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Vol. 286, Issue 2, 760-766, August 1998
Division of Circulatory Physiology, Department of Medicine, College of Physicians & Surgeons, Columbia University, New York, New York
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Abstract |
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BAY y 5959 is a dihydropyridine derivative that binds to L-type calcium channels in a voltage-dependent manner and promotes calcium entry into the cell during the plateau of the action potential by influencing mean open time. Because myofilament responsiveness to calcium is preserved in congestive heart failure (CHF), the inotropic responsiveness to this compound should be preserved in CHF, and tolerance should not develop despite long-term treatment. To test these hypotheses, CHF was induced in 14 chronically instrumented dogs by daily (30 ± 5 days) intracoronary microsphere injections. The effects of BAY y 5959 (2-h i.v. infusions of 3 µg/kg/min and 10 µg/kg/min) were determined before heart failure, after heart failure was established and then 2 h after the end of a 5-day continuous BAY y 5959 intra-atrial infusion. Before CHF, the positive inotropic effect of BAY y 5959 at a dose of 10 µg/kg/min [left ventricular dP/dt (LVdP/dt) increased from 2955 ± 132 mmHg to 4897 ± 426 mmHg, P < .05] was associated with bradycardia (HR decreased from 92 ± 4 to 78 ± 6 b/min, P <.05), slight increases in mean arterial pressure (it increased from 100 ± 2 mmHg to 113 ± 5 mmHg, P <.05) and did not alter left ventricular end-diastolic pressure. In CHF, BAY y 5959 continued to induce dose-dependent increases in left ventricular systolic pressure, LVdP/dt and mean arterial pressure, as well as causing bradycardia and a significant decrease in left ventricular end-diastolic pressure. After a 5-day infusion of BAY y 5959, base-line LVdP/dt and left ventricular end-diastolic pressure improved. The responses of LVdP/dt and mean arterial pressure to BAY y 5959 were similar to those of the control state. The sustained responses in CHF and after long-term infusion suggest that BAY y 5959 may be an effective and potent inotropic agent for treatment of CHF that does not lead to tolerance to its positive inotropic effects.
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Introduction |
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The
use of inotropic agents is an important form of therapy for many
patients with CHF. Currently used inotropic agents generally fall into
one of two classes:
-agonists or phosphodiesterase inhibitors.
Although they are efficacious in many settings, their use is sometimes
limited by afterload-reducing effects, by decreased effectiveness in
heart failure, by the development of tolerance and by potential
proarrhythmic effects such as sinus tachycardia and ventricular ectopy.
BAY y 5959 is a dihydropyridine derivative that binds to
L-type calcium channels in a voltage-dependent manner and
promotes calcium entry into the cell during the plateau of the action
potential by influencing mean open time (Bechem et al.,
1997
). In contrast to previous calcium promoters, BAY y 5959 has been
shown to be relatively myocardial-specific, lacking significant
vasoconstrictor properties that are present in previous compounds in
this class of drugs, such as BAY k 8644 (Bechem et al.,
1997
; Huetter et al., 1994
). A recent study has demonstrated
that in normal conscious dogs, the positive inotropic effects of BAY y
5959 are comparable to those of two other traditional inotropic agents,
dobutamine and milrinone (Sato et al., 1997
). It remains to
be determined whether the positive inotropic effect of BAY y 5959 exists in the heart failure state and whether tolerance, defined as a
reduced inotropic response after prolonged exposure, develops with the continuous use of BAY y 5959. Because myofilament responsiveness to
calcium is preserved in the heart failure state (Hajjar and Gwathmey,
1992
), it is hypothesized that the inotropic responsiveness to this
compound should be similar to that observed in the normal heart and
that tolerance should not develop after long-term treatment.
Accordingly, this study was designed to determine whether inotropic responsiveness to BAY y 5959 is preserved in an animal model of heart failure and whether tolerance develops after a 5-day continuous infusion.
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Materials and Methods |
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Surgical preparation.
Eighteen mongrel dogs (24-32 kg) of
either sex were chronically instrumented for hemodynamic measurements
and repeated microembolization as described previously (Knecht et
al., 1997
). Four animals died unexpectedly soon after coronary
embolization, so this study is based on results from the 14 chronically
instrumented dogs that survived the embolization procedure. Briefly,
animals were anesthetized (inhaled isoflurane 1-2%) and mechanically
ventilated. A thoracotomy was performed in the left fifth intercostal
space under sterile conditions. Tygon catheters (inside diameter
0.04-0.05 in., outside diameter 0.07-0.09 in., Cardiovascular Instr.
