Blocking digestive enzymes may reverse shock, stop multiorgan failure
UC San Diego Jacobs School of Engineering, Microcirculation Laboratory |
New research from the University of California, San Diego
published in the Jan. 23 issue ofScience Translational Medicine moves researchers closer to understanding
and developing treatments for shock, sepsis and multiorgan failure.
Collectively, these maladies represent a major unmet medical need: they are the
number one cause of mortality in intensive care units in the United States,
with hundreds of thousands of deaths annually. There is currently no treatment
for these conditions in spite of many clinical trials. Most researchers agree
that organ failure in shock and sepsis involves the intestine -- and that it
arises when the mucosal barrier of the small intestine becomes permeable.
However, the mechanism by which this disrupted membrane is tied to vastly
different kinds of shock, as well as multiorgan failure and death has not been
understood.
In the
case of sepsis (septic shock), for example, some researchers speculate that
bacteria in the intestine and their toxins are responsible for organ failure.
However, interventions against bacteria that are aimed at reducing mortality in
patients undergoing septic shock have been unsuccessful in clinical trials.
Looking
more broadly than bacteria, a team of researchers led by Geert W.
Schmid-Schönbein in the Department of Bioengineering at the UC San Diego Jacobs
School of Engineering has carried out several years of careful analysis of the
events in shock. That research led them to investigate the powerful,
concentrated digestive enzymes in the intestine, the same enzymes that are part
of daily digestion.
These
digestive enzymes need to be restricted to the inside of the small intestine by
the mucosal barrier. Once this barrier is disrupted, which can occur for a
variety of reasons including dramatic loss of blood, physical puncture or
opening (as in shrapnel injury or appendicitis), or degradation by bacterial
toxins, digestive enzymes leak into the wall of the intestine and begin
digesting it, a phenomenon the UC San Diego researchers call
"autodigestion." Once beyond the mucosal barrier of the small
intestine, the UC San Diego researchers believe the digestive enzymes damage
other organs by indiscriminately starting to degrade them, which can lead to
multiorgan failure and death.
The new research, published in the Jan. 23 issue of Science Translational Medicine,
provides novel results linking digestive enzymes to shock, sepsis and
multiorgan failure. In particular, by administering digestive enzyme blockers
directly into the small intestines of rats an hour after the onset of different
types of shock, the researchers led by Schmid-Schönbein reversed the often
fatal conditions, reduced injury to the heart and lungs, and greatly increased
long-term survival of the animals from about 16 percent to 86 percent.
UC San Diego Jacobs School of Engineering,
Microcirculation Laboratory |
·
The animals that received the
digestive enzyme blockers in the lumen of the intestine regained their health
and survived for long periods of time after shock. (Past experimental shock
studies have been limited to relatively short observation periods.)
·
The researchers showed a clear
connection between direct inhibition of pancreatic digestive enzymes after the
onset of three different shock models in rat, reduced organ damage and
long-term survival of the animals. They demonstrated improved survival with
three very different inhibitors of the digestive enzymes.
·
All three of the pancreatic enzyme
inhibitors, when delivered directly into the small intestine, but not when
delivered intravenously, stopped autodigestion brought on by shock. (One of
these enzyme inhibitors is already approved for use in the United States for
other purposes).
·
Blockade of the digestive enzymes was
successful in three widely different forms of shock. The researchers studied
hemorrhagic shock, septic shock and endotoxic shock.
For the
first time, these studies specifically indicate that it is possible to stop
autodigestion by blocking the digestive enzymes in animals with induced shock.
"We saw far less damage to organs, faster recovery of the animals, and a
reduction of mortality in shock," said Research Associate Frank DeLano,
who carried out the studies with Schmid-Schönbein.
Autodigestion
The UC
San Diego bioengineers have described aspects of autodigestion, as well as the
potential for stopping it (and treating shock) by blocking the powerful
digestive enzymes that have breached the intestine barrier, in numerous papers
in the scientific literature.
This
research has the potential to lead to therapies that greatly reduce fatalities,
morbidity, and length of stay in intensive care units in patients undergoing
various forms of shock.
"Organisms
rely on full containment of the digestive enzymes in the small intestine. The
moment the intestinal mucosal barrier is compromised, the digestive enzymes
escape and then we are no longer digesting just our food, but we may be
digesting our organs," said Schmid-Schönbein.
A Phase
2 clinical pilot study is under way to test the efficacy and safety of a new
method of administering an enzyme inhibitor for critically ill patients such as
those with new-onset sepsis and septic shock, post-operative complications, and
new-onset gastrointestinal bleeding.
In
addition, a published clinical report points to successful treatment of a
patient with severe septic shock with digestive enzyme inhibitors delivered
directly into the intestine.
In
shock, there is a major failure of the mucosal barrier in the small intestine.
There may also be other conditions in which the failure of this barrier is less
severe, and digestive enzymes leak more slowly into the blood stream. The
effect on human health of slow leakage of digestive enzymes into the body with
low level of autodigestion remains to be explored, Schmid-Schönbein explained.
Source: University
of California - San Diego
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