Abstract
The extensive use of angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors (ACEIs) as antihypertensive agents and the huge amount of data collected in clinical trials and post-marketing studies has allowed the extending of the indication of ACEIs beyond blood pressure control. Current guidelines recommend ACEIs in symptomatic patients with heart failure with reduced ejection fraction to decrease the risk of heart failure hospitalization, and also in patients after acute myocardial infarction (AMI) with ST-elevation with or without post-AMI ventricular dysfunction. Analyzing the association between the choice of an ACEI after AMI with the risk of mortality and re-infarction, a class effect, rather than the superiority of some agents, has been described. The focus of this review is centered on the role of ACEIs in addition to and beyond blood pressure control. It summarizes clinical evidence on the use of these agents in cardiovascular diseases, with a specific interest in the experience with zofenopril, which presents a peculiar pharmacological profile that may contribute to additional clinical benefits in some identifiable populations of patients. Indeed, the presence of a sulfhydryl group in its structure confers on zofenopril high anti-oxidant and anti-ischemic properties involving the activation of the H2S system, resulting in a cardioprotective effect. The efficacy and safety of zofenopril have been extensively evaluated and proved in the Survival of Myocardial Infarction Long-Term Evaluation (SMILE) program in numerous clinical settings. The pharmacological features and ancillary characteristics of zofenopril with potent cardioprotective effects seem to differentiate it from other ACEIs and to confer further benefits to patients.
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Angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors (ACEIs) are currently recommended for managing arterial hypertension, the progression of chronic renal disease, post-myocardial infarction, congestive heart failure, and type 2 diabetes mellitus. |
In patients with acute or chronic coronary syndrome and heart failure ACEIs appear to provide several benefits beyond blood pressure control. |
Among the various drugs of this class, zofenopril, a lipophilic, sulfhydryl group-containing ACEI, seems to contribute to additional clinical benefits in some identifiable populations of subjects. |
The clinical efficacy and safety of zofenopril has been evaluated in more than 3,600 post-acute myocardial infarction patients with or without left ventricular dysfunction in the four randomized controlled trials of the SMILE program. |
The pharmacological characteristics and ancillary features of zofenopril with potent cardioprotective activity seem to differentiate it from other ACEIs and to confer further benefits to patients. |
Introduction
Given the consolidated clinical experience in the use of therapies blocking the renin-angiotensin system (RAS), angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors (ACEIs) and angiotensin II-receptor blockers (ARBs) have become a first-line strategy for managing arterial hypertension, the progression of chronic renal disease, post-myocardial infarction, congestive heart failure, and type 2 diabetes mellitus [1, 2]. These results have been generated by a large number of randomized clinical trials and observational post-surveillance studies that have demonstrated the clinical efficacy of RAS blockade in daily practice and in patients with presumed RAS activation and without hypertension [2]. The focus of this review is centered on the role of ACEIs beyond blood pressure (BP) control and summarizes the clinical evidence on the use of these agents in patients with different settings of cardiovascular diseases (CVDs). Specific attention is paid to the experience with zofenopril because of its peculiar pharmacological properties, mainly related to the sulfhydryl group present in its molecular structure. This article is based on previously conducted studies and does not contain any studies with human participants or animals performed by any of the authors.
RAS Involvement in CVD
The RAS is one of the main physiological system responsible for homeostatic control of arterial pressure, electrolyte balance, organ perfusion, and extracellular volume. Its modulation has several important effects that mainly involve CVDs and renal disease [3]. The pathway is initiated by renin which cleaves the N-terminal portion of angiotensinogen to form the biologically inactive decapeptide angiotensin I [4]; this inactive peptide is then hydrolyzed by ACE which removes the C-terminal dipeptide in order to form the octapeptide angiotensin II, biologically active as a vasoconstrictor [4]. Angiotensin II is the primary effector of a variety of RAS-induced physiological and pathophysiological actions. It interacts with 4 receptor subtypes expressed in the CV system (vasoconstriction, increased BP, increased cardiac contractility, vascular and cardiac hypertrophy), kidney (renal tubular sodium reabsorption, inhibition of renin release), sympathetic nervous system, and adrenal cortex (stimulation of aldosterone synthesis), as well as in the lung and the gut where it plays a remarkable role in fluid balance and respiratory function [5, 6].