Corp., Boston, MA) were placed in the descending thoracic aorta and the
LA. A solid-state pressure gauge (P6.5, Konigsberg Instruments,
Pasadena, CA) was placed in the apex of the LV, and a Tygon catheter
was also inserted into the LV for calibration of the solid-state
pressure gauge during experimental measurements. A custom-made silicon
catheter was implanted in the proximal portion of the dominant coronary artery. Of the 14 dogs reported in this study, the LAD was dominant in
six dogs, and the LCX was dominant in six dogs. Two dogs had catheters
in both LAD and LCX. The catheters and wires were run s.c. and
externalized through the back of the dog, the chest was closed in
layers and a chest tube was inserted to reduce the pneumothorax. Antibiotics were given after surgery as necessary. Dogs were allowed to
recover fully from surgery and were trained to lie quietly on a
laboratory table before experiments.
Hemodynamic recordings. Hemodynamic measurements were obtained with common recording techniques in all animals. Briefly, arterial and LA pressures were measured by attaching the previously implanted catheters to P23ID strain-gauge transducers (Statham Instruments, Inc, Oxnard, CA). LV systolic pressure was measured with the previously implanted solid-state pressure gauge, which had been calibrated in vitro against an electronic signal of known size and was cross-calibrated in vivo with measurements of pressure from the LV and LA catheters. All the pressure transducers were calibrated in vitro against a mercury manometer with atmospheric pressure as zero and cross-calibrated in vivo with pressure recorded from the implanted aortic, LA and LV catheters. Mean values of aortic pressure and atrial pressure were all determined on-line using 3-Hz averaging filters (DA26, Medtron Engineering, Olivenhain, CA). Data were recorded on an 8-channel thermal writing chart recorder (30-V8808-10, Gould Electronics, East Rutherford, NJ), and periods of interest were digitized [Gateway 2000, 486 computer equipped with a National Instruments (Austin, TX) analog-to-digital conversion system] for off-line analysis. Drift in the pressure gauges, amplifiers and chart recorder was eliminated by frequent calibration during experiments.
Experimental design and protocol. On the day of each series of measurements, a 19-gauge i.v. catheter was inserted in a peripheral vein of a hind leg for drug infusions. LVSP, LVEDP, MAP, LAP and HR were measured after the dogs were quiet and accustomed to the laboratory. The LV pressure signal was differentiated to assess LVdP/dtmax. In order to assess beta-adrenergic receptor-mediated cardiac inotropic responsiveness, a bolus injection of isoproterenol (0.5 µg/kg) was administered, and changes in LVSP, LVdP/dtmax, MAP and HR were measured. After performing the base-line hemodynamic measurements and an isoproterenol challenge, a placebo infusion [placebo: 20 ml of reconstituted diluent solution without BAY y 5959, consisting of 1,2 propylene glycol (7.75 g), polyethylene glycol 400 (2.5 g), water (10.48 g), ascorbic acid (0.02 g), sodium ascorbate (0.026 g) and sodium hydoxide solution 2 N (0.05 g)] was administered for 2 h, and the above measurements were repeated. Subsequently, BAY y 5959 was infused at a rate of 3 µg/kg/min for 2 h; measurements were repeated at the end of that interval and again after 2 h at an infusion rate of 10 µg/kg/min. Each dog underwent this protocol before the induction of heart failure (as detailed below). Approximately 3 days after the establishment of a stable chronic heart failure state, a second similar series of hemodynamic measurements was performed. Finally, to test whether a long-term infusion of BAY y 5959 resulted in the development of tolerance, BAY y 5959 was infused continuously for 5 days at the rate of 3 µg/kg/min using a portable infusion pump (Model 5400, SIMS Deltec, Inc, St. Paul, MN) through the previously implanted LA catheter. In order to provide a placebo group of animals to compare the degree of heart failure, 3 animals underwent a 5-day infusion of placebo at the equivalent of 3 µg/kg/min. On the sixth day, the infusion pump was turned off for 2 h and the animals were rechallenged with the drug using the same protocol outlined above. In order to assess tolerance to BAY y 5959, we allowed a 2-h hiatus between turning off the infusion pump and acute administration of BAY y 5959. This was done because the half life of BAY y 5959 is approximately 3 h (Investigator's Brochure, Miles Inc., West Haven, CT), in order to avoid complete washout of the drug and yet to obtain stable base-line hemodynamics. Placebo-infusion animals did not undergo the tolerance challenge.
Induction of heart failure.
