In preclinical safety studies, drug-induced vascular injury can negatively impact candidate-drug selection because there are no obvious diagnostic markers for monitoring this pathology preclinically or clinically. Furthermore, our current understanding of the pathogenesis of this lesion is limited. While vasodilatation and increased shear stress appear to play a role, the exact mechanism(s) of injury to the primary target cells, smooth muscle (SMC) and endothelial cell (EC), are unknown. Evaluation of potential novel markers for clinical monitoring with a mechanistic underpinning would add value in risk assessment and risk management. This mini review focuses on the efforts and progress to identify diagnostic markers as well as understanding the mechanism of action in nonrodent drug-induced vascular injury.
Pharmacologically, vasoactive agents targeting endothelial and/or smooth muscle cells (SMC) are known to cause acute drug-induced vascular injury (DIVI) and the resulting pathology is due to endothelial cell (EC) perturbation, activation, and/or injury. Alteration in EC structure and/or function may be a critical event in vascular injury and, therefore, evaluation of the circulatory kinetic profile and secretory pattern of EC-specific proteins such as VWF and VWFpp could serve as acute vascular injury biomarkers. In rat and dog models of DIVI, this profile was determined using pharmacologically diverse agents associated with functional stimulation/perturbation (DDAVP), pathological activation (lipopolysaccharide [LPS]/endotoxin), and structural damage (fenoldopam [FD], dopamine [DA], and potassium channel opener (PCO) ZD6169). In rats, FD caused moderate DIVI and time-related increase in plasma VWF levels ∼33% while in control rats VWF increased ∼5%. In dogs, VWF levels transiently increased ∼30% when there was morphologic evidence of DIVI by DA or ZD6169. However, in dogs, VWFpp increased >60-fold (LPS) and >6-fold (DDAVP), respectively. This was in comparison to smaller dynamic 1.38-fold (LPS) and 0.54-fold (DDAVP) increases seen in plasma VWF. Furthermore, DA was associated with a dose-dependent increase in plasma VWFpp. In summary, VWF and VWFpp can discriminate between physiological and pathological perturbation, activation, and injury to ECs.
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