Journal article
Haptoglobin Treatment for Aneurysmal Subarachnoid Hemorrhage: Review and Expert Consensus on Clinical Translation
Stroke, Vol.54(7), pp.1930-1942
2023
DOI: 10.1161/strokeaha.123.040205
PMCID: PMC10289236
PMID: 37232189
Abstract
Aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (aSAH) is a devastating form of stroke frequently affecting young to middle-aged adults, with an unmet need to improve outcome. This special report focusses on the development of intrathecal haptoglobin supplementation as a treatment by reviewing current knowledge and progress, arriving at a Delphi-based global consensus regarding the pathophysiological role of extracellular hemoglobin and research priorities for clinical translation of hemoglobin-scavenging therapeutics. After aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage, erythrocyte lysis generates cell-free hemoglobin in the cerebrospinal fluid, which is a strong determinant of secondary brain injury and long-term clinical outcome. Haptoglobin is the body’s first-line defense against cell-free hemoglobin by binding it irreversibly, preventing translocation of hemoglobin into the brain parenchyma and nitric oxide-sensitive functional compartments of cerebral arteries. In mouse and sheep models, intraventricular administration of haptoglobin reversed hemoglobin-induced clinical, histological, and biochemical features of human aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage. Clinical translation of this strategy imposes unique challenges set by the novel mode of action and the anticipated need for intrathecal drug administration, necessitating early input from stakeholders. Practising clinicians (n=72) and scientific experts (n=28) from 5 continents participated in the Delphi study. Inflammation, microvascular spasm, initial intracranial pressure increase, and disruption of nitric oxide signaling were deemed the most important pathophysiological pathways determining outcome. Cell-free hemoglobin was thought to play an important role mostly in pathways related to iron toxicity, oxidative stress, nitric oxide, and inflammation. While useful, there was consensus that further preclinical work was not a priority, with most believing the field was ready for an early phase trial. The highest research priorities were related to confirming haptoglobin’s anticipated safety, individualized versus standard dosing, timing of treatment, pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics, and outcome measure selection. These results highlight the need for early phase trials of intracranial haptoglobin for aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage, and the value of early input from clinical disciplines on a global scale during the early stages of clinical translation.
Details
- Title: Subtitle
- Haptoglobin Treatment for Aneurysmal Subarachnoid Hemorrhage: Review and Expert Consensus on Clinical Translation
- Creators
- Ian Galea - University of SouthamptonDavid HasanEdgar A. SamaniegoSoham Bandyopadhyay - University of SouthamptonDiederik Bulters - University Hospital Southampton NHS Foundation TrustRok Humar - University of ZurichMichael Hugelshofer - University of ZurichDominik J. Schaer - University of ZurichAmr AbdulazimAndrew F. AlaladeSheila A. AlexanderSergi AmaroSepideh Amin-HanjaniChristopher R. AndersenCraig AndersonMatthew H. AnsteyJózsef BallaNourou Dine Adeniran BankoleJudith BellapartHemant BhagatSpiros L. BlackburnMarkus BrechmannPaul W. BuehlerJan-Karl BurkhardtYujie ChenJeremy CohenP. David CooperLiam G. CoulthardElisa Cuadrado-GodiaJoan DaltonAnthony DelaneySylvain DoréJonathan DownerJustin DyeIsabel Fernandez-PerezOliver FlowerBéla FülesdiBen GaastraThomas GaberelJames GaleaGbetoho Fortuné GankpePatrick GarlandThomas GentinettaMagnus GramJonas Heilskov GraversenPatrick J. GroverDaniel Guisado-AlonsoAdel HelmyJulius HöhneIsabel Charlotte HostettlerAjay Prasad HrishiKoji IiharaDavid C. IrwinKiran JangraAruma Jiménez-O’ShanahanRichard F. KeepMatthew KochMiikka KorjaMunish KumarLaura LlullJames JM LoanMiguel Ángel Lopez-GonzalezR. Loch MacdonaldShalvi MahajanJoan Martí-FàbregasJose Medina-SuárezSoren MoestrupJohn MoreEghosa MorganRadhakrishnan MuthuchellappanPaul NyquistCoralia Sosa PérezPromod PillaiNikolaus PlesnilaJose Javier ProvencioEamon RaithAnna Ramos-PachónScott B. RaymondLuca RegliYnte Marije RuigrokPoonam SaharanGerrit Alexander SchubertIan SeppeltKamath SriganeshJose I. SuarezJonathon TaylorNicole A. TerpolilliFernando D. TestaiEmanuela TolosanoAhmed K. TomaAnderson Chun On TsangAndrew A. UdyFlorence VallelianMariana Vargas-CaballeroGregory M VercellottiMervyn D.I. VergouwenMichaela WaakHannah WarmingPeter C. WhitfieldGeorge Kwok-chu WongJason WrightAdrian W. ZuercherSAH Delphi Group
- Resource Type
- Journal article
- Publication Details
- Stroke, Vol.54(7), pp.1930-1942
- DOI
- 10.1161/strokeaha.123.040205
- PMID
- 37232189
- PMCID
- PMC10289236
- NLM abbreviation
- Stroke
- ISSN
- 0039-2499
- Publisher
- American Heart Association
- Language
- English
- Date published
- 2023
- Academic Unit
- Neurology; Radiology; Iowa Neuroscience Institute; Neurosurgery
- Record Identifier
- 9984530381402771
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