Proteomic and Mechanistic Analysis of Spironolactone in Patients at Risk for HF.

João Pedro Ferreira ; Job Verdonschot ; Ping Wang ; Anne Pizard ; Timothy Collier ORCID logo ; Fozia Z Ahmed ; Hans-Peter Brunner-La-Rocca ; Andrew L Clark ; Franco Cosmi ; Joe Cuthbert ; +21 more... Javier Díez ; Frank Edelmann ; Nicolas Girerd ; Arantxa González ; Stéphanie Grojean ; Mark Hazebroek ; Javed Khan ; Roberto Latini ; Mamas A Mamas ; Beatrice Mariottoni ; Blerim Mujaj ; Pierpaolo Pellicori ; Johannes Petutschnigg ; Burkert Pieske ; Patrick Rossignol ; Philippe Rouet ; Jan A Staessen ; John GF Cleland ; Stephane Heymans ; Faiez Zannad ; HOMAGE (Heart Omics in AGEing) Consortium ; (2021) Proteomic and Mechanistic Analysis of Spironolactone in Patients at Risk for HF. JACC: Heart Failure, 9 (4). pp. 268-277. ISSN 2213-1779 DOI: 10.1016/j.jchf.2020.11.010
Copy

OBJECTIVES: This study sought to further understand the mechanisms underlying effect of spironolactone and assessed its impact on multiple plasma protein biomarkers and their respective underlying biologic pathways. BACKGROUND: In addition to their beneficial effects in established heart failure (HF), mineralocorticoid receptor antagonists may act upstream on mechanisms, preventing incident HF. In people at risk for developing HF, the HOMAGE (Heart OMics in AGEing) trial showed that spironolactone treatment could provide antifibrotic and antiremodeling effects, potentially slowing the progression to HF. METHODS: Baseline, 1-month, and 9-month (or last visit) plasma samples of HOMAGE participants were measured for protein biomarkers (n = 276) by using Olink Proseek-Multiplex cardiovascular and inflammation panels (Olink, Uppsala, Sweden). The effect of spironolactone on biomarkers was assessed by analysis of covariance and explored by knowledge-based network analysis. RESULTS: A total of 527 participants were enrolled; 265 were randomized to spironolactone (25 to 50 mg/day) and 262 to standard care ("control"). The median (interquartile range) age was 73 years (69 to 79 years), and 26% were female. Spironolactone reduced biomarkers of collagen metabolism (e.g., COL1A1, MMP-2); brain natriuretic peptide; and biomarkers related to metabolic processes (e.g., PAPPA), inflammation, and thrombosis (e.g., IL17A, VEGF, and urokinase). Spironolactone increased biomarkers that reflect the blockade of the mineralocorticoid receptor (e.g., renin) and increased the levels of adipokines involved in the anti-inflammatory response (e.g., RARRES2) and biomarkers of hemostasis maintenance (e.g., tPA, UPAR), myelosuppressive activity (e.g., CCL16), insulin suppression (e.g., RETN), and inflammatory regulation (e.g., IL-12B). CONCLUSIONS: Proteomic analyses suggest that spironolactone exerts pleiotropic effects including reduction in fibrosis, inflammation, thrombosis, congestion, and vascular function improvement, all of which may mediate cardiovascular protective effects, potentially slowing progression toward heart failure. (HOMAGE [Bioprofiling Response to Mineralocorticoid Receptor Antagonists for the Prevention of Heart Failure]; NCT02556450).


picture_as_pdf
Ferreira_etal_2021_Spironolactone-effect-on-the-blood.pdf
subject
Accepted Version
Available under Creative Commons: Attribution-NonCommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0

View Download

Atom BibTeX OpenURL ContextObject in Span Multiline CSV OpenURL ContextObject Dublin Core Dublin Core MPEG-21 DIDL Data Cite XML EndNote HTML Citation JSON MARC (ASCII) MARC (ISO 2709) METS MODS RDF+N3 RDF+N-Triples RDF+XML RIOXX2 XML Reference Manager Refer Simple Metadata ASCII Citation EP3 XML
Export

Downloads