PetCaseFinder

Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Elamipretide treatment improves heart function in dogs with heart

By Sabbah, Hani N et al.·Published in Circulation. Heart failure·2016·From the Department of Medicine·View original on PubMed

PetCaseFinder translated the abstract of this peer-reviewed paper into plain English so pet owners can read it. We do not publish original research — every detail traces back to the citation above. How we work →

Original publication title: Chronic Therapy With Elamipretide (MTP-131), a Novel Mitochondria-Targeting Peptide, Improves Left Ventricular and Mitochondrial Function in Dogs With Advanced Heart Failure.

Species:
dog

Plain-English summary

A group of 14 dogs with advanced heart failure received either a new treatment called elamipretide or a placebo for three months. The dogs treated with elamipretide showed significant improvement in heart function, with their heart's ability to pump blood increasing from 30% to 36%. In contrast, the dogs that received the placebo experienced a decline in heart function. Additionally, elamipretide helped lower harmful substances in the blood and improved energy production in heart cells. This promising treatment could be beneficial for dogs suffering from heart failure.

People also search for: dog heart failure treatment · elamipretide for dogs · improving dog heart function · heart medication for dogs

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Elamipretide (MTP-131), a novel mitochondria-targeting peptide, was shown to reduce infarct size in animals with myocardial infarction and improve renal function in pigs with acute and chronic kidney injury. This study examined the effects of chronic therapy with elamipretide on left ventricular (LV) and mitochondrial function in dogs with heart failure (HF). METHODS AND RESULTS: Fourteen dogs with microembolization-induced HF were randomized to 3 months monotherapy with subcutaneous injections of elamipretide (0.5 mg/kg once daily, HF+ELA, n=7) or saline (control, HF-CON, n=7). LV ejection fraction, plasma n-terminal pro-brain natriuretic peptide, tumor necrosis factor-&#x3b1;, and C-reactive protein were measured before (pretreatment) and 3 months after initiating therapy (post-treatment). Mitochondrial respiration, membrane potential (&#x394;&#x3c8;m), maximum rate of ATP synthesis, and ATP/ADP ratio were measured in isolated LV cardiomyocytes obtained at post-treatment. In HF-CON dogs, ejection fraction decreased at post-treatment compared with pretreatment (29 &#xb1; 1% versus 31 &#xb1; 2%), whereas in HF+ELA dogs, ejection fraction significantly increased at post-treatment compared with pretreatment (36 &#xb1; 2% versus 30 &#xb1; 2%; P<0.05). In HF-CON, n-terminal pro-brain natriuretic peptide increased by 88 &#xb1; 120 pg/mL during follow-up but decreased significantly by 774 &#xb1; 85 pg/mL in HF+ELA dogs (P<0.001). Treatment with elamipretide also normalized plasma tumor necrosis factor-&#x3b1; and C-reactive protein and restored mitochondrial state-3 respiration, &#x394;&#x3c8;m, rate of ATP synthesis, and ATP/ADP ratio (ATP/ADP: 0.38 &#xb1; 0.04 HF-CON versus 1.16 &#xb1; 0.15 HF+ELA; P<0.001). CONCLUSIONS: Long-term therapy with elamipretide improves LV systolic function, normalizes plasma biomarkers, and reverses mitochondrial abnormalities in LV myocardium of dogs with advanced HF. The results support the development of elamipretide for the treatment of HF.

Find similar cases for your pet

PetCaseFinder finds other peer-reviewed reports of pets with the same symptoms, plus a plain-English summary of what was tried across them.

Search related cases →

Original publication on PubMed: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/26839394/