» Articles » PMID: 31840498

Cardiovascular Toxicity Induced by Kinase Inhibitors: Mechanisms and Preclinical Approaches

Overview
Specialty Toxicology
Date 2019 Dec 17
PMID 31840498
Citations 27
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Kinase inhibitors have transformed the treatment of many cancers and are showing the same promise for other indications including inflammatory diseases. This class of drugs is one of the most predominant in the pharmaceutical industry, but development and clinical utility is often limited by a broad spectrum of cardiovascular (CV) toxicities including QT prolongation and arrhythmia, left ventricular dysfunction, congestive heart failure, ischemia and myocardial infarction, and hypertension. In this review article, we provide a broad overview of the spectrum of CV events detected in clinical trials of kinase inhibitors and the known and proposed on- and off-target links between kinase inhibitor targets and these specific cardiotoxicities. We also examine the unique features of kinase inhibitors that have impeded complete mechanistic understanding of kinase inhibitor-associated cardiotoxicities and contributed to the disconnect between preclinical predictions and clinical findings. We then discuss various models currently in use that are amenable for high-throughput screening as well as lower throughput models that are valuable for mechanistic insight. These physiologically relevant models, together with newer "omic"-wide approaches will help to increase our understanding of the mechanisms underlying kinase inhibitor-associated cardiotoxicity and enable rational design of kinase inhibitors in the future.

Citing Articles

Matters of the Heart: Cardiotoxicity Related to Target Therapy in Oncogene-Addicted Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer.

Torresan S, Bortolot M, De Carlo E, Bertoli E, Stanzione B, Del Conte A Int J Mol Sci. 2025; 26(2).

PMID: 39859270 PMC: 11765312. DOI: 10.3390/ijms26020554.


Imatinib‑ and ponatinib‑mediated cardiotoxicity in zebrafish embryos and H9c2 cardiomyoblasts.

Zakaria Z, Suleiman M, Benslimane F, Al-Badr M, Sivaraman S, Korashy H Mol Med Rep. 2024; 30(4).

PMID: 39219269 PMC: 11350628. DOI: 10.3892/mmr.2024.13311.


Cardiovascular Toxicity in Cancer Therapy: Protecting the Heart while Combating Cancer.

Manhas A, Tripathi D, Thomas D, Sayed N Curr Cardiol Rep. 2024; 26(9):953-971.

PMID: 39042344 DOI: 10.1007/s11886-024-02099-2.


Anti-rheumatic property and physiological safety of KMU-11342 in in vitro and in vivo models.

Baek H, Hong V, Kang H, Lee S, Lee J, Kang H Inflamm Res. 2024; 73(8):1371-1391.

PMID: 38879731 PMC: 11281989. DOI: 10.1007/s00011-024-01904-6.


Discovery of Sovleplenib, a Selective Inhibitor of Syk in Clinical Development for Autoimmune Diseases and Cancers.

Jia H, Deng W, Hao B, Cai M, Guo D, Cai Y ACS Med Chem Lett. 2024; 15(5):595-601.

PMID: 38746892 PMC: 11089545. DOI: 10.1021/acsmedchemlett.3c00553.