Does treatment with temocapril, bosentan, or their combination improve survival and cardiac function in rat models of left ventricular hypertrophy transitioning to heart failure?
Combined ACE inhibition and endothelin antagonism provides synergistic benefits on survival in a rat model of heart failure, suggesting a potential therapeutic approach for humans.
BACKGROUND: In view of their mutual crosstalk, the roles of angiotensin II (Ang II) and endothelin-1 (ET-1) in the myocardium are assumed to be synergistic and supplemental. METHODS AND RESULTS: In the phase of compensated left ventricular (LV) hypertrophy of Dahl salt-sensitive rats, Ang II peptide and the ACE mRNA in the LV were increased by 1.6- and 3.8-fold, respectively. In contrast, ET-1 peptide and the preproET-1 mRNA remained unchanged. In subsequent congestive heart failure (CHF), Ang II and ACE mRNA did not show further increases. But ET-1 and the mRNA were increased de novo by 5.3- and 4.1-fold, respectively. In ascending aorta-banded rats, the local activations of Ang II and ET-1 also showed a differential time course between LV hypertrophy and CHF. Long-term treatments of Dahl salt-sensitive rats with temocapril (an ACE inhibitor) and with bosentan (a mixed ET receptor blocker) equally improved long-term survival. Temocapril reduced the LV/body weight ratio and ameliorated LV fractional shortening. Conversely, although bosentan equally improved fractional shortening, it did not reduce the increase in LV mass. Combined treatment with these 2 drugs further ameliorated the animal's survival without additional decreases in systolic pressure. CONCLUSIONS: The pathophysiological roles in the myocardium during the transition to CHF differ qualitatively between Ang II and ET-1. Thus, long-term therapy with a combination of ACE inhibition and ET antagonism may provide a new approach for heart failure in humans.
Iwanaga et al. (Tue,) studied this question.