Therefore, a dysregulation of RAS is reported not only in essential hypertension and in the response of CV and renal tissue to hypertensive and non-hypertensive injury but also in many other CV disorders [4]. Angiotensin II is involved in the development of both vascular and cardiac hypertrophy and remodeling, vascular damage, renal damage, and atherosclerosis with a mechanism that is only partially dependent on elevated BP values. [4]. In congestive heart failure (HF), the reduced cardiac function and the renal under-perfusion related to a reduced effective intravascular volume are responsible for renin hypersecretion and secondary aldosteronism, contributing to pulmonary congestion and development of edema. In these patients, angiotensin II increases peripheral vascular resistance (cardiac afterload) and enhances progressive ventricular dysfunction contributing to the progression of heart failure [4].
ACEI and ARB medications both target RAS, and are recommended in the treatment of several types of CVD (Fig. 1). However, the optimal choice between these two groups of medications for the prevention of CVD is not well established [3].
ACEIs prevent the conversion of angiotensin I to angiotensin II by competing with angiotensin I for the active site of ACE. The reduction of angiotensin II formation decreases vasoconstriction and aldosterone secretion and increases plasma renin. As a consequence, ACEIs can lower BP, total peripheral resistance, and sodium and water retention [7]. ACEIs also reduce both preload and afterload through arterial and venous dilation. These hemodynamic effects are particularly beneficial in the presence of left ventricular dysfunction (LVD) [8]. One disadvantage of ACEIs is that the presence of non-ACE pathways results in continued low-level production of angiotensin II, despite the inhibition of ACE. ARBs are selective ligands of AT1 receptors; these drugs achieve their clinical goals bypassing the limitations of ACE escape phenomena and non-ACE sources of angiotensin II formation, despite the increased blood angiotensin II levels due to blockade of AT1-mediated receptor internalization (Fig. 1) [3, 9].
Role of ACEIs in CVD According to Current Guidelines
ACEIs are widely prescribed to manage hypertension, and are recommended in recent guidelines (level of recommendation IA) as the basis of antihypertensive strategies, given their ability to reduce BP and CV events in randomized clinical trials [10]. The potency of ACE inhibition is influenced by the affinity of the drug to the zinc (Zn++) ligand of ACE. There are three distinct chemical classes of ACEIs (Table 1): (1) sulfhydryl containing ACEIs (i.e., captopril, zofenopril) which strongly bind the Zn++ ligand, but disulfide formation limits their half-life; (2) drugs containing a carboxyl group (i.e., enalapril, lisinopril, ramipril) that binds to side chains of the enzyme within the active moiety for improved potency and duration of action; and (3) drugs composed of phosphorus-containing ACEIs (i.e., fosinopril) [11, 12]. Although direct ACEIs comparisons among available agents are rare, a Cochrane review has demonstrated that there are no clinically meaningful differences in BP-lowering efficacy between different ACEIs [13].
ACEIs are the mainstay not only for hypertension management but also for other CVD, including HF, LVD, and acute myocardial infarction (AMI) (Table 2). In HF, ACEIs decrease total peripheral resistance, pulmonary vascular resistance, pulmonary capillary wedge pressure, and mean arterial and right atrial pressures, thus resulting in reduced mortality, regardless of HF severity [7, 8]. In these patients, the use of ACEIs has been shown to increase cardiac index, cardiac output, stroke volume, and exercise tolerance [7]. Many pieces of evidence indicate that BP control delays the onset of HF and, in some cases, contributes to prolonging life, and this also applies to hypertensive patients treated with ACEIs with or without a history of myocardial infarction, especially in older people [14]. As per current guidelines, an ACEI is recommended in addition to a beta-blocker for symptomatic patients with HF with reduced left ventricular ejection fraction (LVEF) to reduce the risk of HF hospitalization and death (recommendation 1A) [15]. A meta-analysis of three randomized trials (SAVE, Survival and Ventricular Enlargement; AIRE, Acute Infarction Ramipril Efficacy; and TRACE, trandolapril in patients with reduced LVD after acute myocardial infarction), including 5966 patients with LVD or HF, have indicated that administration of ACEIs after AMI provides clear benefit and lead to substantial reductions in mortality and morbidity in high-risk patients [16]. Indeed, the proportion of patients readmitted for HF resulted was reduced by 27% with ACEIs [11.9% in the ACEI group vs. 15.5% of the control group; hazard ratio (HR) 0.73 95% CI 0.63–0.85, p < 0.0001], while the combination of death or hospital admission for HF occurred in 30.5% of the ACEI group and 37.0% of the control group [17]. ACEIs are also indicated in patients with asymptomatic LV systolic dysfunction in order to minimize the risk of development of HF, and consequent hospitalization, and death [15].
