| Literature DB >> 30319427 |
Zulfan Zazuli1,2, Susanne Vijverberg1, Elise Slob1, Geoffrey Liu3,4, Bruce Carleton5,6,7, Joris Veltman1, Paul Baas1,8, Rosalinde Masereeuw9, Anke-Hilse Maitland-van der Zee1.
Abstract
Background: Nephrotoxicity is a notable adverse effect in cisplatin treated patients characterized by tubular injury and/or increased serum creatinine (SCr) with incidence varying from 20 to 70%. Pharmacogenomics has been shown to identify strongly predictive genetic markers to help determine which patients are more likely to experience, for example, a serious adverse drug reaction or receive optimal benefit through enhanced efficacy. Genetic variations have been reported to influence the risk of cisplatin nephrotoxicity; however, a comprehensive overview is lacking.Entities:
Keywords: cisplatin; genetic variations; kidney; nephrotoxicity; pharmacogenomics; precision medicine; toxicity
Year: 2018 PMID: 30319427 PMCID: PMC6171472 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2018.01111
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
Figure 1Flow chart of the selection of articles. This flow diagram is created according to the PRISMA recommendation (Moher et al., 2009).
Included pharmacogenetic studies of cisplatin-induced nephrotoxicity.
| Wang et al., | XRCC1 rs1799782 | Vinorelbine + cisplatin | NCI-CTCAE v3.0 grade 0–2 vs. 3–4 | There were no grades 3 and 4 renal toxic effects. | |
| Filipski et al., | Not specified in detail. Subjects with malignant solid tumors. | OCT2 808G > T (rs316019) | Cisplatin-based regimens | Changes in serum creatinine after the 1st cycle | Subjects carrying a copy of this SNP ( |
| Goekkurt et al., | 1. XPD rs13181 | FLO (fluorouracil-leucovorin-oxaliplatin) and | Not defined; using grading system from 0 to 4. Grouped into grade 0–2 vs. 3–4. | Significant associations between the XPD-Asn312-751Gln (rs1799793-rs13181) haplotype and nephrotoxicity. | |
| Khrunin et al., | 1. GSTA1 rs3957357 | Cisplatin + cyclophosphamide | NCI-CTCAE (version not mentioned). | Cases of renal dysfunction were more prevalent among patients with the ERCC1 gene rs11615 heterozygous T/C (46.7%) with OR = 2.51 (95% CI 1.09–5.57; | |
| 15. TP53 16-bp duplication rs17878362 | |||||
| Khrunin et al., | 1. DNASE1 (intron 4) VNTR | Cisplatin + cyclophosphamide | standard WHO criteria (Nephrotoxicity assessed as a decrease in creatinine clearance below 60 ml/min) | An increased risk of nephrotoxicity was noted for patients with the homozygous GGT1 T/T genotype (rs5751901) | |
| Chen et al., | 1. ERCC1 rs11615 | Cisplatin + gemcitabine | WHO toxicity criteria (1979); grouped into grade 0 vs. ≥1. | No significant association between the MDR1 gene rs2032582, E1/-129(T/C), rs1045642 or ERCC1 gene rs11615 polymorphisms and the risk of hematologic toxicity, gastrointestinal toxicity, hepatotoxicity, or nephrotoxicity ( | |
| Tzvetkov et al., | 1. GSTM1 Whole-gene deletion | Cisplatin-containing chemotherapy. | Relative change in the estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR), serum creatinine and cystatin C levels. | Homozygous carriers of the rare A allele of the 8092C > A ERCC1 gene polymorphism (rs3212986) were protected from cisplatin-induced nephrotoxicity (mean change in eGFR: AA = 24 ± 3.4 ml/min/1.73m2); CA = −10.2 ± 2.6 ml/min/1.73m2; CC = −12.6 ± 2.5 ml/min/1.73m2, | |
| Erculj et al., | 1. XPD rs1799793 | Various platinum-based regimens | NCI-CTCAE v2.0 Grade 0 vs. Grade 1–4 | None of the investigated polymorphisms influenced the occurrence of nephrotoxicity. | |
| Malignant mesothelioma (various stage) | 3. ERCC1 rs11615 | ||||
| KimCurran et al., | ERCC1 rs3212986 | Platinum + gemcitabine | NCI-CTCAE v3.0 Grade 0 vs. Grade 1–4 | No significant association between polymorphism and nephrotoxicity ( | |
