Francesca Bartoli-Leonard, Tim Pennel, Massimo Caputo
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Widely considered a multi-faceted disease comprising both regurgitative pathogenesis, in which retrograde blood flows back through to the left ventricle, and aortic valve stenosis, which is characterized by the thickening, fibrosis, and subsequent mineralization of the aortic valve leaflets, limiting the anterograde flow through the valve, surgical intervention is still the main treatment, which incurs considerable risk to the patient.</p><p><strong>Results: </strong>Though originally thought of as a passive degeneration of the valve or a congenital malformation that has occurred before birth, the paradigm of AVD is shifting, and research into the inflammatory drivers of valve disease as a potential mechanism to modulate the pathobiology of this life-limiting pathology is taking center stage. Following limited success in mainstay therapeutics such as statins and mineralisation inhibitors, immunomodulatory strategies are being developed. Immune cell therapy has begun to be adopted in the cancer field, in which T cells (chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells) are isolated from the patient, programmed to attack the cancer, and then re-administered to the patient. Within cardiac research, a novel T cell-based therapeutic approach has been developed to target lipid nanoparticles responsible for increasing cardiac fibrosis in a failing heart. With clonally expanded T-cell populations recently identified within the diseased valve, their unique epitope presentation may serve to identify novel targets for the treatment of valve disease.</p><p><strong>Conclusion: </strong>Taken together, targeted T-cell therapy may hold promise as a therapeutic platform to target a multitude of diseases with an autoimmune aspect, and this review aims to frame this in the context of cardiovascular disease, delineating what is currently known in the field, both clinically and translationally.</p>","PeriodicalId":9557,"journal":{"name":"Cardiovascular Drugs and Therapy","volume":" ","pages":"1173-1185"},"PeriodicalIF":3.1000,"publicationDate":"2024-12-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11680629/pdf/","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Immunotherapy in the Context of Aortic Valve Diseases.\",\"authors\":\"Francesca Bartoli-Leonard, Tim Pennel, Massimo Caputo\",\"doi\":\"10.1007/s10557-024-07608-7\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p><strong>Purpose: </strong>Aortic valve disease (AVD) affects millions of people around the world, with no pharmacological intervention available. Widely considered a multi-faceted disease comprising both regurgitative pathogenesis, in which retrograde blood flows back through to the left ventricle, and aortic valve stenosis, which is characterized by the thickening, fibrosis, and subsequent mineralization of the aortic valve leaflets, limiting the anterograde flow through the valve, surgical intervention is still the main treatment, which incurs considerable risk to the patient.</p><p><strong>Results: </strong>Though originally thought of as a passive degeneration of the valve or a congenital malformation that has occurred before birth, the paradigm of AVD is shifting, and research into the inflammatory drivers of valve disease as a potential mechanism to modulate the pathobiology of this life-limiting pathology is taking center stage. Following limited success in mainstay therapeutics such as statins and mineralisation inhibitors, immunomodulatory strategies are being developed. Immune cell therapy has begun to be adopted in the cancer field, in which T cells (chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells) are isolated from the patient, programmed to attack the cancer, and then re-administered to the patient. Within cardiac research, a novel T cell-based therapeutic approach has been developed to target lipid nanoparticles responsible for increasing cardiac fibrosis in a failing heart. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
目的:主动脉瓣疾病(AVD)影响着全球数百万人,目前尚无药物干预措施。主动脉瓣狭窄的特点是主动脉瓣瓣叶增厚、纤维化和随后的矿化,限制了瓣膜的前向血流,手术干预仍然是主要的治疗方法,但会给患者带来相当大的风险:虽然最初被认为是瓣膜的被动变性或出生前发生的先天性畸形,但主动脉瓣退化症的研究范式正在发生转变,对瓣膜疾病的炎症驱动因素的研究正成为调节这种限制生命的病理生物学的潜在机制。在他汀类药物和矿化抑制剂等主流疗法取得有限成功后,免疫调节策略正在被开发出来。癌症领域已开始采用免疫细胞疗法,即从患者体内分离出 T 细胞(嵌合抗原受体 (CAR) T 细胞),对其进行编程以攻击癌症,然后再给患者注射。在心脏研究领域,已开发出一种基于 T 细胞的新型治疗方法,针对导致衰竭心脏纤维化加剧的脂质纳米粒子。最近在病变的瓣膜内发现了克隆扩增的 T 细胞群,它们独特的表位展示可能有助于确定治疗瓣膜疾病的新靶点:综上所述,靶向 T 细胞疗法有望成为针对多种自身免疫性疾病的治疗平台,本综述旨在以心血管疾病为背景,阐述该领域目前在临床和转化方面的已知情况。
Immunotherapy in the Context of Aortic Valve Diseases.
Purpose: Aortic valve disease (AVD) affects millions of people around the world, with no pharmacological intervention available. Widely considered a multi-faceted disease comprising both regurgitative pathogenesis, in which retrograde blood flows back through to the left ventricle, and aortic valve stenosis, which is characterized by the thickening, fibrosis, and subsequent mineralization of the aortic valve leaflets, limiting the anterograde flow through the valve, surgical intervention is still the main treatment, which incurs considerable risk to the patient.
Results: Though originally thought of as a passive degeneration of the valve or a congenital malformation that has occurred before birth, the paradigm of AVD is shifting, and research into the inflammatory drivers of valve disease as a potential mechanism to modulate the pathobiology of this life-limiting pathology is taking center stage. Following limited success in mainstay therapeutics such as statins and mineralisation inhibitors, immunomodulatory strategies are being developed. Immune cell therapy has begun to be adopted in the cancer field, in which T cells (chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells) are isolated from the patient, programmed to attack the cancer, and then re-administered to the patient. Within cardiac research, a novel T cell-based therapeutic approach has been developed to target lipid nanoparticles responsible for increasing cardiac fibrosis in a failing heart. With clonally expanded T-cell populations recently identified within the diseased valve, their unique epitope presentation may serve to identify novel targets for the treatment of valve disease.
Conclusion: Taken together, targeted T-cell therapy may hold promise as a therapeutic platform to target a multitude of diseases with an autoimmune aspect, and this review aims to frame this in the context of cardiovascular disease, delineating what is currently known in the field, both clinically and translationally.
期刊介绍:
Designed to objectively cover the process of bench to bedside development of cardiovascular drug, device and cell therapy, and to bring you the information you need most in a timely and useful format, Cardiovascular Drugs and Therapy takes a fresh and energetic look at advances in this dynamic field.
Homing in on the most exciting work being done on new therapeutic agents, Cardiovascular Drugs and Therapy focusses on developments in atherosclerosis, hyperlipidemia, diabetes, ischemic syndromes and arrhythmias. The Journal is an authoritative source of current and relevant information that is indispensable for basic and clinical investigators aiming for novel, breakthrough research as well as for cardiologists seeking to best serve their patients.
Providing you with a single, concise reference tool acknowledged to be among the finest in the world, Cardiovascular Drugs and Therapy is listed in Web of Science and PubMed/Medline among other abstracting and indexing services. The regular articles and frequent special topical issues equip you with an up-to-date source defined by the need for accurate information on an ever-evolving field. Cardiovascular Drugs and Therapy is a careful and accurate guide through the maze of new products and therapies which furnishes you with the details on cardiovascular pharmacology that you will refer to time and time again.