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Prenatal treprostinil reduces the pulmonary hypertension phenotype in the rat model of congenital diaphragmatic hernia.

Publication ,  Journal Article
De Bie, FR; Halline, CG; Kotzur, T; Hayes, K; Rouse, CC; Chang, J; Larson, AC; Khan, SA; Spina, A; Tilden, S; Russo, FM; Hedrick, HL ...
Published in: EBioMedicine
July 2022

Persistent pulmonary hypertension (PH) causes significant mortality and morbidity in infants with congenital diaphragmatic hernia (CDH). Since pulmonary vascular abnormalities in CDH develop early during foetal development, we hypothesized that prenatal maternal administration of treprostinil, through its anti-remodelling effect, would improve the PH-phenotype in the nitrofen rat model of CDH.In a dose-finding study in normal, healthy pregnant rats, we demonstrated target-range foetal plasma treprostinil concentrations without signs of toxicity. Next, an efficacy study was performed assessing the effects of treprostinil administration at 900 and 1500ng/kg/min from gestational day (GD) 16 until term (GD 21) in CDH and control pups. Pulmonary vascular and airway morphometry, lung mechanics, and expression patterns of genes implicated in the prostaglandin vasoactive pathway were studied.In rats maternal administration of 1500ng/kg/min treprostinil reached target foetal concentrations, with no detrimental maternal or foetal side-effects. Prenatal exposure to 900 and 1500 ng/kg/min treprostinil reduced the medial wall thickness (%MWT) (CDH·900, 38.5± 8·4%; CDH.1500, 40·2±9·7%; CDH, 46·6±8·2%; both p < 0·0001) in rat pups with CDH, however increased the %MWT in normal foetuses (C.T.900, 36·6±11·1%; C.T.1500, 36·9±9·3%; C.P., 26·9±6·2%; both p < 0·001). Pulmonary airway development, lung hypoplasia and pulmonary function were unaffected by drug exposure.In pregnant rats maternally administered treprostinil crosses the placenta, attains foetal target concentrations, and is well tolerated by both mother and foetuses. This report shows a significant reduction of pulmonary arteriole muscularization with prenatal treprostinil in a nitrofen rat model, supporting the promise of this treatment approach for PH of CDH.United Therapeutics Corporation provided treprostinil and financial support (ISS-2020-10879).

Duke Scholars

Published In

EBioMedicine

DOI

EISSN

2352-3964

ISSN

2352-3964

Publication Date

July 2022

Volume

81

Start / End Page

104106

Related Subject Headings

  • Rats
  • Pregnancy
  • Phenotype
  • Lung Diseases
  • Lung
  • Hypertension, Pulmonary
  • Hernias, Diaphragmatic, Congenital
  • Female
  • Epoprostenol
  • Disease Models, Animal
 

Citation

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De Bie, F. R., Halline, C. G., Kotzur, T., Hayes, K., Rouse, C. C., Chang, J., … Partridge, E. A. (2022). Prenatal treprostinil reduces the pulmonary hypertension phenotype in the rat model of congenital diaphragmatic hernia. EBioMedicine, 81, 104106. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ebiom.2022.104106
De Bie, Felix Rafael, Christopher Gates Halline, Travis Kotzur, Kevin Hayes, Christopher Copeland Rouse, Jonathan Chang, Abby Christine Larson, et al. “Prenatal treprostinil reduces the pulmonary hypertension phenotype in the rat model of congenital diaphragmatic hernia.EBioMedicine 81 (July 2022): 104106. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ebiom.2022.104106.
De Bie FR, Halline CG, Kotzur T, Hayes K, Rouse CC, Chang J, et al. Prenatal treprostinil reduces the pulmonary hypertension phenotype in the rat model of congenital diaphragmatic hernia. EBioMedicine. 2022 Jul;81:104106.
De Bie, Felix Rafael, et al. “Prenatal treprostinil reduces the pulmonary hypertension phenotype in the rat model of congenital diaphragmatic hernia.EBioMedicine, vol. 81, July 2022, p. 104106. Epmc, doi:10.1016/j.ebiom.2022.104106.
De Bie FR, Halline CG, Kotzur T, Hayes K, Rouse CC, Chang J, Larson AC, Khan SA, Spina A, Tilden S, Russo FM, Hedrick HL, Deprest J, Partridge EA. Prenatal treprostinil reduces the pulmonary hypertension phenotype in the rat model of congenital diaphragmatic hernia. EBioMedicine. 2022 Jul;81:104106.
Journal cover image

Published In

EBioMedicine

DOI

EISSN

2352-3964

ISSN

2352-3964

Publication Date

July 2022

Volume

81

Start / End Page

104106

Related Subject Headings

  • Rats
  • Pregnancy
  • Phenotype
  • Lung Diseases
  • Lung
  • Hypertension, Pulmonary
  • Hernias, Diaphragmatic, Congenital
  • Female
  • Epoprostenol
  • Disease Models, Animal