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Cardiovascular Research 2002 56(2):214-224; doi:10.1016/S0008-6363(02)00591-6
© 2002 by European Society of Cardiology
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Copyright © 2002, European Society of Cardiology

Clinical and experimental evidence of prostaglandin E1-induced angiogenesis in the myocardium of patients with ischemic heart disease

Mohammad Reza Mehrabia,*, Nermin Serbecica, Forouzan Tamaddona, Christoph Kauna, Kurt Hubera, Richard Pachera, Thomas Wildb, Gerhard Mallc, Johann Wojtaa and Helmut-D Glogara

aDepartment of Cardiology, University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria
bDepartment of Surgery, University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria
cDepartment of Pathology, Darmstadt, Germany

mohammad.mehrabi{at}univie.ac.at

* Corresponding author. Department of Cardiology, University of Vienna, Postfach 120, Waehringer Gürtel 18–20, A-1090 Vienna, Austria. Tel.: +43-1-40400-4614; fax: +43-1-408-1148.

Objective: Prostaglandin E1 (PGE-1) is a potent vasodilative agent which has been used to bridge patients with chronic heart failure listed for heart transplantation (HTX). In various experimental settings PGE-1 appears to stimulate angiogenesis by inducing vascular endothelial growth factor expression. This observational clinical study sought to investigate the angiogenic effects of PGE-1 in the failing human heart. Methods: Neovascularization was investigated in 14 explanted hearts from patients with ischemic cardiomyopathy (ICMP) who had been bridged to HTX with PGE-1 (8±1 mg/kg/min, 97±75.6 days) and compared with 14 hearts who did not receive PGE-1 prior to HTX. In three sectional areas obtained from the left ventricular wall CD34, von Willebrand factor (vWf), nuclear Ki67 (MIB-1), and VEGF were quantified by immunohistochemistry to estimate capillary density and endothelial cell proliferation. Additionally, to investigate a possible angiogenic effect of PGE-1 in vitro, cultured human coronary artery smooth muscle cells (HCASMCs) were treated with PGE-1. Results: PGE-1-treated patients had significantly more CD34- and vWf-positive cells in the subepicardium (both P<0.01), myocardium (both P<0.0001) and subendocardium (P<0.01 and P<0.001) as compared to the nonPGE-1 group. Proliferative endothelial activity expressed by the presence of MIB-1- and VEGF-positive cells (both P<0.0001 in all layers) was increased more than twofold. Addition of PGE-1 to HCASMCs in cell culture resulted in a significant increase in VEGF production (164.0±19.7 pg/105 cells/24 h, P<0.005) as compared to the control cell line (66.6±8.7 pg/105 cells/24 h, P<0.005). Conclusions: Our data demonstrate that PGE-1 is a potent stimulator of angiogenesis via upregulation of VEGF expression. The induction of therapeutic angiogenesis in patients with severe ICMP might explain the favorable clinical outcome in PGE-1 treated patients until HTX.

KEYWORDS Angiogenesis; Cardiomyopathy; Prostaglandins; Growth factors; Ischemia


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