Clinical therapeutics | 2019

The Role of Colchicine in Acute Coronary Syndromes.

 
 
 

Abstract


PURPOSE\nBecause inflammation is a key process implicated in the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis at all stages, including plaque formation, progression, instability, and rupture, and because colchicine has unique anti-inflammatory properties, this review article summarizes the pathophysiologic mechanisms underpinning inflammation in atherosclerosis and acute coronary syndrome (ACS), outlines anti-inflammatory therapeutic approaches that have been tested thus far, and evaluates the evidence supporting the potential role of colchicine in improving outcomes and reducing cardiovascular morbidity and mortality in patients after ACS.\n\n\nMETHODS\nPubMed was searched for publications on colchicine and ACSs and atherosclerosis, and www.clinicaltrials.org was searched for completed and ongoing trials of colchicine use in ACSs.\n\n\nFINDINGS\nDespite contemporary optimal medical therapy, patients remain at a high risk of future events after an ACS because of residual inflammation at culprit and nonculprit sites. Several attempts have been made to address this with targeted anti-inflammatory therapies, but until the recent promising results of canakinumab (an anti-interleukin-1β monoclonal antibody), most have failed to find any prognostic benefit in large clinical trials with hard end points. The pathogenic role of neutrophils and monocytes in atheroinflammation is well established, and a fundamental component in this process is the activation of the NOD-like receptor protein 3 inflammasome, a cytosolic multiprotein complex that, when activated by a stress signal such as cholesterol crystals, drives caspase-1-dependent release of 2 key proinflammatory cytokines, which are predictive of future adverse cardiovascular events: interleukin-1β and interleukin-18. Colchicine is a widely available, inexpensive, and well-tolerated medication that, among several anti-inflammatory mechanisms of action, inhibits activation of the NOD-like receptor protein 3 inflammasome complex. A seminal trial has found the beneficial properties of colchicine in reducing adverse cardiovascular events in the stable coronary artery disease population.\n\n\nIMPLICATIONS\nDespite promising results in small prospective observational and randomized trials, there is a need for more evidence evaluating the role of colchicine as a secondary preventive agent after ACSs.

Volume 41 1
Pages \n 11-20\n
DOI 10.1016/j.clinthera.2018.07.023
Language English
Journal Clinical therapeutics

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