Heart failure was induced by
daily injection of glass microspheres (Spheriglass, 90 µm in mean
diameter) through the previously implanted catheter in the dominant
coronary artery (Knecht et al., 1997
). In brief, the
microspheres were continuously agitated in a saline suspension (25,000 microspheres/ml, 50,000 microspheres/day) and injected daily until
LVEDP was approximately 15 mmHg and HR was approximately 120 beats/min.
Further details concerning the establishment of CHF are provided under
"Results."
Statistical analysis. All results are expressed as means ± S.E. Changes in resting hemodynamic parameters between pre- and post-heart failure values were compared using one-way analysis of variance (ANOVA). Base-line changes in hemodynamics due to an intervention were compared to changes in the same intervention after the establishment of heart failure using a two-way ANOVA. A Duncan's multiple range test was used for multiple comparisons. Statistical significance was determined at P < .05.
This study was approved by the Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee, College of Physicians & Surgeons of Columbia University, and animals were cared for in accordance with the Guiding Principles for the Use and Care of Laboratory Animals (N.I.H. Publication No 82-23, 185).| |
Results |
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Daily coronary microembolization leads to CHF. After 30 ± 5 days of embolization with a total of 1,310,714 ± 261,171 microspheres, moderate heart failure developed. The base-line hemodynamic profile of the animals before and 3 days after the final embolization is summarized in figure 1. LVdP/dtmax was reduced by approximately 25%, and there was a resting tachycardia. LVEDP increased significantly from 6 ± 0.5 to 17 ± 0.7 mmHg. LVSP and MAP were slightly decreased. These effects persisted after the 5-day infusion of the placebo agent in three control animals, as can be seen in table 1; this demonstrates that the daily coronary microembolization model leads to persistent CHF.
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Effects of chronic infusion of BAY y 5959. Hemodynamic alterations were measured 2 h after the beginning and at the end of the 5-day infusion on three of the dogs (with infusion pump kept turned on). The results, summarized in table 2, showed that LVSP, LVdP/dtmax, LVEDP and MAP were consistently improved by the 5-day continuous infusion of BAY y 5959. These changes were comparable to the changes induced by acute administration of BAY y 5959 at the same dose (3 µg/kg/min).
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Hemodynamic effects of BAY y 5959 are preserved in the failing heart and after 5 days of continuous infusion. Before the induction of heart failure, BAY y 5959 induced dose-dependent changes in LV hemodynamics. After establishment of heart failure (evidenced by a marked decrease in dP/dtmax and a rise in LVEDP), BAY y 5959 retained these dose-dependent hemodynamic effects (fig. 2). These included dose-dependent increases in peak LV pressure, dP/dtmax and MAP, as well as a dose-dependent decrease in resting HR. Whereas BAY y 5959 had no significant effect on LVEDP in the control (non-heart failure) state, drug infusion significantly decreased this parameter in the heart failure state.
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Comparison with hemodynamic effects of isoproterenol. As shown in the top panel of figure 4, hemodynamic responses to isoproterenol are blunted in the heart failure state. These included blunted response of LVSP, LVdP/dtmax and HR; however, the hypotensive effect of isoproterenol was not altered. In contrast, as shown in the bottom panel of figure 4, the hemodynamic effects of BAY y 5959 were preserved in the heart failure state. Another important distinction between these agents was that blood pressure increased (not decreased) and HR decreased (not increased) with BAY y 5959.
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Discussion |
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The possibility of the development of a dihydropyridine derivative
with calcium-promoting (instead of calcium-blocking) actions for the
treatment of heart failure has been discussed for many years.
Theoretically, as these agents directly increase the concentration of
intracellular calcium, they result in significant positive inotropic
effects independent of the cAMP-related mechanisms that are
significantly impaired in heart failure. Because it is generally believed that myofilament responsiveness to calcium is well maintained in the heart failure state (Hajjar and Gwathmey, 1992
), this class of
compounds would be expected to exert a preserved positive inotropic effect on the failing heart.
To date, the only drug of this class generally available for evaluation
has been BAY k 8644. This agent prolongs the mean open time of the
L-type calcium channel in a voltage-independent manner
(Schramm et al., 1983
; Brown et al., 1986
; Hess
et al., 1986
). Under this circumstance, the profound
positive inotropic response is accompanied by a marked vasoconstrictor
response (Rump et al., 1992
). Experimental data also showed
that when applied to isolated rabbit hearts, BAY k 8644 increased
myocardial infarct size (Rump et al., 1993
). In the same
experimental preparation, BAY k 8644 did not increase myocardial
contractility because of a concomitant marked reduction of coronary
blood flow that counteracted the direct myocardial effects (Rump
et al., 1993
). In normal conscious dogs, administration of
BAY k 8644 produces significant increases in MAP, LVSP, HR and systemic
vascular resistance but causes no change in cardiac output, stroke
volume or left ventricular percent area shortening. Increased
LVdP/dtmax and rate of shortening
could be shown only after autonomic nervous system blockade (Pagel
et al., 1994
). Thus BAY k 8644 lacks myocardial specificity
(Ishii et al., 1986
), and the potentially clinically
beneficial positive inotropic effects were undermined by its
vasoconstrictor properties.
