METHODS OF USING POTASSIUM CHANNEL INHIBITORS (BLOCKERS) FOR FLUID RESUSCITATION
20170304281 · 2017-10-26
Inventors
- Matthias Majetschak (Woodridge, IL, US)
- Kenneth Lee Byron (Chicago, IL, US)
- Sean Patrick Nassoiy (River Forest, IL, US)
Cpc classification
A61K31/444
HUMAN NECESSITIES
International classification
Abstract
Methods and pharmaceutical treatments of fluid resuscitation in which a selective potassium channel inhibitor is administered to a patient in a therapeutic amount sufficient to stabilize blood pressure and/or to reduce the amount of the resuscitation fluid otherwise required to resuscitate the patient.
Claims
1. A method of fluid resuscitation using a pharmaceutical treatment comprising administering a selective potassium channel inhibitor to a patient in a therapeutic amount sufficient to stabilize blood pressure of the patient.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein the patient is hypotensive and/or hemodynamically unstable, the patient is undergoing fluid resuscitation, and the administering of the selective potassium channel inhibitor reduces fluid resuscitation requirements for the patient.
3. The method of claim 1, wherein the patient is in hemorrhagic shock when the selective potassium channel inhibitor is administered to the patient.
4. The method of claim 1, wherein the selective potassium channel inhibitor is administered to the patient while the patient is suffering from trauma, burn, or sepsis, or is undergoing cardiovascular, abdominal, or transplant surgery, or has a medical condition associated with limited fluid tolerance.
5. The method of claim 1, wherein the selective potassium channel inhibitor is administered via intravenous bolus injection.
6. The method of claim 1, wherein the selective potassium channel inhibitor is administered via supplementation of a resuscitation fluid.
7. The method of claim 6, wherein the resuscitation fluid is a crystalloid solution, a colloid solution, blood, a blood product, or a blood substitute.
8. The method of claim 1, wherein the selective potassium channel inhibitor is a Kv7 potassium channel inhibitor.
9. The method of claim 8, wherein the Kv7 potassium channel inhibitor is linopirdine.
10. The method of claim 8, wherein the Kv7 potassium channel inhibitor is XE991.
11. A pharmaceutical treatment of a patient who is hypotensive and/or hemodynamically unstable and undergoing fluid resuscitation with a resuscitation fluid, the pharmaceutical treatment comprising administering a selective Kv7 potassium channel inhibitor to the patient in a therapeutic amount sufficient to reduce the amount of the resuscitation fluid otherwise required to resuscitate the patient.
12. The pharmaceutical treatment of claim 11, wherein the selective Kv7 potassium channel inhibitor is administered to the patient while the patient is suffering from trauma, burn, or sepsis, or is undergoing cardiovascular, abdominal, or transplant surgery, or has a medical condition associated with limited fluid tolerance.
13. The pharmaceutical treatment of claim 11, wherein the selective Kv7 potassium channel inhibitor is administered via intravenous bolus injection.
14. The pharmaceutical treatment of claim 11, wherein the selective Kv7 potassium channel inhibitor is administered via supplementation of a resuscitation fluid.
15. The pharmaceutical treatment of claim 11, wherein all drugs administered during the pharmaceutical treatment lack significant intrinsic vasopressor activity.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0017]
[0018]
[0019]
[0020]
[0021]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0022] As discussed below, the present invention arises in part from an investigation indicating that administration of a selective Kv7 potassium channel inhibitor (blocker), for example, linopirdine or XE991, is able to reduce resuscitation fluid requirements in hypotensive and/or hemodynamically unstable subjects (e.g., rats), and induces small and transient increases in blood pressure only if administered in sufficiently high doses. The structure, composition, and manufacture of Kv7 potassium channel inhibitors (blockers) are well known in the art and therefore will not be explained further herein.
[0023] Initial phases of the investigation entailed the administration of linopirdine to anesthetized male Sprague-Dawley rats to determine its effect on blood pressure. Hemodynamics and fluid requirements were continuously monitored.
[0024]
[0025]
[0026] Further phases of the investigation entailed the use of anesthetized male Sprague-Dawley rats that were hemorrhaged to a mean arterial blood pressure (MAP) of 25 mmHg for thirty minutes to induce hemorrhagic shock, followed by fluid resuscitation with normal saline to a MAP of 70 mmHg until t=75 minutes. Hemodynamics and fluid requirements were continuously monitored.
[0027] Based on these series of investigations, it was concluded that even a high intravenous bolus dose of linopirdine (6 mg/kg) and a total intravenous dose of 10.6 mg/kg of linopirdine administered within one hour caused only minimal and short-lived increases in systemic blood pressures, suggesting that systemic vasopressor effects of linopirdine are consistently small. Despite only modest effects of acute linopirdine treatment on blood pressure in normotensive rats, it was observed that retigabine-induced hypotension was instantaneously reverted with intravenous linopirdine. As such, it was concluded that Kv7 channel modulators may provide an alternative pharmacological approach for the management of hypertensive emergencies, in which drugs that permit rapid, titratable and reversible reduction of blood pressure are highly desirable.