| Xu et al., | 22 SNPs of eIF3a gene | cisplatin/carboplatin + gemcitabine; cisplatin/carboplatin + etoposide and cisplatin + docetaxel; cisplatin/carboplatin + gemcitabine; cisplatin/carboplatin + etoposide; cisplatin + docetaxel | NCI-CTCAE v3.0 moderate = grade 0 vs. severe = grade 1–4 | Minor T-carrier of eIF3a Arg803Lys C > T polymorphism have better tolerance than C-carrier to cisplatin-induced toxicity in NSCLC patients (moderate = 42, 14.89% vs. severe = 34, 12.06%; | |
| Kim et al., | ERCC2 gene: | Weekly schedule of cisplatin or carboplatin; | Not defined; using grading system from 0 to 4. Grouped into grade 0–2 vs. 3–4. | rs238405 was significantly associated with infection and nephrotoxicity ( | |
| Windsor et al., | Folate pathway 1. MTHFR rs1801133, 1801131, 4846051, 2274976 | MAP (methotrexate, adriamycin (doxorubicin), cisplatin) | NCI-CTCAE v3.0 | The regimens may cause decreased of GFR. SNPs below involved in early toxicity: 1. ERCC2 c.2251A > Cp.Lys751Gln (rs13181). AC/CC vs. AA; OR = 4.4 (95% CI 1–18.8, | |
| 9. ABCC2, rs717620, 2273697, 17222723, 8087710 | |||||
| DNA repair | |||||
| Zhang, et al. 2012, Japan | ERCC5 rs17655 ERCC6 rs2228526; Q1413R, A/G; R1213G, A/G CCNH rs2266690 MMS19L, G811A, G/A XPC, Q940K, A/C; R500W, C/T RRM1 rs12806698 | vinorelbine or gemcitabine, or docetaxel or paclitaxel plus cisplatin or carboplatin | NCI-CTCAE v3.0 Grouped into grade 0 vs. 1–4. | SNPs of MMS19L G811A may have some roles in predicting the increase of creatinine during chemotherapy in NSCLC OR = 4.436 (95% CI 2.018–10.372, | |
| Iwata et al., | OCT2 rs316019 MATE1 | Cisplatin. | NCI-CTCAE v4.0 | The 808G/T SNP in OCT2 (rs316019) ameliorated CDDP-induced nephrotoxicity without alteration of disposition (decrease of SCr on wild type GG vs. GT = 1.11 ± 0.37 vs. 0.92 ± 0.15, | |
| Zhang et al., | SLC22A2 808 G > T (rs316019) | Cisplatin alone or in combination with docetaxel and etoposide. | Changes in biomarkers of renal function, i.e. serum creatinine (SCr), blood urea nitrogen (BUN) and cystatin C. | No significant association between the increased of SCr to the genetic variations (GG 0.833 ± 7.394 vs. GT/TT 2.091 ± 6.302 mmol/L; | |
| Sprowl et al., | ABCC2: | Various cisplatin based regimens | changes in serum creatinine levels following treatment | Changes in serum creatinine levels were not significantly linked with any of the common genotypes. | |
| rs17216177 | |||||
| Khrunin et al., | 1. GSTA1 rs3957357 | cisplatin + cyclophosphamide | NCI-CTCAE v2.0 | Yakut patients with the GSTT1-null genotype had a higher risk for nephrotoxicity with OR = 3.31 (95% CI 1.15–9.54; | |
| Hinai et al., | SLC22A2 rs316019 | Cisplatin + fluorouracil | NCI-CTCAE v4.0 | Cisplatin-induced nephrotoxicity seems to be unaffected by SLC22A2 808G > T polymorphism. (SCr difference: GG −0.30 ± 0.30, GT/TT −0.40 ± 0.53, | |
| Khokhrin et al., | 228 polymorphic loci of 106 genes | Cisplatin + cyclophosphamide | NCI-CTCAE v2.0 | No result regarding nephrotoxicity reported. Probably its not significantly associated. | |
| Khrunin et al., | 228 SNPs in 106 genes | cisplatin + cyclophosphamide | Standard criteria (not mentioned). Grouped into grade 0 vs. 1–4. | Nephrotoxicity was more frequent among patients with a heterozygous genotype CT of EPHX gene rs1051740 (OR = 9.524, 95% CI 3.621–225.520, | |
| Liu et al., | 1. TP53 rs1042522 | Platinum + gemcitabine | RIFLE category | No significant correlation between genetic variations and nephrotoxicity | |
| Lamba et al., | NQO1 rs1800566 TMEM63A rs10158985 | 87 received carboplatin, two received cisplatin, and two received cisplatin and carboplatin as first-line chemotherapy. | NCI-CTCAE v4.0 Grade 0–2 vs. grade 3–4 | No toxicity experience by subjects | |
| ABCB1 rs1128503 | |||||
