Endothelial Dysfunction Clinical Trial
Official title:
Characterization of Vascular Functions in Myeloma Patients Before and During Anti-tumor Therapy
Treatment options for multiple myeloma have increased significantly over the last years with
the approval of immunomodulatory drugs (IMiDs) and proteasome inhibitors (PIs). These
therapies have markedly improved overall survival for these patients to a median of 5-7
years. Due to the advanced age, the myeloma patient collective has a high prevalence of
pre-existing cardiovascular comorbidities. In addition, the primary disease process
contributes to cardiovascular complications. With the beginning of anti-tumor therapy, an
increased incidence of cardiovascular complications in myeloma patients can be determined.
This includes hypertension, left ventricular dysfunction, heart failure and both arterial and
venous thromboembolic events. The detailed mechanism by which proteasome inhibitors and
immunomodulatory agents lead to increased cardiovascular events is not established at this
time. Endothelial dysfunction, as a possible mechanism of cardiovascular toxicity, is
difficult to assess. Flow-mediated dilation (FMD) is an noninvasive method to measure
endothelial function by assessing the change in the vasodilatative reserve of the brachial
artery. Several independent recent investigations implicate that vascular (endothelial)
dysfunction precedes hypertension and heart failure. This has been related to a reduced level
of metabolites of the l-arginine-nitric oxide (NO) signaling pathway.
Hypothesis:
1. Anti-myeloma therapy exert vascular toxicity by limiting endothelial function.
Endothelial function, assessed by the change in the vasodilatative reserve of the
brachial artery (flow-mediated dilation = FMD) decreases after myeloma therapy.
2. Patients with multiple myeloma have a limited endothelial function compared to a healthy
control group.
A total of 40 myeloma patients will be examined. Measurements will be taken at baseline, 1
month and 6 month after myeloma therapy. Patients should not have received chemotherapy for
at least 3 months. Furthermore a healthy sex- and age-matched control group will be examined.
Treatment options for multiple myeloma have increased significantly over the last years with
the approval of immunomodulatory drugs (IMiDs) and proteasome inhibitors (PIs). These
therapies have markedly improved overall survival for these patients to a median of 5-7
years, many continue to live for more than 10 years. Due to the advanced age, the myeloma
patient collective has a high prevalence of pre-existing cardiovascular comorbidities. In
addition, the primary disease process contributes to cardiovascular complications. With the
beginning of anti-tumor therapy, an increased incidence of cardiovascular complications in
myeloma patients can be determined. This includes hypertension, left ventricular dysfunction,
heart failure and both arterial and venous thromboembolic events.
Proteasome inhibitors including bortezomib and carfilzomib, and immunomodulatory agents, e.g.
lenalidomide, represent cornerstone therapies for multiple myeloma. The most common therapy
choices are Bortezomib-based therapy (VCD, VC) and Carfilzomib-based therapy (KRD, KD).
Induction therapy is given 4-6 cycles followed by autologous hematopoietic cell
transplantation. Thereafter, many patients receive consolidation therapy. In patients not
eligible for autologous hematopoietic cell transplantation, a prolonged course of initial
chemotherapy is typically administered. The proteasome inhibitor Bortezomib is used
predominately in the front line setting, while second-generation carfilzomib is used in
relapsed/refractory disease.
Despite their efficacy, increased rates of cardiovascular complications occur in patients
exposed to these particular therapies. Higher incidences of cardiac adverse events including
hypertension, arrhythmia, heart failure, ischemic heart disease and cardiomyopathy has been
reported in patients receiving carfilzomib and bortezomib. Immunomodulatory agents are known
to increase the risk of venous thromboembolic disease particularly when combined with
dexamethasone or other chemotherapy. Furthermore, increased incidence of myocardial
infarction (MI) and cerebrovascular events has been demonstrated in patients treated with
lenalidomide. The mechanism of PI- and IMiD-associated cardiotoxicity is not fully
elucidated. PIs inhibit proteasome activity, leading to the accumulation of abnormal proteins
which in turn activates apoptotic pathways in myeloma cells. IMiDs bind cereblon, a component
of the E3 ubiquitin ligase which promotes proteasome-mediated degradation of the
transcription factors, IKZF1 and IKZF. It is unclear if the protein degradation properties of
these drugs contribute to cardiotoxicity, although clinical features of the toxicity suggest
endothelial cell injury and dysfunction. It is possible that CV events may be augmented when
these two classes of medications are co-administered and further enhanced by the additional
endothelial stress conferred by steroids. The detailed mechanism by which proteasome
inhibitors and immunomodulatory agents lead to increased cardiovascular events is not
established at this time.
Endothelial dysfunction, as a possible mechanism of cardiovascular toxicity, is difficult to
assess. Flow-mediated dilation (FMD) is an noninvasive method to measure endothelial function
by assessing the change in the vasodilatative reserve of the brachial artery. Several
independent recent investigations implicate that vascular (endothelial) dysfunction precedes
hypertension and heart failure. This has been related to a reduced level of metabolites of
the l-arginine-nitric oxide (NO) signaling pathway.
Hypothesis:
1. Anti-myeloma therapy exert vascular toxicity by limiting endothelial function.
Endothelial function, assessed by the change in the vasodilatative reserve of the
brachial artery (flow-mediated dilation = FMD) decreases after myeloma therapy.
2. Patients with multiple myeloma have a limited endothelial function compared to a healthy
control group.
Study design:
A total of 40 myeloma patients will be examined. Measurements will be taken at baseline, 1
month 6 month after myeloma therapy. Patients should not have received chemotherapy for at
least 3 months. Furthermore a healthy sex- and age-matched control group will be examined.
Primary endpoint:
• Endothelial function, assessed by the change in the vasodilatative reserve of the brachial
artery (flow-mediated dilation = FMD), between baseline and 1 month data
Secondary endpoints:
- Endothelial function, assessed by the vasodilatative reserve of the brachial artery
(flow-mediated dilation = FMD) between baseline data in myeloma patients and control
group
- Change of left ventricular pump function (3D-EF, global longitudinal strain)
- Alteration of echocardiographic parameters of diastolic dysfunction
- Change in dyspnea symptoms (NYHA Classification)
- Modification of cardiac biomarkers (NT-pro BNP, Troponin)
- Change of circulating NO-Pool
- Change in metabolomics (Biobank)
- Change in arterial stiffness and augmentation index
- Change of quality of life rated according to Medical Outcomes Short-Form Survey, SF-36,
Minnesota Living With Heart Failure Questionnaire
- Change in blood pressure
;
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