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Coronary microcirculation damage in anthracycline cardiotoxicity

AIMS: The aim of this study was to study changes in coronary microcirculation status during and after several cycles of anthracycline treatment. METHODS AND RESULTS: Large-white male pigs (n=40) were included in different experimental protocols (ExPr.) according to anthracycline cumulative exposure...

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Autores principales: Galán-Arriola, Carlos, Vílchez-Tschischke, Jean Paul, Lobo, Manuel, López, Gonzalo J, de Molina-Iracheta, Antonio, Pérez-Martínez, Claudia, Villena-Gutiérrez, Rocio, Macías, Álvaro, Díaz-Rengifo, Iván A, Oliver, Eduardo, Fuster, Valentin, Sánchez-González, Javier, Ibanez, Borja
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8803079/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33605403
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/cvr/cvab053
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author Galán-Arriola, Carlos
Vílchez-Tschischke, Jean Paul
Lobo, Manuel
López, Gonzalo J
de Molina-Iracheta, Antonio
Pérez-Martínez, Claudia
Villena-Gutiérrez, Rocio
Macías, Álvaro
Díaz-Rengifo, Iván A
Oliver, Eduardo
Fuster, Valentin
Sánchez-González, Javier
Ibanez, Borja
author_facet Galán-Arriola, Carlos
Vílchez-Tschischke, Jean Paul
Lobo, Manuel
López, Gonzalo J
de Molina-Iracheta, Antonio
Pérez-Martínez, Claudia
Villena-Gutiérrez, Rocio
Macías, Álvaro
Díaz-Rengifo, Iván A
Oliver, Eduardo
Fuster, Valentin
Sánchez-González, Javier
Ibanez, Borja
author_sort Galán-Arriola, Carlos
collection PubMed
description AIMS: The aim of this study was to study changes in coronary microcirculation status during and after several cycles of anthracycline treatment. METHODS AND RESULTS: Large-white male pigs (n=40) were included in different experimental protocols (ExPr.) according to anthracycline cumulative exposure [0.45 mg/kg intracoronary (IC) doxorubicin per injection] and follow-up: control (no doxorubicin); single injection and sacrifice either at 48 h (ExPr. 1) or 2 weeks (ExPr. 2); 3 injections 2 weeks apart (low cumulative dose) and sacrifice either 2 weeks (ExPr. 3) or 12 weeks (ExPr. 4) after third injection; five injections 2 weeks apart (high cumulative dose) and sacrifice 8 weeks after fifth injection (ExPr. 5). All groups were assessed by serial cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) to quantify perfusion and invasive measurement of coronary flow reserve (CFR). At the end of each protocol, animals were sacrificed for ex vivo analyses. Vascular function was further evaluated by myography in explanted coronary arteries of pigs undergoing ExPr. 3 and controls. A single doxorubicin injection had no impact on microcirculation status, excluding a direct chemical toxicity. A series of five fortnightly doxorubicin injections (high cumulative dose) triggered a progressive decline in microcirculation status, evidenced by reduced CMR-based myocardial perfusion and CFR-measured impaired functional microcirculation. In the high cumulative dose regime (ExPr. 5), microcirculation changes appeared long before any contractile defect became apparent. Low cumulative doxorubicin dose (three bi-weekly injections) was not associated with any contractile defect across long-term follow-up, but provoked persistent microcirculation damage, evident soon after third dose injection. Histological and myograph evaluations confirmed structural damage to arteries of all calibres even in animals undergoing low cumulative dose regimes. Conversely, arteriole damage and capillary bed alteration occurred only after high cumulative dose regime. CONCLUSION: Serial in vivo evaluations of microcirculation status using state-of-the-art CMR and invasive CFR show that anthracyclines treatment is associated with progressive and irreversible damage to the microcirculation. This long-persisting damage is present even in low cumulative dose regimes, which are not associated with cardiac contractile deficits. Microcirculation damage might explain some of the increased incidence of cardiovascular events in cancer survivors who received anthracyclines without showing cardiac contractile defects.
