Metformin: Experimental and clinical evidence for a potential role in emphysema treatment.
Autor
Córdoba Lanús, Aída Elizabeth

Fecha
2021Resumen
Rationale: Cigarette smoke (CS) inhalation triggers oxidative stress
and inflammation, leading to accelerated lung aging, apoptosis, and
emphysema, as well as systemic pathologies. Metformin is beneficial
for protecting against aging-related diseases.
Objectives: We sought to investigate whether metformin may
ameliorate CS-induced pathologies of emphysematous chronic
obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD).
Methods: Mice were exposed chronically to CS and fed metforminenriched chow for the second half of exposure. Lung, kidney, and muscle
pathologies, lung proteostasis, endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress,
mitochondrial function, and mediators of metformin effectsin vivo and/
orin vitrowere studied. We evaluated the association of metformin use
with indices of emphysema progression over 5 years of follow-up among
the COPDGene (Genetic Epidemiology of COPD) study participants.
The association of metformin use with the percentage of emphysema
and adjusted lung density was estimated by using a linear mixed model.
Measurements and Main Results: Metformin protected against
CS-induced pulmonary inflammation and airspace enlargement; small
airway remodeling, glomerular shrinkage, oxidative stress, apoptosis,
telomere damage, aging, dysmetabolism in vivo and in vitro; and ER
stress. The AMPK (AMP-activated protein kinase) pathway was
central to metformin’s protective action. Within COPDGene,
participants receiving metformin compared with those not receiving it
had a slower progression of emphysema (20.92%; 95% confidence
interval [CI], 21.7% to 20.14%; P= 0.02) and a slower adjusted lung
density decrease (2.2 g/L; 95% CI, 0.43 to 4.0 g/L; P= 0.01).
Conclusions: Metformin protected against CS-induced lung, renal,
and muscle injury; mitochondrial dysfunction; and unfolded protein
responses and ER stress in mice. In humans, metformin use was
associated with lesser emphysema progression over time. Our results
provide a rationale for clinical trials testing the efficacy of metformin
in limiting emphysema progression and its systemic consequences.