Back to Search Start Over

Nintedanib improves cardiac fibrosis but leaves pulmonary vascular remodelling unaltered in experimental pulmonary hypertension

Authors :
Ly Tu
Franziska Herrmann
Xiaoke Pan
Robert Szulcek
Frances S. de Man
Anton Vonk-Noordegraaf
Geerten P. van Nieuw Amerongen
Harm Jan Bogaard
Chris Dickhoff
Kondababu Kurakula
Christophe Guignabert
Michiel Alexander de Raaf
Denielli da Silva Goncalves Bos
Nina Rol
Vincent P Kuiper
Kirsten Lodder
Xiaoqing Q Sun
Pieter Koolwijk
Chris Happé
Ingrid Schalij
Raphaël Thuillet
Marie-José Goumans
Lutz Wollin
Pulmonary medicine
ACS - Pulmonary hypertension & thrombosis
Physiology
Cardio-thoracic surgery
CCA - Cancer Treatment and quality of life
CCA - Cancer biology and immunology
ACS - Microcirculation
APH - Quality of Care
VU University medical center
Source :
Cardiovascular Research, 115(2), 432-439. Oxford University Press, Rol, N, de Raaf, M A, Sun, X Q, Kuiper, V P, da Silva Gonçalves Bos, D, Happé, C, Kurakula, K, Dickhoff, C, Thuillet, R, Tu, L, Guignabert, C, Schalij, I, Lodder, K, Pan, X, Herrmann, F E, van Nieuw Amerongen, G P, Koolwijk, P, Vonk-Noordegraaf, A, de Man, F S, Wollin, L, Goumans, M-J, Szulcek, R & Bogaard, H J 2019, ' Nintedanib improves cardiac fibrosis but leaves pulmonary vascular remodelling unaltered in experimental pulmonary hypertension ', Cardiovascular Research, vol. 115, no. 2, pp. 432-439 . https://doi.org/10.1093/cvr/cvy186, https://doi.org/10.1093/cvr/cvy186, Cardiovascular Research, 115(2), 432-439. OXFORD UNIV PRESS
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Aims: Pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) is associated with increased levels of circulating growth factors and corresponding receptors such as platelet derived growth factor, fibroblast growth factor and vascular endothelial growth factor. Nintedanib, a tyrosine kinase inhibitor targeting primarily these receptors, is approved for the treatment of patients with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis. Our objective was to examine the effect of nintedanib on proliferation of human pulmonary microvascular endothelial cells (MVEC) and assess its effects in rats with advanced experimental pulmonary hypertension (PH). Methods and results: Proliferation was assessed in control and PAH MVEC exposed to nintedanib. PH was induced in rats by subcutaneous injection of Sugen (SU5416) and subsequent exposure to 10% hypoxia for 4 weeks (SuHx model). Four weeks after re-exposure to normoxia, nintedanib was administered once daily for 3 weeks. Effects of the treatment were assessed with echocardiography, right heart catheterization, and histological analysis of the heart and lungs. Changes in extracellular matrix production was assessed in human cardiac fibroblasts stimulated with nintedanib. Decreased proliferation with nintedanib was observed in control MVEC, but not in PAH patient derived MVEC. Nintedanib treatment did not affect right ventricular (RV) systolic pressure or total pulmonary resistance index in SuHx rats and had no effects on pulmonary vascular remodelling. However, despite unaltered pressure overload, the right ventricle showed less dilatation and decreased fibrosis, hypertrophy, and collagen type III with nintedanib treatment. This could be explained by less fibronectin production by cardiac fibroblasts exposed to nintedanib. Conclusion: Nintedanib inhibits proliferation of pulmonary MVECs from controls, but not from PAH patients. While in rats with experimental PH nintedanib has no effects on the pulmonary vascular pathology, it has favourable effects on RV remodelling.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00086363
Volume :
115
Issue :
2
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cardiovascular Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....24f69fccf1fee5850e4963063aac06e1