Myocardial Infarction Clinical Trial
Official title:
Endotoxemia in Coronary Thrombus of Patients With Acute Coronary Syndrome
Platelets play a key role in the athero-thrombotic process. However, the in vivo mechanism
accounting for thrombus growth at site of coronary atherosclerotic lesion has not been fully
elucidated. While platelet adhesion and aggregation on the thrombogenic core of
atherosclerotic plaque is an established mechanism for thrombus growth, the role of systemic
factors, which may contribute to thrombus via amplification and propagation of platelet
aggregation, is still to be clarified.
There is a growing body of evidence that lipopolysaccharides (LPS), are implicated in
athero-thrombosis. Circulating levels of endotoxins have been associated with human
atherosclerosis progression, particularly in smokers or in patients with infections.
Furthermore, endotoxins seem to be implicated in the thrombotic process through several
mechanisms including up-regulation of macrophage tissue factor expression and amplification
of platelet response upon interaction with Toll-like receptor 4. The relationship between
endotoxins and platelets may be relevant in the context of acute coronary syndromes as
endotoxins could locally amplify platelet-derived thrombus growth but this issue is still
unexplored.
Previous studies demonstrated that low-grade endotoxemia is detectable in human circulation,
likely as consequence of enhanced gut permeability, and may be responsible for
leucocyte-platelet aggregate and eventually thrombosis. The investigators hypothesize that
low-grade endotoxemia may be observed in patients with coronary heart disease and may favor,
at site of coronary unstable plaque, thrombus growth. To explore this issue, Escherichia Coli
(EC)-LPS concentration and biomarkers of platelet activation will be measured in coronary
thrombus and intra-coronary blood of patients with STEMI and stable angina (SA),
respectively, and in peripheral circulation of both patients and controls. EC DNA will be
searched in serum of all patients by polymerase chain reaction (PCR). Furthermore, to
substantiate that LPS could be biologically active, immune-histochemical analysis of thrombi
and in vitro studies will be performed to assess the interplay between LPS and platelet
activation.
In this case-control study, three groups of patients will be compared: consecutive STEMI
patients undergoing to manual thrombo-aspiration during primary percutaneous coronary
intervention, patients with chronic stable angina (SA) undergoing elective diagnostic and/or
interventional coronary procedure and outpatients without coronary heart disease referring to
the ambulatory of the Department of Internal Medicine, I Clinica Medica, Sapienza -University
of Rome.
Patients will be recruited from three Centers: i) Department of the Heart and Great Vessels
"Attilio Reale", Sapienza -University of Rome; ii) Department of Internal Medicine, I Clinica
Medica, Sapienza -University of Rome; iii) Department of Interventional Cardiology, Santa
Maria University Hospital, Terni.
The study complied with the Declaration of Helsinki and was approved by the local ethic
committees of centers involved.
In patients presenting STEMI, coronary thrombi, when present, or plaque fragments will be
aspirated from the culprit coronary artery before stent implantation and collected in EDTA
tubes.
Thrombi will be homogenized in 5 mL of a homogenization buffer. Aliquots of thrombi
homogenate will be centrifuged. In a subset of STEMI patients, part of the thrombotic
material aspirated will be fixed in 4% buffered formaldehyde for histologic and
immunohistochemical analyses.
In patients with SA, intracoronary blood will be aspirated from the stented coronary artery,
before stenting, and immediately collected in EDTA tubes and centrifuged. Next, supernatant
will be removed and stored at -80°C until use.
Peripheral blood samples will be obtained from a radial or femoral artery, before the start
of procedure and after stent deployment in STEMI patients, or before balloon dilation and
stenting in SA patients and then collected into tubes with or without 3.8% sodium citrate and
EDTA tubes and centrifuged to obtain supernatant. Blood samples of controls group will be
obtained from patients after supine rest for at least 10 min and taken into tubes with or
without 3.8% sodium citrate and in EDTA tubes and centrifuged to obtain supernatant. Plasma
and serum aliquots will be stored at -80°C in appropriate cuvettes until assayed.
Complete haemochrome, blood glucose, lipid profile, fibrinogen, creatinine, creatine
kinase-MB and troponin T will be evaluated using standard methods.
sCD40L and sP-selectin levels will be measured with a commercial immunoassay in aliquots of
plasma, thrombus homogenate and intracoronary blood.
Lipopolysaccharide (LPS) levels in serum and thrombus will be measured using a commercial
ELISA kit.
A PCR reaction for specific amplification of a region of the 16S ribosomal RNA gene of
Escherichia coli will be developed.
Serum zonulin levels will be measured using a commercial ELISA kit.
Immunoistochemistry (IHC) will be performed on sections obtained from formalin-fixed and
paraffin embedded thrombus fragments aspirated from a subset of STEMI patients. After
rehydration and antigen retrieval slides will be incubated with primary antibodies
respectively to LPS, TLR4 and Cathepsin G, then washed in phosphate saline buffer and
incubated with a secondary universal antibody. Immunoreactions will be detected with
diaminobenzidine.
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