Lestage P, Lockhart B, Roger A
Division de Pathologie, Cérébrale, Institut de Recherches Servier, Croissy-sur-Seine, France.
Therapie. 2002 Nov-Dec;57(6):554-63.
A "good" in vivo animal model of stroke must reproduce the etiology, anatomical, functional and metabolic consequences of human pathology and must also permit the study of anti-ischemic drugs in conditions pertinent to the clinical therapeutics. As stroke is a very heterogeneous clinical entity, such a model could only mimic a limited part of stroke. Animal data are usually collected in healthy laboratory rodents of the same age, in which a standardized amount of cerebral ischemia is induced by a reproducible intervention. In contrast, aetiology, location and severity of ischaemic stroke in patients is very heterogeneous. Among the various animal models of stroke, two of them are particularly used: a model of global transient ischemia by occlusion of the 4-vessels in the rat (Pulsinelli's model), which induces a delayed neuronal death in the hippocampus and model(s) of permanent or transient focal cerebral ischemia occluding the middle cerebral artery in rodents. A large number of compounds have been shown to be active using these two animal models, but unfortunately, none of them were found to be active in clinical trials. Various factors could be responsible for this major discrepancy and some of them are not related to pre-clinical studies, but to the complexities of the clinical problem of stroke. Failure in the translation of results from animals models to humans implicates potential limitations of the current drug development process. Retrospective analysis of studies suggests possible improvements at several stages during pre-clinical studies. Standardized guidelines for preclinical evaluation of neuroprotective drugs may improve chances of success. For example, preclinical studies should be performed in at least 2 species and 2 strains for a specific specie in order to take into account known strain and species differences. Moreover, while neuroprotection drug development is dominated by volumetric histology as the outcome measure, the demonstration of functional benefits must be performed both after short and long periods of recovery. Attempts should be made to use multiple models such as stroke-prone spontaneously hypertensive rats, outbred rodents and aged animals that more closely simulate clinical conditions. In addition, treatment in animals should not be given immediately after ischaemia, but after a delay, as most patients are not treated within minutes of stroke onset. Animal models should be used to determine dosage and duration of therapy, which will vary with the pharmacokinetic properties of different agents. Moreover, complete dose-response curves should be established as bell-shaped dose-responses curves may predict dose-limiting adverse effects that hinder subsequent efficacy trials. Finally, physiological monitoring (cerebral blood flow, blood pressure and gazes, body temperature, glycemia, ...) should be performed to eliminate confounding variables and to observe adverse systemic effects. The future of neuroprotection for stroke remains bright in spite of previous disappointments.
一个“良好”的中风体内动物模型必须重现人类病理学的病因、解剖、功能和代谢后果,还必须允许在与临床治疗相关的条件下研究抗缺血药物。由于中风是一种非常异质性的临床实体,这样的模型只能模拟中风的有限部分。动物数据通常是在相同年龄的健康实验室啮齿动物中收集的,通过可重复的干预诱导标准化量的脑缺血。相比之下,患者缺血性中风的病因、位置和严重程度非常异质。在各种中风动物模型中,特别常用的有两种:大鼠四血管闭塞的全脑短暂性缺血模型(普尔西内利模型),它会导致海马体延迟性神经元死亡,以及啮齿动物大脑中动脉闭塞的永久性或短暂性局灶性脑缺血模型。使用这两种动物模型已证明大量化合物具有活性,但不幸的是,在临床试验中未发现它们有活性。造成这种重大差异的因素有多种,其中一些与临床前研究无关,而是与中风临床问题的复杂性有关。动物模型结果向人类的转化失败意味着当前药物开发过程存在潜在局限性。对研究的回顾性分析表明,在临床前研究的几个阶段可能有改进之处。神经保护药物临床前评估的标准化指南可能会提高成功几率。例如,为了考虑已知的品系和物种差异,针对特定物种,临床前研究应至少在2个物种和2个品系中进行。此外,虽然神经保护药物开发以体积组织学作为结果指标为主,但必须在短期和长期恢复后都证明功能益处。应尝试使用多种模型,如易患中风的自发性高血压大鼠、远交系啮齿动物和更接近模拟临床情况的老龄动物。此外,动物治疗不应在缺血后立即进行,而应延迟进行,因为大多数患者在中风发作后几分钟内并未接受治疗。动物模型应用于确定治疗剂量和持续时间,这将因不同药物的药代动力学特性而异。此外,应建立完整的剂量反应曲线,因为钟形剂量反应曲线可能预测阻碍后续疗效试验的剂量限制性不良反应。最后,应进行生理监测(脑血流量、血压和血气、体温、血糖等)以消除混杂变量并观察全身不良反应。尽管此前令人失望,但中风神经保护的未来仍然光明。