardiovascular death | 6 months |
| Fiolet et al. (2020) [ | CCS | CCS and hsCRP ≥ 2 mg/L | 138 | Colchicine 0.5 mg QD | ↓ 41% hsCRP levels | 30 days |
| Colchicine-PCI (2020) [ | PCI | Subjects referred for PCI (ACS or CCS) | 400 | Colchicine 1.8 mg pre-procedural | No significant effect on: PCI-related myocardial injury 30-day MACE (Death from any cause, MI, revascularization) | 30 days |
| COPE-PCI (2021) [ | PCI | Patients undergoing PCI (CCS or NSTEMI) | 196 | Colchicine 1.5 mg pre-procedural | ↓ 41% Periprocedural myocardial injury | 24 hrs |
| COLCOT (2019) [ | ACS | MI (treated with PCI) within 30 days | 4745 | Colchicine 0.5 mg BID | ↓ 23% MACE Cardiovascular death Resuscitated cardiac arrest MI | 19.5 months |
| COPS (2020) [ | ACS | ACS treated with PCI or optimal medical therapy | 795 | Colchicine 0.5 mg BID | ↓ 84% Ischemia-driven urgent revascularization MACE ACS Stroke (ischemic, non-cardioembolic) | 12 months |
| COPS (2021) | ACS | ACS treated with PCI or optimal medical therapy | 795 | Same as above, no colchicine or placebo from months 13 to 24. | ↓ 41% MACE Death from any cause ACS Stroke (ischemic, non-cardioembolic) | 24 months |
| LoDoCo | CCS | CCS, clinically stable for >6 months | 532 | Colchicine 0.5 mg QD | ↓ 67% MACE Cardiac arrest Stroke (ischemic, non-cardioembolic) | 36 months |
| LoDoCo2 | CCS | CCS, clinically stable for >6 months | 5522 | Colchicine 0.5 mg QD | ↓ 31% MACE Cardiovascular death Stroke (ischemic) | 28.6 months |
| Deftereos S, et al. | ACS/CCS | Diabetic patients undergoing PCI with BMS | 196 | Colchicine 0.5 mg BID | ↓ 62% Angiographic in stent restenosis↓ 58% IVUS in stent restenosis | 6 months |
↓: indicates reduction of measured outcome. ACS: Acute coronary syndrome; AUC: area under the curve; BID: twice daily; BMS: bare-metal stent; CABG: coronary artery bypass grafting; CCS: chronic coronary syndrome; CCTA: coronary computed tomography angiography; CKMB: creatine kinase-MB; HF: heart failure; hsCRP: high-sensitive C reactive protein; hsTnT: high-sensitive Troponin T; IVUS: intravascular ultrasound; LV: left ventricle; MACE: Major adverse cardiovascular events, refers to the composite primary endpoint of each study, including all the individual outcomes listed in the box.; MI: myocardial infarction; MRI: magnetic resonance imaging; NSTEMI: non-ST-elevation MI; OMT: optimal medical therapy; PCI: percutaneous coronary intervention; QD: once daily; STEMI: ST-elevation MI; UA: unstable angina.
Figure 2Role of colchicine in coronary artery disease treatment. Colchicine has been described to affect microtubule stability, impacting several intracellular processes including mitosis, phagocytosis, and intracellular transport. It has also been reported that colchicine affects NLRP3 inflammasome activation, impacting inflammatory cytokines production, both directly and through its action on microtubules. These intracellular effects directly impact the inflammatory response of neutrophils, monocyte/macrophages, and blood vessels, which translates into several cardiovascular benefits. The overall effect on plaque stability and progression impacts the clinical manifestations of atherosclerosis, reducing the incidence of major adverse cardiovascular effects, suggesting that the addition of colchicine to the management of coronary artery disease might be beneficial.