Treatment with the GnRH receptor agonist leuprolide increased the median necrotic area in stable atherosclerotic plaques to 11.0% compared to 0.6% in control mice, whereas the antagonist degarelix had no such effect.
Does the GnRH receptor agonist leuprolide or the antagonist degarelix induce atherosclerotic plaque instability in ApoE-/- mice?
The GnRH receptor agonist leuprolide, but not the antagonist degarelix, induces necrosis and inflammation in established stable atherosclerotic plaques in mice, providing a potential mechanism for the increased cardiovascular risk associated with GnRH agonists.
Absolute Event Rate: 11% vs 0.6%
Androgen-deprivation therapy (ADT) for prostate cancer has been associated with increased risk for development of cardiovascular events and recent pooled analyses of randomized intervention trials suggest that this primarily is the case for patients with pre-existing cardiovascular disease treated with gonadotropin-releasing hormone receptor (GnRH-R) agonists. In the present study we investigated the effects of the GnRH-R agonist leuprolide and the GnRH-R antagonist degarelix on established atherosclerotic plaques in ApoE(-/-) mice. A shear stress modifier was used to produce both advanced and more stable plaques in the carotid artery. After 4 weeks of ADT, increased areas of necrosis was observed in stable plaques from leuprolide-treated mice (median and IQR plaque necrotic area in control, degarelix and leuprolide-treated mice were 0.6% (IQR 0-3.1), 0.2% (IQR 0-4.4) and 11.0% (IQR 1.0-19.8), respectively). There was also evidence of increased inflammation as assessed by macrophage immunohistochemistry in the plaques from leuprolide-treated mice, but we found no evidence of such changes in plaques from control mice or mice treated with degarelix. Necrosis destabilizes plaques and increases the risk for rupture and development of acute cardiovascular events. Destabilization of pre-existing atherosclerotic plaques could explain the increased cardiovascular risk in prostate cancer patients treated with GnRH-R agonists.
Knutsson et al. (Wed,) conducted a other in Atherosclerosis (n=30). Leuprolide and Degarelix vs. Untreated control was evaluated on Median necrotic area in stable plaques distal to the cast (%). Treatment with the GnRH receptor agonist leuprolide increased the median necrotic area in stable atherosclerotic plaques to 11.0% compared to 0.6% in control mice, whereas the antagonist degarelix had no such effect.
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