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spelling pubmed-88030792022-02-01 Coronary microcirculation damage in anthracycline cardiotoxicity Galán-Arriola, Carlos Vílchez-Tschischke, Jean Paul Lobo, Manuel López, Gonzalo J de Molina-Iracheta, Antonio Pérez-Martínez, Claudia Villena-Gutiérrez, Rocio Macías, Álvaro Díaz-Rengifo, Iván A Oliver, Eduardo Fuster, Valentin Sánchez-González, Javier Ibanez, Borja Cardiovasc Res Original Articles AIMS: The aim of this study was to study changes in coronary microcirculation status during and after several cycles of anthracycline treatment. METHODS AND RESULTS: Large-white male pigs (n=40) were included in different experimental protocols (ExPr.) according to anthracycline cumulative exposure [0.45 mg/kg intracoronary (IC) doxorubicin per injection] and follow-up: control (no doxorubicin); single injection and sacrifice either at 48 h (ExPr. 1) or 2 weeks (ExPr. 2); 3 injections 2 weeks apart (low cumulative dose) and sacrifice either 2 weeks (ExPr. 3) or 12 weeks (ExPr. 4) after third injection; five injections 2 weeks apart (high cumulative dose) and sacrifice 8 weeks after fifth injection (ExPr. 5). All groups were assessed by serial cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) to quantify perfusion and invasive measurement of coronary flow reserve (CFR). At the end of each protocol, animals were sacrificed for ex vivo analyses. Vascular function was further evaluated by myography in explanted coronary arteries of pigs undergoing ExPr. 3 and controls. A single doxorubicin injection had no impact on microcirculation status, excluding a direct chemical toxicity. A series of five fortnightly doxorubicin injections (high cumulative dose) triggered a progressive decline in microcirculation status, evidenced by reduced CMR-based myocardial perfusion and CFR-measured impaired functional microcirculation. In the high cumulative dose regime (ExPr. 5), microcirculation changes appeared long before any contractile defect became apparent. Low cumulative doxorubicin dose (three bi-weekly injections) was not associated with any contractile defect across long-term follow-up, but provoked persistent microcirculation damage, evident soon after third dose injection. Histological and myograph evaluations confirmed structural damage to arteries of all calibres even in animals undergoing low cumulative dose regimes. Conversely, arteriole damage and capillary bed alteration occurred only after high cumulative dose regime. CONCLUSION: Serial in vivo evaluations of microcirculation status using state-of-the-art CMR and invasive CFR show that anthracyclines treatment is associated with progressive and irreversible damage to the microcirculation. This long-persisting damage is present even in low cumulative dose regimes, which are not associated with cardiac contractile deficits. Microcirculation damage might explain some of the increased incidence of cardiovascular events in cancer survivors who received anthracyclines without showing cardiac contractile defects. Oxford University Press 2021-02-19 /pmc/articles/PMC8803079/ /pubmed/33605403 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/cvr/cvab053 Text en © The Author(s) 2021. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the European Society of Cardiology. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Articles
Galán-Arriola, Carlos
Vílchez-Tschischke, Jean Paul
Lobo, Manuel
López, Gonzalo J
de Molina-Iracheta, Antonio
Pérez-Martínez, Claudia
Villena-Gutiérrez, Rocio
Macías, Álvaro
Díaz-Rengifo, Iván A
Oliver, Eduardo
Fuster, Valentin
Sánchez-González, Javier
Ibanez, Borja
Coronary microcirculation damage in anthracycline cardiotoxicity
title Coronary microcirculation damage in anthracycline cardiotoxicity
title_full Coronary microcirculation damage in anthracycline cardiotoxicity
title_fullStr Coronary microcirculation damage in anthracycline cardiotoxicity
title_full_unstemmed Coronary microcirculation damage in anthracycline cardiotoxicity
title_short Coronary microcirculation damage in anthracycline cardiotoxicity
title_sort coronary microcirculation damage in anthracycline cardiotoxicity
topic Original Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8803079/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33605403
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/cvr/cvab053
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