In patients affected by coronary artery disease (CAD) with preserved systolic ventricular function, the evidence for routine administration has been conflicting. A metanalysis by Al-Mallah et al. reported a modest benefit of ACEIs on the prognosis of patients with CAD associated with preserved LV systolic function [17]. Data from more than 33,000 patients indicated that ACEIs therapy, when added to conventional therapy (aspirin, beta-blockers, and statins), was associated with a decrease in the rate of CV mortality (risk reduction or RR 0.83, 95% CI 0.72–0.96, p = 0.01), nonfatal MI (RR 0.84, 95% CI 0.75–0.94, p = 0.003), all-cause mortality (RR 0.87, 95% CI 0.81–0.94, p = 0.0003), and coronary revascularization (RR 0.93, 95% CI 0.87–1.00, p = 0.04) [17]. Not all trials, however, described an effective advantage in the use of ACEIs in this setting; hence, current guidelines generally do not recommend ACEIs in chronic coronary syndrome patients without HF or high CV risk, unless with coexisting hypertension, LVEF ≤ 40%, diabetes, or chronic kidney disease. In these latter cases, ACEIs should be considered (level of recommendation IIA) [18].
Therapy with ACEIs is also common after AMI. Numerous trials have indicated that mortality and morbidity were reduced when ACEIs were administered in a relatively unselected population of patients in the acute phase of MI (“early”) or in patients with evidence of LVD in the subacute phase after MI (“late”) [19]. In their metanalysis, Franzosi et al. collected data from large randomized trials which evaluated the efficacy and safety of treatments with ACEIs given in the acute phase of MI (0–36 h from the onset of symptoms) and continued for a short period of follow-up (generally 4–6 weeks) [20]. These trials were CONSENSUS-II, GISSI-3, ISIS-3, and CCS-1, and included a total of 98,496 patients. The main conclusions of the analysis were: (1) ACEI treatment can be started immediately during the acute phase of MI, in association with other routinely recommended treatments (such as thrombolytics, aspirin, and beta-blockers); (2) the benefit occurs during the first few days after MI, suggesting a positive role of tissue remodeling; (3) the benefit is proportionally larger in higher-risk subgroups (those with an anterior site MI or high heart rate); and (4) early benefits would be complementary to that observed later in trials of prolonged ACEI therapy initiated several days or weeks after MI in patients with evidence of HF or LVD [20]. Due to the lack of clinical trials that directly compared the efficacy of different ACEIs treatment after AMI, these drugs are generally assumed to be equally effective [21]. Analyzing the association between the choice of an ACEI after MI with the risk for mortality and reinfarction, a class effect was described rather than a superiority of some agents, when drugs were used in comparable dosages, thus suggesting that it would be more important initiating treatment and continuing treatment at the recommended dosage than choosing a particular agent to achieve long-term benefits [21]. Current guidelines recommend ACEIs after AMI with ST-elevation, starting within the first 24 h of ST-elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) in patients with evidence of heart failure, LV systolic dysfunction, diabetes, or an anterior infarct (level of recommendation IA). They should be considered in all patients with AMI unless specifically contraindicated (level of recommendation IIa) [22].
ACEIs are commonly used in patients with diabetes and/or with renal disease. In a systematic review including 36,917 participants (including 2400 deceased, 766 patients who required dialysis, and 1099 patients in which serum creatinine levels doubled), ACEIs showed higher probabilities of reducing all-cause mortality, use of dialysis, or doubling of serum creatinine levels, and demonstrated renoprotective effects [23]. These observations were confirmed even in chronic renal disease progression when ACEIs decreased BP, and urinary protein excretion slowed the increase in serum creatinine and reduced the risk for end-stage renal disease (ESRD), or for the combined outcome of doubling of the baseline serum creatinine concentration or ESRD by approximately 30% [24].
