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Mattia Arrigo, Nicolas Vodovar, Hélène Nougué, Malha Sadoune, Chris J Pemberton, Pamela Ballan, Pierre-Olivier Ludes, Nicolas Gendron, Alain Carpentier, Bernard Cholley, Philippe Bizouarn, Alain Cohen-Solal, Jagmeet P Singh, Jackie Szymonifka, Christian Latremouille, Jane-Lise Samuel, Jean-Marie Launay, Julien Pottecher, A Mark Richards, Quynh A Truong, David M Smadja, Alexandre Mebazaa, The heart regulates the endocrine response to heart failure: cardiac contribution to circulating neprilysin, European Heart Journal, Volume 39, Issue 20, 21 May 2018, Pages 1794–1798, https://doi.org/10.1093/eurheartj/ehx679
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Abstract
Heart failure (HF) is accompanied by major neuroendocrine changes including the activation of the natriuretic peptide (NP) pathway. Using the unique model of patients undergoing implantation of the CARMAT total artificial heart and investigating regional differences in soluble neprilysin (sNEP) in patients with reduced or preserved systolic function, we studied the regulation of the NP pathway in HF.
Venous blood samples from two patients undergoing replacement of the failing ventricles with a total artificial heart were collected before implantation and weekly thereafter until post-operative week 6. The ventricular removal was associated with an immediate drop in circulating NPs, a nearly total disappearance of circulating glycosylated proBNP and furin activity and a marked decrease in sNEP. From post-operative week 1 onwards, NP concentrations remained overall unchanged. In contrast, partial recoveries in glycosylated proBNP, furin activity, and sNEP were observed. Furthermore, while in patients with preserved systolic function (n = 6), sNEP concentrations in the coronary sinus and systemic vessels were similar (all P > 0.05), in patients with reduced left-ventricular systolic function, sNEP concentration, and activity were ∼three-fold higher in coronary sinus compared to systemic vessels (n = 21, all P < 0.0001), while the trans-pulmonary gradient was neutral (n = 5, P = 1.0).
The heart plays a pivotal role as a regulator of the endocrine response in systolic dysfunction, not only by directly releasing NPs but also by contributing to circulating sNEP, which in turn determines the bioavailability of other numerous vasoactive peptides.