Geisbert Thomas W, Hensley Lisa E, Jahrling Peter B, Larsen Tom, Geisbert Joan B, Paragas Jason, Young Howard A, Fredeking Terry M, Rote William E, Vlasuk George P
Virology Division, US Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases, Fort Detrick, MD 21702, USA.
Lancet. 2003 Dec 13;362(9400):1953-8. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(03)15012-X.
Infection with the Ebola virus induces overexpression of the procoagulant tissue factor in primate monocytes and macrophages, suggesting that inhibition of the tissue-factor pathway could ameliorate the effects of Ebola haemorrhagic fever. Here, we tested the notion that blockade of fVIIa/tissue factor is beneficial after infection with Ebola virus.
We used a rhesus macaque model of Ebola haemorrhagic fever, which produces near 100% mortality. We administered recombinant nematode anticoagulant protein c2 (rNAPc2), a potent inhibitor of tissue factor-initiated blood coagulation, to the macaques either 10 min (n=6) or 24 h (n=3) after a high-dose lethal injection of Ebola virus. Three animals served as untreated Ebola virus-positive controls. Historical controls were also used in some analyses.
Both treatment regimens prolonged survival time, with a 33% survival rate in each treatment group. Survivors are still alive and healthy after 9 months. All but one of the 17 controls died. The mean survival for the six rNAPc2-treated macaques that died was 11.7 days compared with 8.3 days for untreated controls (p=0.0184). rNAPc2 attenuated the coagulation response as evidenced by modulation of various important coagulation factors, including plasma D dimers, which were reduced in nearly all treated animals; less prominent fibrin deposits and intravascular thromboemboli were observed in tissues of some animals that succumbed to Ebola virus. Furthermore, rNAPc2 attenuated the proinflammatory response with lower plasma concentrations of interleukin 6 and monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 (MCP-1) noted in the treated than in the untreated macaques.
Post-exposure protection with rNAPc2 against Ebola virus in primates provides a new foundation for therapeutic regimens that target the disease process rather than viral replication.
埃博拉病毒感染可诱导灵长类动物单核细胞和巨噬细胞中促凝血组织因子的过度表达,这表明抑制组织因子途径可能会改善埃博拉出血热的病情。在此,我们测试了阻断FVIIa/组织因子在埃博拉病毒感染后有益的这一观点。
我们使用了埃博拉出血热的恒河猴模型,该模型的死亡率接近100%。在高剂量致死性注射埃博拉病毒后10分钟(n = 6)或24小时(n = 3),我们给恒河猴注射重组线虫抗凝血蛋白c2(rNAPc2),它是组织因子启动的血液凝固的有效抑制剂。三只动物作为未治疗的埃博拉病毒阳性对照。在一些分析中也使用了历史对照。
两种治疗方案均延长了存活时间,每个治疗组的存活率为33%。幸存者在9个月后仍然存活且健康。17只对照中除1只外全部死亡。接受rNAPc2治疗的6只死亡恒河猴的平均存活时间为11.7天,而未治疗对照为8.3天(p = 0.0184)。rNAPc2减弱了凝血反应,各种重要凝血因子的调节证明了这一点,包括血浆D-二聚体,几乎所有接受治疗的动物中其水平都有所降低;在一些死于埃博拉病毒的动物组织中,观察到纤维蛋白沉积和血管内血栓栓塞不那么明显。此外,rNAPc2减弱了促炎反应,治疗组猕猴血浆中白细胞介素6和单核细胞趋化蛋白-1(MCP-1)的浓度低于未治疗组。
rNAPc2在灵长类动物中对埃博拉病毒的暴露后保护为针对疾病过程而非病毒复制的治疗方案提供了新的基础。