Zofenopril: A Cardioprotective ACEI
Zofenopril is a sulfhydryl ACEI featuring a high lipophilicity, long-lasting tissue penetration, selective cardiac ACEI, potent anti-oxidant activities, and good efficacy after a single daily administration (Table 3) [25]. Starting from 1990, its efficacy and safety have been evaluated in the Survival of Myocardial Infarction Long-Term Evaluation (SMILE) project, a large clinical program aimed at investigating the role of zofenopril in the treatment of AMI in several populations of patients to test the hypothesis that its unique pharmacological profile could provide some benefits beyond ACE inhibition, in terms of CV event prevention (Table 4). The first trial was a pilot study that evaluated the safety of zofenopril administration within 24 h of the onset of AMI symptoms and provided some preliminary data of efficacy in terms of combined occurrence of death, non-fatal CV events, and severe adverse events after a 12-month follow-up [26]. A large clinical trial was then designed to determine the efficacy of 6-week zofenopril administration (15–60 mg twice daily) versus placebo in 1556 patients with MI not receiving thrombolysis and treated within 24 h of the onset of symptoms (SMILE-1). The incidence of death or severe congestive HF at 6 weeks (primary end-point) was significantly reduced in the zofenopril group, with risk reduction by 34% (95% CI 8–54%; p = 0.018). These positive outcomes were maintained after 1 year, observing a risk reduction for death of 29% (95% CI 6–51%; p = 0.011) [27]. Given the large size of population involved in the SMILE trials, many statistically pre-specified and adequately powered post hoc analyses on specific subgroups could be performed, providing evidence on zofenopril effects in older patients, and in patients with arterial hypertension [28], diabetes [29], hypercholesterolemia [30], metabolic syndrome [31], angina, or previous myocardial infarction or NSTEMI [32]. Zofenopril was then directly compared with two ACEIs in randomized clinical trials carried out in patients with coronary artery disease. In the SMILE-2 study, zofenopril was compared to lisinopril in 1024 patients with acute MI undergoing thrombolysis [33], while in the SMILE-4 study, the main comparison was between zofenopril and ramipril in combination with acetylsalicylic acid (ASA) in patients with post-MI left ventricular dysfunction. In the SMILE 2 trial, zofenopril slightly reduced the incidence of severe hypotension versus lisinopril (10.9% vs. 11.7%, p = 0.38), with a significant decrease in the rate of drug-related severe hypotension (6.7% vs. 9.8%, p = 0.048) without a difference in mortality or major CV complications [33]. SMILE-4 investigated whether the benefits of zofenopril or ramipril could be affected by a concomitant ASA administration in patients with LV dysfunction after AMI [34]. The occurrence of death or hospitalization for CV cause was significantly reduced with zofenopril (odds ratio: 0.70; 95% CI: 0.51–0.96; p = 0.028), and this benefit was maintained during 5-year follow-up (Fig. 2) [34, 35]. The same results have been confirmed after a propensity analysis of the population and comparing subpopulations of patients appropriately matched for the main prognostic variables [36]. Finally, the cardioprotective effects of zofenopril were investigated in the SMILE-3 ISCHEMIA trial in 349 patients with preserved LV function after MI. In these patients receiving recommended standard treatment, zofenopril reduced the global burden of myocardial ischemia by decreasing the occurrence of significant ST-T abnormalities on ambulatory electrocardiography (ECG), ECG abnormalities or symptoms of angina during the standard exercise test, MI recurrence and the need for revascularization procedures, in comparison to placebo (20.3% vs. 35.9%, p = 0.01) (Fig. 3) [37]. The results were not affected by demography, BP control, and concomitant pharmacological treatment, and supported some primary cardioprotective effect of zofenopril. More recently, the results of the SMILE-ischemia study were corroborated by a post hoc analysis of SMILE 4, stratifying patients by LVEF measured at baseline, and showing a reduction in 1 year and long-term mortality and hospitalization in post-MI with preserved LV function (Fig. 4) [38]. The cardioprotective properties of zofenopril were confirmed in a pooled analysis of the four SMILE studies [39] (Fig. 5).
