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Heart failure (HF) is the common end-stage of different medical conditions. It is the only growing cardiovascular disease and its prognosis remains worse than that of many malignancies. The lack of evidence-based treatment for patients with diastolic HF (HFpEF) exemplifies that the current "one for all" therapy has to be advanced by an individualized approach. Inherited cardiomyopathies can serve as paradigmatic examples of different HF pathogenesis. Both gain- and loss-of-function mutations of the same gene cause disease, calling for disease-specific agonism or antagonism of this gene´s function. However, mutations alone do not predict the severity of cardiomyopathies nor therapy, because their impact on cardiac myocyte function is modified by numerous factors, including the genetic context. Today, patient-specific cardiac myocytes can be evaluated by the induced pluripotent stem cell (hiPSC) technology. Yet, unfolding the true potential of this technology requires robust, quantitative, high content assays. The researchers' recently developed method to generate 3D-engineered heart tissue (EHT) from hiPSC provides an automated, high content analysis of heart muscle function and the response to stressors in the dish. The aim of this project is to make the technology a clinically applicable test. Major steps are (i) in depths clinical phenotyping and genotyping of patients with cardiomyopathies or HFpEF, (ii) follow-up of the clinical course, (iii) generation of hiPSC lines (40 patients, 40 healthy controls), and (iv) quantitative assessment of hiPSC-EHT function under basal conditions and in response to pro-arrhythmic or cardio-active drugs and chronic afterload enhancement. The product of this study is an SOP-based assay with standard values for hiPSC-EHT function/stress responses from healthy volunteers and patients with different heart diseases. The project could change clinical practice and be a step towards individualized risk prediction and therapy of HF.
At present, heart function in patients can only be analysed by imaging methods or hemodynamic measurements. This has dramatically changed by the discovery that hiPSC can be generated from somatic cells (e.g. fibroblasts) by transduction of pluripotency genes. The investigators and others have shown that pluripotent stem cells can be efficiently differentiated into beating cardiac myocytes. This allows for the first time to study the function of cardiac myocytes from an individual patient. However, at present, only alterations were reproduced in hiPSC cells that were known previously and important limitations have to be resolved: * Immaturity of hiPSC-derived cardiac myocytes * Variability of hiPSC-generation, cardiac myocyte differentiation and experimental analyses * No readout of contractile force, the parameter mostly affected in heart failure * No modeling of hemodynamic stress in vitro * No statistically valid correlation of hiPSC-cardiac myocyte function with clinical/genetic data * Uncertainty as to standard values and adequate controls * Unclear predictive value The research challenge for the coming years is to resolve these shortcomings. IndivuHeart formulates a number of hypotheses and goals that are based on the researchers' longstanding expertise in tissue engineering and recent, still unpublished data on the pathophysiology of HCM and its modeling in EHT. The study will * reveal standard values for hiPSC-EHT function in a statistically valid manner, both under basal and stress conditions, * define a "cardiomyopathy phenotype" in vitro, * allow new mechanistic insight into the pathogenesis of human HCM and DCM, * uncover HCM-like abnormalities in HFpEF, * allow individualized drug testing (acute and chronic).
Age
18 - 60 years
Sex
ALL
Healthy Volunteers
Yes
Department of Experimental Pharmacology and Toxicology
Hamburg, Germany
Start Date
June 1, 2014
Primary Completion Date
June 1, 2019
Completion Date
June 1, 2019
Last Updated
April 29, 2019
80
ESTIMATED participants
Skin biopsy, genotyping and disease phenotyping
OTHER
Lead Sponsor
Universitätsklinikum Hamburg-Eppendorf
NCT05321875
NCT06253221
Data Source & Attribution
This clinical trial information is sourced from ClinicalTrials.gov, a service of the U.S. National Institutes of Health.
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View ClinicalTrials.gov Terms and ConditionsNCT06112743