IMproving Preclinical Assessment of Cardioprotective Therapies (IMPACT): a small animal acute myocardial infarction randomized-controlled multicenter study on the effect of ischemic preconditioning

Sauri Hernandez-Resendiz, Reinis Vilšķērsts, David Aluja, Ioanna Andreadou, Péter Bencsik, Maija Dambrova, Panagiotis Efentakis, Fei Gao, Zoltán Giricz, Javier Inserte, Roisin Kelly-Laubscher, Attila Kiss, Thomas Krieg, Brenda R Kwak, Sandrine Lecour, Gary Lopaschuk, Michał Mączewski, Michał Waszkiewicz, Marta Oknińska, Pasquale PagliaroBruno Podesser, Hiran A Prag, Marisol Ruiz-Meana, Tamara Szabados, Coert J Zuurbier, Péter Ferdinandy (Corresponding Author), Derek J Hausenloy (Corresponding Author)

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Although many cardioprotective interventions have been shown to limit infarct size (IS), in preclinical animal studies of acute myocardial ischemia/reperfusion injury (IRI), their clinical translation to patient benefit has been largely disappointing. A major factor is the lack of rigor and reproducibility in the preclinical studies. To address this, we have established the IMproving Preclinical Assessment of Cardioprotective Therapies (IMPACT) small animal multisite acute myocardial infarction (AMI) network, with centralized randomization and blinded core laboratory IS analysis, and have validated the network using ischemic preconditioning (IPC). Eight sites from the COST Innovators Grant (IG16225) network participated in the IMPACT AMI study. Mice and rats were randomly allocated into Sham, Control, or IPC groups. The IRI group underwent 45 min (mice) or 30 min (rats) of left coronary artery occlusion followed by 24 h reperfusion. IPC comprised three cycles of 5 min occlusion/reperfusion before IRI. IS was determined by a blinded core lab. The majority of site showed significant cardioprotection with IPC. In pooled mouse data, IPC (N = 42) reduced IS/AAR by 35% compared to control (N = 48) (30 ± 16% versus 46 ± 13%; p < 0.005), and in rat data, IPC (N = 36) reduced IS/AAR by 29% when compared to control (N = 39) (32 ± 19% versus 45 ± 14%; p < 0.01). The IMPACT multisite mouse and rat AMI networks, with centralized randomization and blinded core IS analysis, were established to improve the reproducibility of cardioprotective interventions in preclinical studies and to facilitate the translation of these therapies for patient benefit.

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere0142021
Pages (from-to)335-346
JournalBasic Research in Cardiology
Volume120
Issue number2
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Apr 2025

Keywords*

  • Acute myocardial infarction
  • Ischemia/reperfusion injury
  • Ischemic preconditioning
  • Multisite network
  • Randomized controlled trial
  • Small animal models

Field of Science*

  • 3.1 Basic medicine

Publication Type*

  • 1.1. Scientific article indexed in Web of Science and/or Scopus database

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