Publications by authors named "M C Althage"

Article Synopsis
  • Heart failure remains a serious issue despite advances in treatment, prompting research into AZD3427, a new medication that mimics a hormone called relaxin, known for its blood vessel-relaxing properties.
  • This study involved healthy individuals and heart failure patients to evaluate the safety and how the body processes AZD3427, finding it well-tolerated with slow absorption and a long half-life.
  • Results indicated potential benefits for heart failure patients, including improved blood flow and kidney function, supporting further exploration of AZD3427 as a long-term treatment option.
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Optimization of the highly potent and selective, yet metabolically unstable and poorly soluble hRXFP1 agonist AZ7976 led to the identification of the clinical candidate, AZD5462. Assessment of RXFP1-dependent cell signaling demonstrated that AZD5462 activates a highly similar panel of downstream pathways as relaxin H2 but does not modulate relaxin H2-mediated cAMP second messenger responsiveness. The therapeutic potential of AZD5462 was assessed in a translatable cynomolgus monkey heart failure model.

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Relaxin H2 is a clinically relevant peptide agonist for relaxin family peptide receptor 1 (RXFP1), but a combination of this hormone's short plasma half-life and the need for injectable delivery limits its therapeutic potential. We sought to overcome these limitations through the development of a potent small molecule (SM) RXFP1 agonist. Although two large SM HTS campaigns failed in identifying suitable hit series, we uncovered novel chemical space starting from the only known SM RXFP1 agonist series, represented by ML290.

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Background: Developing and implementing new patient-centric strategies for drug trials lowers the barrier to participation for some patients by reducing the need to travel to research sites. In early chronic kidney disease (CKD) trials, albuminuria is the key measure for determining treatment effect prior to pivotal kidney outcome trials.

Methods: To facilitate albuminuria sample collection outside of a clinical research site, we developed 2 quantitative microsampling methods to determine the urinary albumin to creatinine ratio (UACR).

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Background: Sodium-glucose co-transporter 2 inhibitors (SGLT2is) are part of the standard of care for patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD), both with and without type 2 diabetes. Endothelin A (ETA) receptor antagonists have also been shown to slow progression of CKD. Differing mechanisms of action of SGLT2 and ETA receptor antagonists may enhance efficacy.

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