Cardiovascular Division, Department of Medicine, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO 63110, USA.
Circulation. 2012 May 15;125(19):2353-62. doi: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.111.081125. Epub 2012 Mar 25.
Pressure overload resulting from aortic stenosis causes maladaptive ventricular and vascular remodeling that can lead to pulmonary hypertension, heart failure symptoms, and adverse outcomes. Retarding or reversing this maladaptive remodeling and its unfavorable hemodynamic consequences has the potential to improve morbidity and mortality. Preclinical models of pressure overload have shown that phosphodiesterase type 5 inhibition is beneficial; however, the use of phosphodiesterase type 5 inhibitors in patients with aortic stenosis is controversial because of concerns about vasodilation and hypotension.
We evaluated the safety and hemodynamic response of 20 subjects with severe symptomatic aortic stenosis (mean aortic valve area, 0.7 ± 0.2 cm(2); ejection fraction, 60 ± 14%) who received a single oral dose of sildenafil (40 or 80 mg). Compared with baseline, after 60 minutes, sildenafil reduced systemic (-12%; P<0.001) and pulmonary (-29%; P=0.002) vascular resistance, mean pulmonary artery (-25%; P<0.001) and wedge (-17%; P<0.001) pressures, and increased systemic (13%; P<0.001) and pulmonary (45%; P<0.001) vascular compliance and stroke volume index (8%; P=0.01). These changes were not dose dependent. Sildenafil caused a modest decrease in mean systemic arterial pressure (-11%; P<0.001) but was well tolerated with no episodes of symptomatic hypotension.
This study shows for the first time that a single dose of a phosphodiesterase type 5 inhibitor is safe and well tolerated in patients with severe aortic stenosis and is associated with improvements in pulmonary and systemic hemodynamics resulting in biventricular unloading. These findings support the need for longer-term studies to evaluate the role of phosphodiesterase type 5 inhibition as adjunctive medical therapy in patients with aortic stenosis.
主动脉瓣狭窄导致的压力超负荷会引起心室和血管的适应性重构,进而导致肺动脉高压、心力衰竭症状和不良预后。延缓或逆转这种适应性重构及其不利的血液动力学后果,有可能改善发病率和死亡率。压力超负荷的临床前模型表明,磷酸二酯酶 5 抑制是有益的;然而,由于担心血管扩张和低血压,磷酸二酯酶 5 抑制剂在主动脉瓣狭窄患者中的应用存在争议。
我们评估了 20 例严重有症状的主动脉瓣狭窄患者(平均主动脉瓣口面积 0.7±0.2cm2;射血分数 60±14%)单次口服西地那非(40 或 80mg)的安全性和血液动力学反应。与基线相比,60 分钟后,西地那非降低了全身(-12%;P<0.001)和肺(-29%;P=0.002)血管阻力、平均肺动脉(-25%;P<0.001)和楔压(-17%;P<0.001)以及增加了全身(13%;P<0.001)和肺(45%;P<0.001)血管顺应性和每搏量指数(8%;P=0.01)。这些变化与剂量无关。西地那非使平均全身动脉压适度下降(-11%;P<0.001),但耐受性良好,无症状性低血压发作。
这项研究首次表明,在严重主动脉瓣狭窄患者中,单次给予磷酸二酯酶 5 抑制剂是安全且耐受良好的,与改善肺和全身血液动力学有关,从而减轻双心室负荷。这些发现支持需要进行更长期的研究,以评估磷酸二酯酶 5 抑制作为主动脉瓣狭窄患者辅助药物治疗的作用。