[0028]
[0029]
[0030] The investigations discussed above indicated that a single dose of linopirdine at the beginning of fluid resuscitation from hemorrhagic shock dose-dependently reduced fluid requirements to stabilize blood pressure. The observed effects of linopirdine were saturated at a dose of three milligrams per kilogram and resulted in 65% reduction of resuscitation fluid requirements. The observation that a dose of one milligram per kilogram of the linopirdine analogue XE991 was equally efficacious to reduce fluid resuscitation requirements as a dose of three milligrams per kilogram of linopirdine is consistent with the higher in vitro and in vivo potency of XE991. It was concluded that these data suggested that the fluid-sparing effects of linopirdine and XE991 during resuscitation from hemorrhagic shock can be considered as a general pharmacological property of drugs that block Kv7 currents.
[0031]
[0032] No toxicity associated with linopirdine treatment was observed in the investigations leading to the present invention. It has previously been determined that after oral administration in humans, the half-life of linopirdine is about 0.4 to 3.2 hours. After intravenous injection of 2.5 mg/kg linopirdine, a half-life of 0.6 hours has been determined in rats. Thus, the short half-life would indicate that linopirdine is a drug that is easily controllable if adverse effects were to occur.
[0033] On the basis of the above investigations, it was concluded that selective Kv7 potassium channel inhibitors (blockers) can be administered in a dose-dependent manner to stabilize blood pressure and reduce systemic fluid requirements to maintain hemodynamics during resuscitation after hemorrhagic shock in a subject. The data support the use of potassium channel inhibitors as a new pharmacological approach to improve fluid resuscitation strategies after severe hemorrhagic shock. Such pharmacological approaches would have the capability of significantly reducing morbidity and mortalityfrom fluid-overload and reducing the need for vasopressor support. Although not yet tested on humans, the expression pattern of Kv7 channels is very similar across species, with Kv7.1, Kv7.4, and Kv7.5 being ubiquitously expressed in every arterial bed so far examined (see, Haick et al., Novel treatment strategies for smooth muscle disorders: Targeting Kv7 potassium channels. Pharmacol Ther. 2016;165:14-25). Therefore, the above investigations indicate that Kv7 potassium channel inhibitors (blockers) can be administered to stabilize blood pressure and reduce systemic fluid requirements during resuscitation treatments in humans.
[0034] More generally, the investigation reported above indicated that Kv7 channel inhibitors may find use as a supplement for various resuscitation fluids such as Lactated Ringer's solution or other resuscitation fluids for out-of hospital and in-hospital resuscitation, for trauma, burn, sepsis, or shock resuscitation, for resuscitation during major cardiovascular, abdominal or transplant surgery, and for resuscitation of patients with medical conditions associated with limited fluid tolerance, including but not limited to kidney failure or heart diseases (myocardial insufficiency, myocardial infarction, congestive heart failure, cardiomyopathy, etc.).
[0035] The dose of the pharmaceutical administered to a subject, particularly a human, in the context of the present invention, should be sufficient to effect a therapeutic response in the subject over a reasonable time frame. One skilled in the art will recognize that dosage will depend upon a variety of factors including a condition of the subject, the body weight of the subject, the nature and extent of the symptoms, the kind of concurrent treatment, the frequency of treatment, etc. The size of the dose also will be determined by the route, timing and frequency of administration as well as the existence, nature, and extent of any adverse side effects that might accompany the administration of the pharmaceutical and the desired physiological effect. Appropriate dosing may be determined empirically from clinical trials, starting with doses that have established safety profiles when used for other applications. For example, Linopirdine has previously been tested in phase 1 and phase 2 clinical trials as a cognition-enhancing drug in Alzheimer's disease with no relevant adverse effects being reported, and linopirdine dosages evaluated in the investigation reported herein were comparable with or below those shown to be safe in humans in those clinical trials. Such an advantageous pharmacological profile would permit rapid transition of linopirdine into clinical trials. It is foreseeable and within the scope of the invention that the dose may be administered via intravenous bolus injection or as supplementation of resuscitation fluids as shown herein, or by another method known in the art.
[0036] While the invention has been described in terms of a particular investigation, it is apparent that other forms could be adopted by one skilled in the art. For example, it is foreseeable that uses could be determined for other potassium channel inhibitors (blockers) as pharmaceutical treatments for fluid resuscitation of patients suffering from a variety of conditions. Furthermore, potassium channel inhibitors could be administered with various resuscitation fluids used in patients, for example, crystalloid solutions (including normal, isotonic, and hypotonic saline solutions), colloid solutions, blood, blood products, blood substitutes, etc. Accordingly, it should be understood that the invention is not limited to any embodiment described herein. It should also be understood that the phraseology and terminology employed above are for the purpose of describing the disclosed investigations, and do not necessarily serve as limitations to the scope of the invention. Therefore, the scope of the invention is to be limited only by the following claims.