Preeclampsia Clinical Trial
Official title:
Marinobufagenin as a Target for DIGIBIND in Preeclampsia
Background:
- Preeclampsia is a combination of high blood pressure and other potentially
life-threatening symptoms. Preeclampsia occurs in up to 10% of pregnancies and is a main
cause of maternal and fetal death worldwide. Treatment is often difficult, and so far
there is no specific and effective therapy. Researchers have been studying the body
systems that regulate blood pressure. They have also studied drugs that can control
certain blood chemicals that constrict blood vessels and increase blood pressure.
- DIGIBIND, a drug that lowers blood pressure, has been used to treat pre-eclampsia.
Marinobufagenin (MBG), a chemical in the blood that constricts blood vessels, has been
shown to be involved in pre-eclampsia. But researchers are still not certain whether
DIGIBIND can be used to specifically target MBG. Researchers want to find out whether
DIGIBIND acts against MBG specifically. This information may help them to develop better
drugs to block MBG and lower blood pressure in women with preeclampsia.
Objectives:
- To study whether the blood pressure treatment drug DIGIBIND specifically acts on
marinobufagenin levels in the blood of pregnant women.
Eligibility:
- Women between 18 and 50 years of age who are 34 to 39 weeks pregnant and have preeclampsia.
Design:
- Participants will be screened with a physical examination, medical history, and blood
and urine tests.
- Before delivery, participants will provide blood samples for testing and evaluation.
- Following delivery, participants will provide additional blood samples and samples of
the placenta for testing and evaluation.
- No additional treatment, apart from the standard of care, will be provided as part of
this protocol.
Preeclampsia (PE) complicates from 5 to 10% of pregnancies and it is a number one cause of
maternal and fetal morbidity and mortality worldwide. Nevertheless, a specific and highly
effective therapy of this disorder does not exist. As illustrated by therapeutic efficacy of
anti-digoxin antibody (DIGIBIND) in preeclampsia, endogenous digitalis-like sodium pump
ligands play an important role in the pathogenesis of this syndrome. Previously, we
demonstrated that levels of endogenous bufadienolide Na/KATPase inhibitors are elevated in
patients with PE, and that antibody to marinobufagenin lower blood pressure in rats with
pregnancy-induced hypertension and ex vivo reverse inhibition of the Na/K-ATPase from
erythrocytes from patients with PE. Most recently, we developed three anti-MBG monoclonal
antibodies which in lower blood pressure in several rat experimental models.
We are proposing a pilot proof-of concept study aimed to demonstrate that MBG is target for
DIGIBIND in preeclampsia. If successful, this trial will provide basis for the development of
a clinically-usable anti-MBG monoclonal antibody. We hypothesize that in patients with
preeclampsia DIGIBIND induces vasorelaxation due to blockade of circulating MBG. The specific
aims of the study are to demonstrate that isolated perfused preeclamptic placentae ex vivo
release MBG at concentration sufficient to induce vasoconstriction that DIGIBIND reverses
vasoconstriction induced by placental perfusate, and that vasorelaxant effect of DIGIBIND is
due to blockade of MBG.
The study population will be pregnant women (18-50 years), 34-39 weeks of fetal gestational
age with preeclampsia The primary outcome of the study variable will be the difference in the
vascular tone in isolated perfused cotyledons. The secondary outcomes will be: (i) the degree
of MBG binding to DIGIBIND at different time points following DIGIBIND administration, (ii)
the effect of DIGIBIND on the activity of Na/K-ATPase in erythrocytes, and (iii) the ex vivo
effect of DIGIBIND on the vascular tone in the isolated placental lobes.
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