The Rationale of the Cardioprotective Properties of Zofenopril
Zofenopril-mediated cardioprotection during ischemia/reperfusion seems to be associated with an increased H2S and nitric oxide (NO) signaling. Hydrogen sulfide is a cytoprotective physiological signaling molecule acting in concert with NO and carbon monoxide in order to maintain physiological homeostasis in both the heart and circulation. Experimental evidence indicates that H2S donors, such as zofenopril, can attenuate the pathological consequences of myocardial ischemia/reperfusion injury and HF, reducing oxidative stress and inflammation and inhibiting apoptosis [40]. In experimental models, indeed, zofenopril preconditioning enhanced tissue antioxidant defense, thus preventing reactive oxygen species formation, following an ischemic injury during reperfusion. Furthermore, treatment with zofenopril upregulated the expression of antioxidant enzymes, such as Trx-1, GPx-1, and SOD-1, suggesting an enhancement in antioxidant defenses before ischemia that mitigate myocardial reperfusion injury [41]. As summarized in Fig. 6, the enhanced H2S signaling, alongside the inhibition of angiotensin II formation and bradykinin metabolism, could represent a further explanation of additional beneficial effects provided by zofenopril [40]. In addition, ex vivo animal studies indicated that, at the heart level, where ACE inhibition may prevent ischemic damage, zofenopril produced a more striking and long-lasting ACE inhibition than ramipril and enalapril, and, to a lesser extent, than captopril and fosinopril; 60% of ACE inhibition could persist in the heart at least 8 h after administration, while it was much lower with other ACEIs [41]. Conversely, in the lung, zofenopril showed a lower potency in both inhibiting ACE and reducing bradykinin metabolism [41]; bradykinin accumulation in the airways with zofenopril is lower than that observed with other ACEIs, and this may partially explain the relatively low risk of coughing observed with zofenopril (Fig. 7) [42]. Indeed, a meta-analysis including hypertensive and post-myocardial infarction patients indicated that zofenopril-induced cough was generally of a mild to moderate intensity, occurred significantly (p = 0.001) more frequently in the first 3–6 months of treatment (3.0% vs. 0.2% 9–12 months), and always resolved or improved upon therapy discontinuation [39].
Conclusions
The pharmacological features of zofenopril provide cardioprotective, anti-ischemic, and anti-oxidant effects that differentiate it from other ACEIs. Zofenopril was evaluated as an early treatment after AMI, showing both short- and long-term benefits, and it has been confirmed as a feasible and effective therapy in many subgroups of patients with CV and metabolic comorbidities. Therefore, as well as other ACEIs, zofenopril is recommended for the management of CVD, including HF, AMI, and LVD, beyond BP control. As per current guidelines, ACEIs are recommended in symptomatic patients with HF with reduced LVEF to reduce the risk of HF hospitalization and in patients after AMI with ST-elevation. Since the effect in reducing the risk of mortality and reinfarction is not specifically associated with a single agent, and is rather described as a class effect, the choice of ACEI therapy can be addressed by the ancillary characteristics of each agent that may confer further benefits to patients.
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Sponsorship for the SMILE programme and open access fee were funded by Menarini International Operations Luxembourg S.A. No Rapid Service Fee was received by the journal for the publication of this article. The funding source did not influence or commented on planned methods, protocol, data analysis and the paper. All authors had full access to all of the data in this study and take complete responsibility for the integrity of the data and accuracy of the data analysis.
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Conflict of interest of Prof Claudio Borghi: consultancy for Boheringer Ingelheim, Menarini International, Sanofi, Amgen, Takeda, Novartis, Ely Lilly and Servier. Stefano Omboni has nothing to disclose.
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This article is based on previously conducted studies and does not contain any studies with human participants or animals performed by any of the authors.
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Borghi, C., Omboni, S. Angiotensin-Converting Enzyme Inhibition: Beyond Blood Pressure Control—The Role of Zofenopril. Adv Ther 37, 4068–4085 (2020). https://doi.org/10.1007/s12325-020-01455-2
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s12325-020-01455-2