In contrast to BAY k 6844, BAY y 5959 does not lead to vasoconstriction
of either the peripheral or the coronary vascular beds (Huetter
et al., 1994
; Sato et al., 1997
). Instead,
coronary vasodilation occurs, as indicated by an increase in coronary
blood flow and a decrease in coronary vascular resistance. The lack of
peripheral effects suggests that this compound is relatively myocardial-specific, and this specificity may be mediated by its unique
electrophysiological properties, which render it ineffective on stable
repolarized tissue such as smooth muscles (Bechem et al.,
1997
).
Despite the expectation of a potential use of this class of drugs for
the treatment of heart failure, the hemodynamic effects of BAY y 5959 in a clinically relevant experimental model of heart failure have not
been determined. In our study, we used a canine model of multi-micro
infarct-induced heart failure (Knecht et al., 1997
).
Although the degree of heart failure achieved with embolization is
moderate compared with rapid cardiac pacing-induced heart failure, we
believe that this serves as a more stable and a more clinically
relevant model, because it mimics the most common clinical etiology of
CHF. Furthermore, as we have shown here and elsewhere (Knecht et
al., 1997
), this model leads to a persistent heart failure state
for at least 5 days after the cessation of microembolization. In our
previous studies of BAY y 5959, we utilized an isolated blood-perfused
failing-heart preparation to demonstrate that the hemodynamic
effectiveness of BAY y 5959 was preserved despite the blunting of
inotropic responsiveness to isoproterenol (Todaka et al.,
1998
). In the present study, our data confirm that in the normal heart,
BAY y 5959 is a potent inotropic agent and that this is accompanied by
a mild increase in blood pressure and by a decrease in HR. In the heart
failure state, the inotropic responsiveness is preserved and the drug
is associated with a significant reduction in LVEDP and HR, as noted in
previous studies of normal dogs (Sato et al., 1997
) and in a
recent study of patients with heart failure (Rousseau et
al., 1997
). After a 5-day continuous infusion of BAY y 5959, there
is no evidence of the development of tolerance with respect to the
inotropic actions, although the bradycardic response diminishes.
The preservation of inotropic effectiveness in the failing heart, despite the documented deterioration of beta adrenergic responsiveness, and the continued effectiveness of long-term administration are important characteristics of an agent proposed for use in the treatment of heart failure. The continuous-infusion regimen not only enabled us to evaluate the development of tolerance but also provided further evidence of hemodynamic benefits resulting from BAY y 5959 treatment of heart failure. The measurements of hemodynamics in the conscious state, although limited by the use of load- and HR-dependent indices of contractile function, made possible the assessment of heart failure and the hemodynamic responses to BAY y 5959 without the interference of the negative inotropy of sedation or anesthesia.
Because our experimental protocol requires survival for almost 10 weeks
(3 weeks for surgical recovery, training and initial experiment, 4-5
weeks for embolization and 1 week for the drug infusion and terminal
experiment) and because implantation of the aortic flow probe for
calculation of systemic vascular resistance significantly jeopardizes
the survival of the animal (there is a risk of rupture of the pulmonary
artery or aorta), total peripheral resistance was not calculated.
Therefore, the issue of whether BAY y 5959 has vasomotor effects was
not directly addressed in our study. There is a moderate increase in
MAP after administration of BAY y 5959 in both the normal and the heart
failure state. This increase probably results from the increase in
inotropy rather than via systemic vasoconstriction, in view
of the fact that we and others have reported a lack of measurable
vasoconstrictor effects of BAY y 5959 in the normal animal (Sato
et al., 1997
; Todaka et al., 1998
), although
these data have not been replicated in the heart failure state. We also
did not examine the effect of BAY y 5959 on venous properties. The
striking dose-dependent decrease in LVEDP due to this agent in the
heart failure state may signal a possible effect of BAY y 5959 on
venous properties. Alternatively, the decrease in LVEDP may simply
result from the improvement of cardiac pump function. Nevertheless, the
effect of BAY y 5959 on arterial and venous properties in various
vascular beds in both the normal and the heart failure state need to be further elucidated.
