The safety and efficacy of adding bosentan to sildenafil in pulmonary arterial hypertension (PAH) patients was investigated.In this prospective, double-blind, event-driven trial, symptomatic PAH patients receiving stable sildenafil (⩾20 mg three times daily) for ⩾3 months were randomised (1:1) to placebo or bosentan (125 mg twice daily). The composite primary end-point was the time to the first morbidity/mortality event, defined as all-cause death, hospitalisation for PAH worsening or intravenous prostanoid initiation, atrial septostomy, lung transplant, or PAH worsening. Secondary/exploratory end-points included change in 6-min walk distance and World Health Organization functional class at 16 weeks, change in N-terminal pro-brain natriuretic peptide (NT-proBNP) over time, and all-cause death.Overall, 334 PAH patients were randomised to placebo (n=175) or bosentan (n=159). A primary endpoint event occurred in 51.4% of patients randomised to placebo and 42.8% to bosentan (hazard ratio 0.83, 97.31% CI 0.58-1.19; p=0.2508). The mean between-treatment difference in 6-min walk distance at 16 weeks was +21.8 m (95% CI +5.9-37.8 m; p=0.0106). Except for NT-proBNP, no difference was observed for any other end-point. The safety profile of bosentan added to sildenafil was consistent with the known bosentan safety profile.In COMPASS-2, adding bosentan to stable sildenafil therapy was not superior to sildenafil monotherapy in delaying the time to the first morbidity/mortality event. @ERSpublications COMPASS-2: adding bosentan was not superior to sildenafil alone in delaying time to first morbidity/mortality event http://ow.ly/NiM65
The molecular analysis of serum is an important field for the definition of potential diagnostic markers or disease-related protein alterations. Novel proteomic technologies such as the mass spectrometric-based surface-enhanced laser desorption/ionization (SELDI) ProteinChip s technique facilitate a rapid and reproducible analysis of such protein mixtures and affords the researcher a new dimension in the search for biomarkers of disease. Here, we have applied this technology to the study of a cohort of serum samples from wellcharacterized renal cell carcinoma patients for the identification of such proteins by comparison to healthy controls. We detected and characterized haptoglobin 1 a and serum amyloid a-1 (SAA-1) as disease related, in addition to an as-yet-unidentified marker of 10.84 kDa. Of particular note is the detection of multiple variants of SAA-1 in multiplex that have not been described in the sera of cancer patients. SAA-1 is detected as full-length protein, des-Arginine and des-Arginine/des-Serine variants at the N terminus by SELDI. In addition, we could also detect a low-abundant variant minus the first five N-terminal amino acids. Such variants may impact the function of the protein. We conclude the technique to be a reproducible, fast and simple mode for the discovery and analysis of marker proteins of disease in serum.
The protein pattern of healthy human eccrine sweat was investigated and 10 major proteins were detected from which apolipoprotein D, lipophilin B, and cathepsin D (CatD) were identified for the first time in human eccrine sweat. We focused our studies on the function of the aspartate protease CatD in sweat. In vitro digestion experiments using a specific fluorescent CatD substrate showed that CatD is enzymatically active in human sweat. To identify potential substrates of CatD in human eccrine sweat LL-37 and DCD-1L, two antimicrobial peptides present in sweat, were digested in vitro with purified CatD. LL-37 was not significantly digested by CatD, whereas DCD-1L was cleaved between Leu 44 and Asp 45 and between Leu 29 and Glu 30 almost completely. The DCD-1L-derived peptides generated in vitro by CatD were also found in vivo in human sweat as determined by surface-enhanced laser desorption/ionization (SELDI) mass spectrometry. Furthermore, besides the CatD-processed peptides we identified additionally DCD-1L-derived peptides that are generated upon cleavage with a 1,10-phenanthroline-sensitive carboxypeptidase and an endoprotease. Taken together, proteolytic processing generates 12 DCD-1L-derived peptides. To elucidate the functional significance of postsecretory processing the antimicrobial activity of three CatDprocessed DCD-1L peptides was tested. Whereas two of these peptides showed no activity against Gram-positive and Gram-negative bacteria, one DCD-1L-derived peptide showed an even higher activity against Escherichia coli than DCD-1L. Functional analysis indicated that proteolytic processing of DCD-1L by CatD in human sweat modulates the innate immune defense of human skin.
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