Background: Ischemic heart disease is the leading cause of mortality and human suffering globally. It often leaves patients with residual symptomatic burden despite current optimized procedural and medical options. Sotagliflozin, a dual SGLT1/2 (sodium-glucose cotransporter 1 and 2) inhibitor, has emerged for its clinically evident ischemic cardiovascular benefits. We hypothesize that sotagliflozin treatment exerts direct myocardial benefits in ischemic heart disease, independent of comorbid conditions.
Methods: Yorkshire swine (n=22) underwent placement of an ameroid constrictor around the left circumflex coronary artery. Following a 2-week period in which the ameroid gradually closes, swine (n=18) were randomized to receive either 400 mg daily sotagliflozin (n=8) or no drug (n=10) for 5 weeks. Afterwards, swine underwent terminal harvest to acquire cardiac functional data with pressure-volume loops, myocardial perfusion by microsphere injection, and ventricular sectioning. To investigate the cellular and tissue-level impact of therapy, histology, immunoblotting, and high-throughput techniques were performed.
Results: Sotagliflozin swine had improved ejection fraction, cardiac output, and stroke work compared with no drug (P<0.05) and a reduction in tau (P=0.04). Absolute blood flow to the ischemic myocardium was increased in the sotagliflozin group (P=0.03). Sotagliflozin swine had a reduction in 3-nitrotyrosine and trichrome staining, representing decreased reactive nitrogen species and myocardial fibrosis (P=0.03 for both). Molecularly, sotagliflozin swine demonstrated increased expression of endothelial nitric oxide synthase and superoxide dismutase 3 (P=0.02, P=0.04; respectively), with upregulated arginine metabolism, protein kinase A/cyclic adenosine monophosphate signaling, as well as glycolysis, fatty acid oxidation, and citric acid cycle.
Conclusions: Sotagliflozin treatment improved left ventricular function, myocardial perfusion, and diastolic relaxation, likely through reduced nitrosative stress and myocardial fibrosis, improved nitric oxide coupling, enhanced insulin signaling, and favorable metabolic shifts. This study suggests a potential role for sotagliflozin as a cardioprotective therapy in patients with ischemic heart disease beyond current treatment strategies.
Keywords: fibrosis; inflammation; ischemia; nitric oxide; perfusion; sodium-glucose transport proteins.