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The
construction of heart modelling leads path to new therapies
Heart disease is still a major killer, especially in the western world,
but new therapies based on stem cells and other techniques could now be
imminent. Progress is being held back however by the difficulty testing
new therapies on human heart tissue, with animal models being only of
limited value owing to differences in structure and activity. The only
solution in the absence of real human models is to create computerised
“in-silico” models that simulate the real heart and enable possible
drugs and therapies to be tested without risk to people. Although this
is still some way off becoming a reality, substantial progress has been
made, and the next steps were plotted at a major workshop held recently
by the European Science Foundation (ESF).
The workshop highlighted how recent progress in imaging technologies was
helping heart modellers overcome the big dilemma they have faced up till
now – actually proving that the models really are an accurate
representation of the real human heart. This has been the big “catch
22” of heart modelling, that in order to create a realistic model, you
need accurate and extensive data from real hearts for calibration.
“Validation of the models is very important, and was raised at the
workshop,” said Blanca Rodriguez, scientific coordinator of the ESF
workshop, and senior cardiac researcher at Oxford University, Europe’s
leading centre for cardiac modelling. “One of the problems has been
that it is much easier to get experimental data from animals than
humans.”
Such animal data can help calibrate some aspects of the models, but only
data from human hearts can fine tune them to the point at which they can
actually make useful predictions and test therapies. Fortunately such
data is now becoming available as a result of dramatic progress in
imaging techniques that can observe cardiac activity externally without
need for invasive probes. “We are now getting data at very high
resolutions, and that allows us to model things in more detail, with
greatly improved anatomy and structure,” said Rodriguez. This in turn
requires access to greater computational power and more sophisticated
software, both of which are available at Oxford.
The models in turn are allowing researchers to study disease and
understand what can go wrong, which is the first step towards developing
cures. One of the most important diseases being modelled is myocardial
ischaemia, which is the loss of blood supply to part of the heart
muscle, leading ultimately to failure and potentially death if
untreated.
Typically victims of heart failure never fully recover their former
health and vigour, because part of the heart muscle has been permanently
lost. However stem cell therapy holds the promise of being able to
regenerate heart muscle destroyed by disease, but this will require
careful testing to eliminate possibly dangerous side effects, such as
cancer and disruption of normal heart rhythms, leading to arrhythmia, or
irregular heart beats. Here again the heart models could play a vital
role. “They could be used to model stem cells’ behaviour, and see
how they are incorporated into the heart,” said Rodriguez.
The ESF workshop also had another dimension – to kick start a
Europe-wide effort to catch up with the US in this vital field. Oxford
was once the world leader, for remarkably the first cardiac model was
developed almost half a century ago in 1961 by Dennis Noble, who
although now officially retired is still assisting Rodriguez and
colleagues today. Noble’s original model was of just of a single heart
cell. But since the late 1990s, the models have been extended to the
whole organ, incorporating multiple cell types.
The workshop identified three key issues that had to be addressed,
according to Rodriguez. The first one was to improve the links within
Europe’s scattered heart modelling community. The second two
recommendations, less specific to Europe, were to create a standard and
robust software infrastructure for sharing heart models and associated
data, and to define exactly how to calibrate the models more effectively
from experimental data.
The next step is to act on these recommendations, but Rodriguez is now
confident that Europe is well placed to regain its early momentum in
this vital field of medical research.
The ESF Exploratory Workshop on
European Heart Modelling and Supporting Technology was held in Oxford,
United Kingdom, in May 2007. The Exploratory Workshop titled Exploring
Symbolic Value Creation In Organizations was held on 6-9 September
2007 in Milano, Italy. Each year, ESF supports approximately 50
Exploratory Workshops across all scientific domains. These small,
interactive group sessions are aimed at opening up new directions in
research to explore new fields with a potential impact on developments
in science.
For more information please go to
http://www.esf.org/fileadmin/be_user/ew_docs/06-016_Programme.pdf
(11/1/08) |