Abstract: |
Neointimal hyperplasia is a critical component of restenosis, a major complication of angioplasty and related therapeutic procedures. We studied the effects of hyperlipidemia and the nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, aspirin (acetyl-salicylic acid; ASA), and sulindac, on neointimal formation in a mouse femoral arterial injury model. At 2 months of age, normolipidemic, wild-type (WT), and hyperlipidemic, apolipoprotein E-deficient (apoE-/-) mice were divided into three treatment groups: Western-type diet (WD), WD + ASA (200 mg/kg food), and WD + sulindac (300 mg/kg food). After 1 week, mice underwent arterial injury and treatments were maintained for 4 weeks. Histomorphometry of the injured arteries showed striking effects of plasma cholesterol levels and drug treatment on neointimal hyperplasia. In the WD or WD + ASA groups, apoE-/- mice had twice the neointimal area than WT mice (≃30,000 vs. 13,000 μm2 per section; P < 0.0001). Compared with ASA or WD alone, sulindac treatment resulted in ≃70% (P = 0.0001) and 50% (P = 0.01) reductions in the neointimal area in apoE-/- and WT mice, respectively. ASA, at a dose sufficient to inhibit platelet aggregation, did not affect neointimal formation in mice of either genotype. Evidence of macrophages was noted in the lesions of apoE-/- mice in the WD and WD + ASA groups, but remarkably, none was detectable with sulindac treatment, despite hyperlipidemia, suggesting early steps in the response to injury were abrogated. These results demonstrate sulindac reduces neo-intimal formation in both normolipidemic and hyperlipidemic settings and raise the possibility that similar benefits may be obtained in patients undergoing angioplasty and related procedures. |