首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     


Enhanced interleukin-1 activity contributes to exercise intolerance in patients with systolic heart failure
Authors:Van Tassell Benjamin W  Arena Ross A  Toldo Stefano  Mezzaroma Eleonora  Azam Tania  Seropian Ignacio M  Shah Keyur  Canada Justin  Voelkel Norbert F  Dinarello Charles A  Abbate Antonio
Affiliation:School of Pharmacy, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, Virginia, United States of America. bvantassell@vcu.edu
Abstract:

Background

Heart failure (HF) is a complex clinical syndrome characterized by impaired cardiac function and poor exercise tolerance. Enhanced inflammation is associated with worsening outcomes in HF patients and may play a direct role in disease progression. Interleukin-1β (IL-1β) is a pro-inflammatory cytokine that becomes chronically elevated in HF and exerts putative negative inotropic effects.

Methods and Results

We developed a model of IL-1β-induced left ventricular (LV) dysfunction in healthy mice that exhibited a 32% reduction in LV fractional shortening (P<0.001) and a 76% reduction in isoproterenol response (P<0.01) at 4 hours following a single dose of IL-1β 3 mcg/kg. This phenotype was reproducible in mice injected with plasma from HF patients and fully preventable by pretreatment with IL-1 receptor antagonist (anakinra). This led to the design and conduct of a pilot clinical to test the effect of anakinra on cardiopulmonary exercise performance in patients with HF and evidence of elevated inflammatory signaling (n = 7). The median peak oxygen consumption (VO2) improved from 12.3 [10.0, 15.2] to 15.1 [13.7, 19.3] mL·kg–1·min–1 (P = 0.016 vs. baseline) and median ventilator efficiency (VE/VCO2 slope) improved from 28.1 [22.8, 31.7] to 24.9 [22.9, 28.3] (P = 0.031 vs. baseline).

Conclusions

These findings suggest that IL-1β activity contributes to poor exercise tolerance in patients with systolic HF and identifies IL-1β blockade as a novel strategy for pharmacologic intervention.

Trial Registration

ClinicalTrials.gov NCT01300650
Keywords:
本文献已被 PubMed 等数据库收录!
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号