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Potential anti-inflammatory effect of erythropoietin in non-clinical studies in vivo: A systematic review

Journal

BIOMEDICINE & PHARMACOTHERAPY
Volume 139, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER FRANCE-EDITIONS SCIENTIFIQUES MEDICALES ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.biopha.2021.111558

Keywords

Erythropoietin; Inflammation; Non-clinical studies in vivo; Animal models; Rodents

Funding

  1. Polytechnic Institute of Lisbon [IPL/2020/cEPO_ESTeSL]

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The study aims to evaluate the potential anti-inflammatory effect of EPO observed in animal disease models, revealing EPO as a multifunctional cytokine with significant anti-inflammatory properties in acute and chronic inflammation models. Further non-clinical studies are recommended to elucidate the anti-inflammatory mechanisms of EPO at lower doses.
Erythropoietin (EPO) is a hypoxia-induced hormone produced in adult kidneys with erythropoietic and nonerythropoietic effects. In vivo studies represent an important role to comprehend the efficacy and safety in the early phase of repurposing drugs. The aim is to evaluate the potential anti-inflammatory effect of EPO observed in animal models of disease. Following PRISMA statements, electronic database Medline via PubMed platform was used to search articles with the research expression ((erythropoietin [MeSH Terms]) AND (inflammation [MeSH Terms]) AND (disease models, animal [MeSH Terms])). The inclusion criteria were original articles, studies where EPO was administered, studies where inflammation was studied and/or evaluated, non-clinical studies in vivo with rodents, and articles published in English. Thirty-six articles met the criteria for qualitative analysis. Exogenous EPO was used in models of sepsis, traumatic brain injury, and autoimmune neuritis, with an average of 3000 IU/Kg for single and multiple doses, using mice and rats. Biomarkers such as immune-related effectors, cytokines, reactive oxygen species, prostaglandins, and other biomarkers were assessed. EPO has been recognized as a multifunctional cytokine with anti-inflammatory properties, showing its significant effect both in acute and chronic models of inflammation. Further non-clinical studies are suggested for the enlightenment of anti-inflammatory mechanisms of EPO in lower doses, allowing us to understand the translational data for humans.

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