Kessinger Chase W, Kim Jin Won, Henke Peter K, Thompson Brian, McCarthy Jason R, Hara Tetsuya, Sillesen Martin, Margey Ronan J P, Libby Peter, Weissleder Ralph, Lin Charles P, Jaffer Farouc A
Cardiovascular Research Center, Cardiology Division, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, United States of America.
Cardiovascular Research Center, Cardiology Division, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts, United States of America; Multimodal Imaging and Theranostic Lab, Cardiovascular Center, Korea University Guro Hospital, Seoul, Republic of Korea.
PLoS One. 2015 Feb 13;10(2):e0116621. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0116621. eCollection 2015.
Despite anticoagulation therapy, up to one-half of patients with deep vein thrombosis (DVT) will develop the post-thrombotic syndrome (PTS). Improving the long-term outcome of DVT patients at risk for PTS will therefore require new approaches. Here we investigate the effects of statins--lipid-lowering agents with anti-thrombotic and anti-inflammatory properties--in decreasing thrombus burden and decreasing vein wall injury, mediators of PTS, in established murine stasis and non-stasis chemical-induced venous thrombosis (N = 282 mice). Treatment of mice with daily atorvastatin or rosuvastatin significantly reduced stasis venous thrombus burden by 25% without affecting lipid levels, blood coagulation parameters, or blood cell counts. Statin-driven reductions in VT burden (thrombus mass for stasis thrombi, intravital microscopy thrombus area for non-stasis thrombi) compared similarly to the therapeutic anticoagulant effects of low molecular weight heparin. Blood from statin-treated mice showed significant reductions in platelet aggregation and clot stability. Statins additionally reduced thrombus plasminogen activator inhibitor-1 (PAI-1), tissue factor, neutrophils, myeloperoxidase, neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs), and macrophages, and these effects were most notable in the earlier timepoints after DVT formation. In addition, statins reduced DVT-induced vein wall scarring by 50% durably up to day 21 in stasis VT, as shown by polarized light microscopy of picrosirius red-stained vein wall collagen. The overall results demonstrate that statins improve VT resolution via profibrinolytic, anticoagulant, antiplatelet, and anti-vein wall scarring effects. Statins may therefore offer a new pharmacotherapeutic approach to improve DVT resolution and to reduce the post-thrombotic syndrome, particularly in subjects who are ineligible for anticoagulation therapy.
尽管进行了抗凝治疗,但多达一半的深静脉血栓形成(DVT)患者仍会发生血栓后综合征(PTS)。因此,改善有PTS风险的DVT患者的长期预后需要新的方法。在此,我们研究了他汀类药物(具有抗血栓形成和抗炎特性的降脂药物)对已形成的小鼠淤滞性和非淤滞性化学诱导静脉血栓形成(N = 282只小鼠)中减少血栓负荷和减轻静脉壁损伤(PTS的介质)的作用。每日用阿托伐他汀或瑞舒伐他汀治疗小鼠可使淤滞性静脉血栓负荷显著降低25%,而不影响血脂水平、凝血参数或血细胞计数。他汀类药物驱动的静脉血栓(VT)负荷降低(淤滞性血栓的血栓质量,非淤滞性血栓的活体显微镜血栓面积)与低分子肝素的治疗性抗凝作用相似。来自他汀类药物治疗小鼠的血液显示血小板聚集和血凝块稳定性显著降低。他汀类药物还降低了血栓纤溶酶原激活物抑制剂-1(PAI-1)、组织因子、中性粒细胞、髓过氧化物酶、中性粒细胞胞外陷阱(NETs)和巨噬细胞,这些作用在DVT形成后的早期时间点最为明显。此外,如用天狼星红染色的静脉壁胶原偏振光显微镜所示,他汀类药物在淤滞性VT中可使DVT诱导的静脉壁瘢痕形成在第21天之前持续降低50%。总体结果表明,他汀类药物通过促纤溶、抗凝、抗血小板和抗静脉壁瘢痕形成作用改善VT溶解。因此,他汀类药物可能提供一种新的药物治疗方法来改善DVT溶解并减少血栓后综合征,特别是在不符合抗凝治疗条件的患者中。