TL;DR: Data demonstrate that the synthetic peptide, KL4, which mimics the hydrophobic and hydrophilic pattern of SP-B, when formulated in an aqueous dispersion with the phospholipids DPPC and POPG, creates a strong and durable surfactant activity as judged by expansion of pulmonary alveoli and improvement of gas exchange in infants with RDS.
Abstract: The present study was undertaken to determine if a synthetic peptide, KLLLLKLLLLKLLLLKLLLLK (KL4), in which K = lysine and L = leucine, in an aqueous dispersion of phospholipids (DPPC and POPG), would expand pulmonary alveoli and improve gas exchange in premature human infants with respiratory distress syndrome (RDS). The KL4 peptide was synthesized to resemble the amino acid pattern of surfactant protein B (SP-B). Forty-seven infants with RDS were treated within 4 h of birth with the KL4-peptide/phospholipid mixture, called KL4-Surfactant. The average arterial-to-alveolar oxygen tension ratios (a/A O2) of 39 patients included in efficacy analyses rose from pretreatment values of 0.14 +/- 0.02 (mean +/- SEM) to 0.40 +/- 0.04 (normal value > or = 0.40) by 12 h of age. Mean airway pressures and oxygenation index values fell concomitantly, and expansion of the lungs was observed on radiographs. The median duration of mechanical ventilation was 5.0 d. Of the 39 included infants, 29 required only a single dose. Radiographic data indicate that those patients requiring a second instillation of KL4-Surfactant but not showing a sustained rise in a/A O2 ratios did, in fact, exhibit expansion of alveoli in the lung. There were no RDS-related deaths; the incidence of complications was no higher than found in other comparable published studies. The data demonstrate that the synthetic peptide, KL4, which mimics the hydrophobic and hydrophilic pattern of SP-B, when formulated in an aqueous dispersion with the phospholipids DPPC and POPG, creates a strong and durable surfactant activity as judged by expansion of pulmonary alveoli and improvement of gas exchange in infants with RDS.
TL;DR: The importance of the peptide in the synthetic surfactant was apparent, and animals treated with a dose of 200 mg/kg showed a faster, more consistent, and greater response than did a group treated with an average dose of 127mg/kg.
Abstract: Studies were conducted to assess the efficacy and safety of a synthetic peptide-containing surfactant in the treatment of respiratory distress syndrome (RDS) in preterm (approximately 80% of normal gestation) infant rhesus monkeys. Surfactant was prepared consisting of the phospholipids dipalmitoylphosphatidyl choline and palmitoyl-oleoyl phosphatidyl glycerol and a synthetic peptide modeled after surfactant protein B (SP-B), "KL4-Surfactant" contained a peptide having the sequence KLLLLKLLLLKLLLLKLLLLK, where "K" is lysine and "L" is leucine. The peptide was selected because it mimics the repeating stretches of hydrophobic residues with intermittent basic hydrophilic residues seen in SP-B. KL4-Surfactant was shown to have biophysical activity assessed as the ability to lower surface tension at an air-liquid interface in a pulsating bubble surfactometer. Thirty premature rhesus monkeys were treated shortly after birth with one dose of KL4-Surfactant. The arterial to alveolar oxygen partial pressure ratio (a/A) was found to rise from a pretreatment level of 0.11 +/- 0.01 (mean +/- SEM), indicative of severe RDS, to 0.40 +/- 0.02 at 12-13 h post-treatment. The improvement in oxygenation persisted throughout the study period, with a mean a/A at 22-23 h of 0.45 +/- 0.07. Chest radiographs and gross and microscopic examination of the lungs all confirmed the reversal of the atelectasis seen before treatment. Animals treated with a dose of 200 mg/kg showed a faster, more consistent, and greater response than did a group treated with an average dose of 127 mg/kg. There was no evidence of toxicity after treatment with the higher dose as demonstrated by physiologic, hematologic, biochemical, and pathologic data. The importance of the peptide in the synthetic surfactant was apparent from the results obtained with a control group of nine premature monkeys treated with a non-peptide-containing surfactant; the a/A of this group was 0.15 +/- 0.03 at nine hours of age as compared with a value of 0.38 +/- 0.02 for 30 comparable animals receiving KL4-Surfactant.