Temperature-dependent drug may
prevent blood clots during therapeutic hypothermia
To prevent blood clots during therapeutic hypothermia,
scientists have developed what may be the first drug activated by cool temperatures
and turned off by warm ones, according to research presented at the American Heart
Association's Arterio-sclerosis, Thrombosis and Vascular Biology Annual Conference
2010.
"We used biotechnology to create a modern intelligent
drug," said Karlheinz Peter, M.D., Ph.D., leading author of the study and associate
director of Baker IDI Heart & Diabetes Institute in Melbourne, Australia.
"This drug is tailored for preventing clots during therapeutic hypothermia and
for minimizing bleeding problems especially after rewarming."
The new drug works only at cooler temperatures by inhibiting
the activity of platelets, which are cells that bind together to stop bleeding.
In mouse and human blood samples, researchers demonstrated that the experimental
drug bound to platelets and prevented them from clumping together at cool temperatures
(22℃ or 71.6゜F). When the researchers raised the temperature to normal (37℃ or 98.6゜F), the anti-platelet action stopped.
"Our idea was to develop a reagent that is highly active
at the moment it is really needed ─ when patients are at low temperature ─ and
that loses its function when it is no longer needed ─ when patients are rewarmed,"
Peter said.
Peter and his collaborators at Baker and Emory University
in Atlanta, Ga., used recombinant DNA technology to fuse a temperature-dependent
protein with a protein that inhibits platelet activity. The first part of this
new protein is similar to the protein elastin, which gives skin and other organs
their flexibility and is known to change shape in response to temperature changes.
The second, antibody portion of this combined protein inhibits platelet activity
by blocking the receptors that normally enable these cells to clot together to
heal an injury.
For centuries, physicians have recognized therapeutic
hypothermia's benefits, but its use in cardiac patients is relatively recent.
In the 1950s, doctors began using the treatment for cardiac surgery, such as valve
and bypass surgery. Also, hypothermia is often used in surgical repair of structural
cardiac defects in infants and children. However, cardiac hypothermic surgery
is associated with a substantial risk of clotting.
To prevent this serious complication, anti-clotting medication
is a standard part of therapeutic hypothermia. The drawback is that the effects
of current anti-clotting medicines continue even after body temperature is raised
to a normal level, which sometimes leads to excessive post-surgical bleeding,
researchers said. In contrast, the new combined protein not only inhibited blood
clot formation during cooling but also prevented bleeding problems after rewarming.
After extensive clinical studies, the American Heart
Association in October 2002 recommended that therapeutic hypothermia also be used
to treat selected patients who have suffered cardiac arrest.
To assure that the novel temperature-dependent drug also
protects patients subjected to this type of therapeutic hypothermia used for the
protection of the brain in patients after cardiocirculatory arrest, further studies
are needed to determine the extent of platelet inhibition at temperatures such
as 32℃ to 34℃ (89.6 ゜F to 93.2 ゜F), Peter said.
Co-authors are: Denijal Topcic, Ph.D.; Carolyn A. Haller,
Ph.D.; Wookhyun Kim, Ph.D.; Andreas Straub, M.D.; Fu Jia, M.D.; and Elliot L.
Chaikof, M.D., Ph.D. Author disclosures are on the abstract.
The Australian Research Council and the Australian National
Health and Medical Research Council funded the study.
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