It has been suggested that the BAY y 5959-induced bradycardia is
mediated through autonomic reflexes because it is eliminated after
ganglionic blockade (Uechi et al., 1995
). We, however,
observed similar bradycardic effects in isolated failing hearts devoid of reflexes (Todaka et al., 1998
), a result that indicates a
direct, reflex-independent effect on pacemaker function, on the cardiac conduction system or on myocytes. A study of in vitro
myocytes also suggested direct negative chronotropic activity
(Dembowsky et al., 1996
; Bechem et al., 1997
). In
our study, we found an even more striking bradycardic response after
the establishment of heart failure. To our surprise, however, whereas
there was no evidence of the development of tolerance to the inotropic
properties of BAY y 5959, base-line HR increased after the 5-day
continuous infusion, and rechallenging the animal with BAY y 5959 had
no effect on HR. Although the mechanisms of the resting tachycardia and
the loss of bradycardia response to BAY y 5959 after continuous infusion were not directly addressed in the present study, several possibilities were considered. First, because baroreflex control may be
involved in BAY y 5959-induced bradycardia, it was reasoned that
baroreflex resetting may take place (Fritsch et al., 1989
; Brooks et al., 1993
; Head, 1995
). That is, as the
baroreceptor is exposed to a new constant-pressure condition or
chemical stimulus (if a chemical stimulus is able to alter the vascular
tone of the carotid sinus or alter the central gain of the reflex) for a period of time, the working point and gain of the reflex will be
reset. In the case of continuous BAY y 5959 infusion, the baroreceptor may have adapted to this agent itself as well as to its pressor effects, resulting in the reappearance of the tachycardia in CHF. If
this is the case, whether this resetting occurred in the central or the
peripheral components of the baroreflex system needs to be determined
(Qian et al., 1997
; Heesch et al., 1996
). These data imply that some tolerance of the HR response to BAY y 5959 does
develop after long-term use of the agent. Second, a less likely
explanation is that tachyarrhythmias may be induced by the 5-day
infusion of BAY y 5959. However, in a separate study in our laboratory,
we did not observe a proarrhythmic effect of this agent. Specifically,
ambulatory Holter monitoring was recorded in eight dogs before
(65.1 ± 12 h) and during (77 ± 7 h) continuous BAY y 5959 infusion (3 µg/kg/min); data analysis revealed that BAY y
5959 did not elicit proarrhythmic activity.
In summary, BAY y 5959, a novel dihydropyridine derivative,
demonstrates a potent positive inotropic effect. Unlike traditional positive inotropic agents involving cAMP pathways, the positive inotropic response to BAY y 5959 is well preserved in the heart failure
state that is accompanied by bradycardia, at least during 2-h
infusions. There is no evidence of tolerance (except HR response) in
terms of diminished inotropic response to BAY y 5959 after a 5-day
period of continuous administration. The profile of hemodynamic actions
of this agent offers several theoretical advantages over that of other
inotropic agents (
-agonists and phosphodiesterase inhibitors) and,
with a clinically acceptable side-effect profile, could provide a
powerful addition to the armamentarium in the treatment of CHF.
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Acknowledgment |
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We thank Dr. David Wood for discussions and suggestions throughout the course of this study.
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Footnotes |
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Accepted for publication April 27, 1998.
Received for publication October 17, 1997.
1 This work is supported in part by a Grant-in-Aid from the American Heart Association (National Center) and a grant from Bayer Corporation, West Haven, CT. J.W. and D.B. were supported in part by an Investigatorship Award from the American Heart Association, New York City Affiliate, Inc.
Send reprint requests to: Jie Wang, MD, Ph.D, Assistant Professor of Medicine, Department of Medicine, Division of Circulatory Physiology, Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, MHB5-435, 177 Ft. Washington Ave., New York, NY 10032.
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Abbreviations |
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LA, left atrium;
LAP, left atrial pressure;
LV, left ventricle;
LVdP/dtmax, peak left
ventricular dP/dt;
CHF, congestive heart failure;
MAP, mean arterial pressure;
LVEDP, left ventricular end-diastolic
pressure;
LVSP, left ventricular systolic pressure;
LAD, left anterior
descending artery;
LCX, left circumflex coronary artery;
BAY y 5959, (
)-(R)-isopropyl-amino-5-cyano-1, 4 dihydro-6-methyl-4-(3-phenyl-quinoline-5-yI)-pyridine-3-carboxylate .
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References |
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