| Powrozek et al., | ERCC1 rs3212986 | platinum compounds + vinorelbine | NCI-CTCAE v4.03 Severe: grade 2–4 | Risk of early severe nephrotoxicity (after 2nd cycle) was significantly lower in carriers of C allele of XPD gene (rs13181, 2251A > C, OR = 0.07, 95% CI 0.02–0.31, | |
| Yuan et al., | GSTP1 rs1695 | gemcitabine-cisplatin | 1979 | No participant developed nephrotoxicity. | |
| Hattinger et al., | 45 polymorphisms and two haplotypes of 31 genes involved in transport, metabolism, activation and detoxification of the four drugs used in standard HGOS chemotherapy (methotrexate, doxorubicin, cisplatin and ifosfamide) | doxorubicin, high-dose methotrexate, cisplatin and ifosfamide | NCI-CTCAE v3.0 | Nephrotoxicity and stomatitis were registered in one patient each (2%) and were therefore not included in association analyses. | |
| van der Schoot et al., | HFE: | Bleomycin + cisplatin | Serum concentration creatinine (mmol/l), and calculated CRCL (Cockcroft-Gault formula). | Renal function, by means of serum creatinine level and calculated CRCL before chemotherapy, 6 weeks after the last course of chemotherapy, 1 year after start of chemotherapy, and 10 years after start of chemotherapy, was similar in patients with or without HFE gene variants | |
| Chang et al., | Selected polymorphisms of interest including transporters (SLC22A2, ABCC2, SLC47A1), regulatory (NFE2L2, KEAP1) and metabolism (GSTA1, GSTP1, GGT1) genes | Various cisplatin-based combination (etoposide, vinblastine, dacarbazine, aldesleukin, interferon alfa 2b, gemcitabine, docetaxel) | Changes in protein biomarkers (e.g., calbindin, clusterin, KIM-1, GST-pi, IL-18, MCP-1, albumin, B2M, cystatin C, NGAL, osteopontin, TFF3) | The polymorphisms rs596881 (SLC22A2/OCT2), and rs12686377 and rs7851395 (SLC31A1/CTR1) were associated with renoprotection and maintenance of estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR). Polymorphisms in |
Effect size of SNPs that had been replicated at least one positive association.
| CTCAE >grade 0 | Khrunin et al., | CT (46.7%) | TT/CC (no values reported) | 2.51 (1.09–5.57) | N/A | 0.037 |
| Change in the estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) | Tzvetkov et al., | CC = 6.91 ± 9.1 ml/min/1.73 m2 | TT/CT CT = −11.8 ± 1.7 ml/min/1.73 m2 | N/A | N/R | 0.004 |
| CTCAE >grade 0 | Khrunin et al., | CA (52.8%) | CC/AA (no values reported) | 3.29 (1.40–7.73) | N/A | 0.009 |
| Change in the estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) | Tzvetkov et al., | AA = 24 ± 3.4 ml/min/1.73 m2 | CC/CA CA = −10.2 ± 2.6 ml/min/1.73 m2 | N/A | N/R | 0.0002 |
| Change in eGFR | Windsor et al., | AC/CC = −23 mL/min/1.73 m2 | AA = −4 mL/min/1.73 m2 | N/A | −19 mL/min/1.73 m2 | 0.021 |
| CTCAE >grade 0 | Windsor et al., | AC/CC (no values reported) | AA (no values reported) | 4.4 (1–18.8) | N/A | 0.044 |
| CTCAE >grade 1 | Powrozek et al., | C allele (no values reported) | A allele (no values reported) | 0.07 (0.02–0.31) | N/A | < 0.0001 |
| % changes in serum creatinine after the 1st cycle | Filipski et al., | GT (no values reported) | GG (no values reported) | N/A | N/R | 0.0009 |
| Increase of SCr | Iwata et al., | GT = 0.92 ± 0.15 mg/dL | GG = 1.11 ± 0.37 mg/dL | N/A | −0.19 mg/dL | 0.04 |
| Zhang et al., | GT/TT = 2.091 ± 6.302 mg/dL | GG = 0.833 ± 7.394 mg/dL | N/A | 1.258 mg/dL | 0.346 | |
| Changes in cystatin C. | Zhang et al., | GT/TT = −0.013 ± 0.120 mmol/L | GG = 0.043 ± 0.107 mmol/L | N/A | 0.056 mmol/L | 0.009 |
| Fold changes in protein biomarkers (KIM-1) | Chang et al., | GT (no values reported) | GG (no values reported) | N/A | 1.77 × 10171 | 0.038 |
SNPs, single nucleotide polymorphisms; OR, odds ratio; CTCAE, Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Effects; SCr, serum creatinine; KIM-1, kidney injury molecule-1; N/A, not available; N/R, not reported.