Patients with cardiovascular disease and cardiac fibrosis
Anti-fibrotic therapies (including conventional therapies like RAAS inhibitors and emerging agents like relaxin)
This review highlights the translational gap in anti-fibrotic therapies for cardiovascular disease and emphasizes the need for novel agents and improved clinical trial designs.
Cardiac fibrosis are central to various cardiovascular diseases. Research on the mechanisms and therapeutic targets for cardiac fibrosis has advanced greatly in recent years. However, while many anti-fibrotic treatments have been studied in animal models and seem promising, translation of experimental findings into human patients has been rather limited. Thus, several potential new treatments which have shown to reduce cardiac fibrosis in animal models have either not been tested in humans or proved to be disappointing in clinical trials. A majority of clinical studies are of small size or have not been maintained for long enough periods. In addition, although some conventional therapies, such as renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system (RAAS) inhibitors, have been shown to reduce cardiac fibrosis in humans, cardiac fibrosis persists in patients with heart failure even when treated with these conventional therapies, indicating a need to develop novel and effective anti-fibrotic therapies in cardiovascular disease. In this review article, we summarize anti-fibrotic therapies for cardiovascular disease in humans, discuss the limitations of currently used therapies, along with possible reasons for the failure of so many anti-fibrotic drugs at the clinical level. We will then explore the future directions of anti-fibrotic therapies on cardiovascular disease, and this will include emerging anti-fibrotics that show promise, such as relaxin. A better understanding of the differences between animal models and human pathology, and improved insight into carefully designed trials on appropriate end-points and appropriate dosing need to be considered to identify more effective anti-fibrotics for treating cardiovascular fibrosis in human patients.
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Fang Lü
Andrew Murphy
Anthony M. Dart
Frontiers in Pharmacology
The Alfred Hospital
Baker Heart and Diabetes Institute
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Lü et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69d5708475589c71d767dccc — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3389/fphar.2017.00186