%0 Journal Article %A A C Morton %A C Foley %A A Rothman %A J Gunn %A J P Greenwood %A A Hall %A K Fox %A B Lees %A M Flather %A D Crossman %T 15 Investigation of IL-1 inhibition in patients presenting with non-ST elevation myocardial infarction acute coronary syndromes (the MRC ILA Heart Study) %D 2011 %R 10.1136/heartjnl-2011-300198.15 %J Heart %P A13-A13 %V 97 %N Suppl 1 %X Background Inflammatory mechanisms are involved in both coronary atherogenesis and its presentation as acute coronary syndromes (ACS). To date, drugs used at the time of ACS, or for primary and secondary prevention have not primarily targeted inflammatory mechanisms. Studies with aspirin and statin drugs indicate that anti-inflammatory properties of these compounds may contribute to their beneficial effects. Pre-clinical studies from our group have indicated that the pro-inflammatory cytokine IL-1 drives a number of vascular events relevant to coronary artery disease and ACS. IL-1 can be inhibited by IL-1 receptor antagonist (IL-1ra, Anakinra, Amgen) which is licensed for the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis.Aims To investigate the effects of interleukin-1 receptor antagonist (IL-1ra) on inflammatory biomarkers in patients with ACS <48 h from symptom onset, and to evaluate the safety and tolerability of treatment.Design and methods The UK MRC ILA-HEART study is an investigator-initiated, non-industry sponsored, phase 2, multi-centre, placebo-controlled trial, comparing the IL-1ra (100 mg) with matching placebo given as a single, daily subcutaneous injection over 2 weeks. The primary outcome of the study was area under the curve (AUC) of high sensitivity CRP (hs-CRP) over the first 7 days of treatment, and the main secondary outcomes are AUC of troponin and safety and compliance of trial treatment. Patients were encouraged to self-administer trial treatment, and underwent daily assessment of hs-CRP, troponin, von Willebrand factor and other biomarkers up to 7 days, and again at 2 weeks and 30 days. Patients were followed up to 12 months for safety (Abstract 15 table 1).View this table:Abstract 15 Table 1 Log transformed values for the primary and secondary outcomesResults Five UK centres randomised 182 patients with non-ST elevation (NSTEMI) ACS to IL-1ra or placebo. Enrolment completed in March 2010. Mean age was 61 years, 32% female, 28% prior MI, 15% diabetes, 90% were receiving a statin at the time of randomisation and 64% had early PCI or CABG. Compliance was good with 85% of patients receiving daily injections during the first 7 days, and 70% of patients were able to self-administer the injections. Injection site reactions reported as adverse events occurred in 14% of patients. There was no significant difference in area under the curve for hsCRP between active and placebo groups. The MACE and serious adverse event rates are shown in Abstract 15 table 2.View this table:Abstract 15 Table 2 MACE and other SAEDiscussion NSTEMI ACS treated with all the current evidenced-based therapies still has significant recurrent events. MRC ILA-HEART is the first study to evaluate the effects of the anti-inflammatory IL-1ra in ACS. The data indicates that despite encouraging pre-clinical evidence, the inflammatory driver for NSTEMI-ACS is not IL-1 mediated. %U https://heart.bmj.com/content/heartjnl/97/Suppl_1/A13.1.full.pdf