A research team
co-led by a physician-scientist at the University of Arizona
College of Medicine – Tucson’s Sarver Heart Center found that a subset of artificial heart patients
can regenerate heart muscle, which may open the door to new ways to treat and
perhaps someday cure heart failure. The results were published in the journal Circulation.
According to the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention, heart failure affects nearly 7 million U.S. adults and
is responsible for 14% of deaths per year. There is no cure for heart failure,
though medications can slow its progression. The only treatment for advanced
heart failure, other than a transplant, is pump replacement through an
artificial heart, called a left ventricular assist device, which can help the
heart pump blood.
“Skeletal muscle has a significant
ability to regenerate after injury. If you’re playing soccer and you tear a
muscle, you need to rest it, and it heals,” said Hesham Sadek, MD, PhD,
director of the Sarver Heart Center and chief of the Division of Cardiology at the U of A College of Medicine – Tucson’s Department of Medicine. “When a heart muscle is injured, it doesn’t grow
back. We have nothing to reverse heart muscle loss.”
Sadek led a collaboration between
international experts to investigate whether heart muscles can regenerate. The
study was funded through a grant awarded to Sadek by the Leducq Foundation
Transatlantic Networks of Excellence Program, which brings together American
and European investigators to tackle big problems.
The project began with tissue from
artificial heart patients provided by colleagues at the University of Utah
Health and School of Medicine led by Stavros Drakos, MD, PhD, a pioneer in left
ventricular assist device-mediated recovery.
Jonas Frisén, MD, PhD, and Olaf
Bergmann, MD, PhD, of the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm, led teams in
Sweden and Germany and used their own innovative method of carbon dating human
heart tissue to track whether these samples contained newly generated cells.
The investigators found that patients
with artificial hearts regenerated muscle cells at more than six times the rate
of healthy hearts.
“This
is the strongest evidence we have, so far, that human heart muscle cells can
actually regenerate, which really is exciting, because it solidifies the notion
that there is an intrinsic capacity of the human heart to regenerate,” Sadek
said. “It also strongly supports the hypothesis that the inability of the heart
muscle to ‘rest’ is a major driver of the heart’s lost ability to regenerate
shortly after birth. It may be possible to target the molecular pathways
involved in cell division to enhance the heart’s ability to regenerate.”
Finding
better ways to treat heart failure is a top priority for Sadek and the Sarver
Heart Center. This study builds on Sadek’s prior research into rest and heart
muscle regeneration.
In
2011, Sadek published a paper in Science showing that while heart muscle
cells actively divide in utero, they stop dividing shortly after birth to
devote their energy to pumping blood through the body nonstop, with no time for
breaks.
In
2014, he published evidence of cell division in
patients with artificial hearts, hinting that their heart muscle cells might
have been regenerating.
These
findings, combined with other research teams’ observations that a minority of
artificial heart patients could have their devices removed after experiencing a
reversal of symptoms, led him to wonder if the artificial heart provides
cardiac muscles the equivalent of bedrest in a person recovering from a soccer
injury.
“The
pump pushes blood into the aorta, bypassing the heart,” he said. “The heart is
essentially resting.”
Sadek’s
previous studies indicated that this rest might be beneficial for the heart
muscle cells, but he needed to design an experiment to determine whether
patients with artificial hearts were actually regenerating muscles.
“Irrefutable
evidence of heart muscle regeneration has never been shown before in humans,”
he said. “This study provided direct evidence.”
Next,
Sadek wants to figure out why only about 25% of patients are “responders” to
artificial hearts, meaning that their cardiac muscle regenerates.
“It’s
not clear why some patients respond and some don’t, but it’s very clear that
the ones who respond have the ability to regenerate heart muscle,” he said.
“The exciting part now is to determine how we can make everyone a responder,
because if you can, you can essentially cure heart failure. The beauty of this
is that a mechanical heart is not a therapy we hope to deliver to our patients
in the future – these devices are tried and true, and we’ve been using them for
years.”
Source: https://healthsciences.arizona.edu/news/releases/can-heart-heal-itself-new-study-says-it-can
Source: Can the heart heal itself? New study says it can. – Scents of Science
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