Phase 1/2 Placebo-Controlled, Double-Blind, Dose-Escalating Trial of Myocardial Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor 2 Gene Transfer by Catheter Delivery in Patients With Chronic Myocardial Ischemia

Author:

Losordo Douglas W.1,Vale Peter R.1,Hendel Robert C.1,Milliken Charles E.1,Fortuin F. David1,Cummings Nancie1,Schatz Richard A.1,Asahara Takayuki1,Isner Jeffrey M.1,Kuntz Richard E.1

Affiliation:

1. From the Divisions of Cardiology (D.W.L., P.R.V., N.C., T.A., J.M.I.) and Cardiovascular Research (D.W.L., P.R.V., J.M.I., C.E.M.) Tufts School of Medicine/St Elizabeth’s Medical Center, Boston, Mass; Division of Cardiology, Rush-Presbyterian–St Luke’s Medical Center (R.C.H.), Chicago, Ill; Department of Cardiology, Scripps Clinic (F.D.F., R.A.S.), La Jolla, Calif; Harvard Medical School Division of Biometrics, Brigham and Women’s Hospital (R.E.K.), Boston, Mass.

Abstract

Background This phase 1/2 study investigated the safety of percutaneous catheter-based gene transfer of naked plasmid DNA encoding for vascular endothelial growth factor 2 (phVEGF2) to left ventricular (LV) myocardium in a prospective, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, dose-escalating study of inoperable patients with class III or IV angina. Methods and Results A steerable deflectable 8F catheter with a 27-gauge needle at its distal tip was advanced percutaneously to the endocardial surface of the LV in 19 patients (age, 61±2 years) with chronic myocardial ischemia who were not candidates for conventional revascularization. Patients were randomized in a double-blind fashion to receive 6 injections (total volume, 6.0 mL) of placebo or phVEGF2 in doses of 200 μg (n=9), 800 μg (n=9), or 2000 μg (n=1) guided by LV electromechanical (NOGA) mapping with a gene-to-placebo ratio of 2:1. A total of 114 LV injections were delivered and caused no hemodynamic alterations, sustained ventricular arrhythmias, ECG evidence of infarction, or ventricular perforation. End-point analysis at 12 weeks disclosed a statistically significant improvement in Canadian Cardiovascular Society (CCS) angina class in phVEGF2-treated versus placebo-treated patients (−1.3 versus −0.1, P =0.04). Remaining efficacy end points—including change in exercise duration (91.8 versus 3.9 seconds), functional improvement by ≥2 CCS classes (9 of 12 versus 1 of 6), and Seattle Angina Questionnaire data—all showed strong trends favoring efficacy of phVEGF2 versus placebo treatment. Conclusions This phase 1/2, double-blind, randomized trial provides preliminary data that support safety of phVEGF2 catheter-mediated myocardial gene transfer. The statistically significant reduction in anginal class and strong positive trends for remaining end points suggest that a larger phase 2/3 trial is warranted.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Physiology (medical),Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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