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Study
reveals why some arthritis drugs can cause heart attacks and
strokes
Tuesday 28 November 2006
New research reveals why
COX-2 inhibitors such as Vioxx can cause heart attacks and
strokes. Researchers believe that their findings, published in
the December issue of the Federation of American Societies for
Experimental Biology (FASEB) journal, could enable the
development of improved therapies which do not have these
side-effects.
COX-2 inhibitors are primarily
used to treat pain in conditions such as arthritis. They work by
blocking the COX-2 enzyme, which is expressed at sites of
inflammation and underlies the production of hormones called
prostaglandins which swell the joints and cause the feeling of
pain.
The new study, by researchers
from Imperial College London and Queen Mary's School of Medicine
and Dentistry, reveals that although COX-2 inhibitors target only
COX-2, they also inhibit the enzyme COX-1 within the endothelial
cells that line all blood vessels.
COX-1 in these cells makes
prostacyclin, which thins the blood. Where this is inhibited
there is a greater chance of blood clotting, which, if the drugs
are used regularly, may increase the risk of heart attacks and
strokes.
Prior to the study, many in the
scientific community believed that the side effects of COX-2
inhibitors were caused by inhibiting COX-2 in the endothelium and
that this was reducing the production of blood-thinning agents.
The researchers found no
evidence for the existence of COX-2 in the endothelium, meaning
that scientists can now work on developing therapies which still
target COX-2 but which do not have the adverse affect on COX-1 in
endothelial cells.
The researchers found that the
COX-2 inhibitors only had a significant adverse effect on COX-1
in the endothelium and not on COX-1 in other areas such as
platelets in the blood. This leads them to believe that there is
something about the cellular environment in the endothelium that
makes COX-1 in that area vulnerable to the COX-2 inhibitors.
Professor Jane Mitchell, one of
the authors of the study from the National Heart and Lung
Institute at Imperial College London, said: "COX-2
inhibitors can have great benefits for patients suffering from
conditions such as arthritis. However, the problem is that their
use appears associated with an increased risk of heart attacks.
Our new research is exciting because it means we can work on
developing better COX-2 inhibitors that don't pose the same risks
in terms of heart attacks and strokes."
Professor Tim Warner, from the
William Harvey Research Institute at Queen Mary University of
London, added: "Our research is crucially important as COX-2
inhibitors are part of the nonsteroid class of drugs that are
taken worldwide by many hundreds of millions of patients. It is
essential that we have a true understanding of their sites of
action so that we can produce new safe and effective drugs for
years to come. This research will help us define such new drugs."
The researchers reached their
conclusions after analyzing donated human blood vessels, blood
and cells. This research was funded by the British Heart
Foundation, the Spanish Government and a European Community FP6
grant.
Source:
Imperial College London

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