Intracoronary basic fibroblast growth factor enhances myocardial collateral perfusion in dogs.

Publication/Presentation Date

2-1-2000

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: In preparation for clinical trials of basic fibroblast growth factor (bFGF) to treat ischemic heart disease, we sought to identify a clinically feasible method of bFGF administration.

BACKGROUND: Basic FGF has been shown to promote collateral development after experimentally induced coronary occlusion; however, methods of bFGF delivery that have been shown to be effective in previous investigations would not be practical for clinical use.

METHODS: Four randomized, blinded, controlled investigations were conducted independently and sequentially in an established canine model. For all studies, dogs underwent operative placement of proximal left circumflex coronary artery ameroid constrictors. The four investigational regimens included: 1) bFGF by central venous bolus injection, 1,740 microg/day for one, two or seven days; 2) bFGF by intravenous infusion, 100 microg/kg body weight per day for seven days; 3) bFGF by pericardial instillation, 2,000 microg/day for 7 days; and 4) bFGF by intracoronary injection (Judkin's technique), 100 microg/kg per day for one or two days. Each substudy included a contemporaneous vehicle control group. Collateral perfusion (microspheres) was assessed during maximal coronary vasodilation during the first month after ameroid placement.

RESULTS: Maximal collateral perfusion in dogs that received intracoronary bFGF for two days exceeded that of concurrent control dogs by 31% (p < 0.01). Perfusion was not increased in dogs that received single-dose intracoronary bFGF. Basic FGF administration by central venous bolus injection, intravenous infusion and pericardial injection failed to enhance collateral perfusion.

CONCLUSIONS: Administration of bFGF by the intracoronary route, an intervention that is feasible in patients, augments collateral development in dogs. These data provide a rationale for clinical testing of intracoronary bFGF in ischemic heart disease.

Volume

35

Issue

2

First Page

519

Last Page

526

ISSN

0735-1097

Disciplines

Medicine and Health Sciences

PubMedID

10676703

Department(s)

Department of Medicine

Document Type

Article

Share

COinS