Lee Craig R, Watkins Michael L, Patterson J Herbert, Gattis Wendy, O'connor Christopher M, Gheorghiade Mihai, Adams Kirkwood F
School of Pharmacy, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 27599-7075, USA.
Am Heart J. 2003 Jul;146(1):9-18. doi: 10.1016/S0002-8703(02)94708-3.
Arginine vasopressin is a peptide hormone that modulates a number of processes implicated in the pathogenesis of heart failure. Numerous vasopressin antagonists are currently under development for the treatment of this syndrome.
Preclinical and clinical data describing the effects of vasopressin and the vasopressin antagonists on both normal physiology and heart failure were reviewed.
Through activation of V(1a) and V(2) receptors, vasopressin regulates various physiological processes including body fluid regulation, vascular tone regulation, and cardiovascular contractility. Vasopressin synthesis is significantly and chronically elevated in patients with heart failure despite the volume overload and reductions in plasma osmolality often observed in these patients. Vasopressin also appears to adversely effect hemodynamics and cardiac remodeling, while potentiating the effects of norepinephrine and angiotensin II. The selective V(2) and dual V(1a)/V(2) receptor antagonists tolvaptan and conivaptan, respectively, substantially increase free water excretion and plasma osmolality, reduce body weight, improve symptoms of congestion, and moderately increase serum sodium concentrations in patients with heart failure who present with symptoms of fluid overload. Tolvaptan effectively normalizes serum sodium concentrations in hyponatremic heart failure patients. Conivaptan significantly reduces pulmonary capillary wedge pressure without affecting systemic vascular resistance or cardiac output. The clinical significance of V(1a) receptor antagonism requires further investigation.
Current preclinical and clinical findings with the vasopressin antagonists appear promising, however further evaluation in phase III clinical trials is necessary to define the role of vasopressin antagonism in the treatment of heart failure.
精氨酸加压素是一种肽类激素,可调节许多与心力衰竭发病机制相关的过程。目前有多种加压素拮抗剂正在研发用于治疗该综合征。
回顾了描述加压素及加压素拮抗剂对正常生理和心力衰竭影响的临床前及临床数据。
通过激活V(1a)和V(2)受体,加压素调节各种生理过程,包括体液调节、血管张力调节和心血管收缩力。尽管心力衰竭患者常出现容量超负荷和血浆渗透压降低,但加压素的合成仍显著且长期升高。加压素似乎还对血流动力学和心脏重塑产生不利影响,同时增强去甲肾上腺素和血管紧张素II的作用。选择性V(2)受体拮抗剂托伐普坦和双重V(1a)/V(2)受体拮抗剂考尼伐坦,分别可显著增加自由水排泄和血浆渗透压,减轻体重,改善充血症状,并适度提高出现液体超负荷症状的心力衰竭患者的血清钠浓度。托伐普坦可有效使低钠血症心力衰竭患者的血清钠浓度恢复正常。考尼伐坦可显著降低肺毛细血管楔压,而不影响全身血管阻力或心输出量。V(1a)受体拮抗作用的临床意义需要进一步研究。
目前加压素拮抗剂的临床前和临床研究结果看起来很有前景,然而,有必要在III期临床试验中进行进一步评估,以确定加压素拮抗作用在心力衰竭治疗中的作用。