| Literature DB >> 35215367 |
Loredana G Marcu1,2.
Abstract
Gender medicine in the field of oncology is an under-researched area, despite the existing evidence towards gender-dependent response to therapy and treatment-induced adverse effects. Oncological treatment aims to fulfil its main goal of achieving high tumour control by also protecting normal tissue from acute or chronic damage. Chemotherapy is an important component of cancer treatment, with a large number of drugs being currently in clinical use. Cisplatin is one of the most commonly employed chemotherapeutic agents, used either as a sole drug or in combination with other agents. Cisplatin-induced toxicities are well documented, and they include nephrotoxicity, neurotoxicity, gastrointestinal toxicity, ototoxicity, just to name the most frequent ones. Some of these toxicities have short-term sequelae, while others are irreversible. Furthermore, research showed that there is a strong gender-dependent aspect of side effects caused by the administration of cisplatin. While evidence towards sex differences in animal models is substantial, clinical studies considering sex/gender as a variable factor are limited. This work summarises the current knowledge on sex/gender-related side effects induced by platinum compounds and highlights the gaps in research that require more attention to open new therapeutic possibilities and preventative measures to alleviate normal tissue toxicity and increase patients' quality of life in both males and females.Entities:
Keywords: adverse effects; carboplatin; cisplatin; gender; personalised chemotherapy; sex
Year: 2022 PMID: 35215367 PMCID: PMC8876358 DOI: 10.3390/ph15020255
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmaceuticals (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8247
Compilation of studies investigating sex-dependent normal tissue toxicity induced by cisplatin in animal models.
| Investigated Toxicity | Investigated Parameters | Gender-Dependent Effects | Study [Ref.] |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nephrotoxicity in Wistar rats | Serum creatinine, blood urea nitrogen, nitric oxide metabolite, malondialdehyde | Male rats: significantly greater levels of serum creatinine, blood urea nitrogen, malondialdehyde; also, greater kidney damage score ( | Nematbakhsh et al., 2013 [ |
| Nephrotoxicity in Wistar rats | Serum creatinine, blood urea nitrogen, kidney weight, kidney tissue damage score | Male rats: greater increase in blood urea nitrogen. | Zamani et al., 2016 [ |
| Nephrotoxicity in Wistar rats | Serum creatinine, blood urea nitrogen, aspartate aminotransferase, alkaline phosphatase, nitrite, kidney weight malondialdehyde | Male rats (young): lower blood urea nitrogen and creatinine than females; the highest creatinine clearance. | Pezeshki et al., 2017 [ |
| Nephrotoxicity in Wistar rats | Creatinine levels, blood urea nitrogen levels, sodium excretion | Female rats: significantly greater levels of serum creatinine and blood urea nitrogen. | Jilanchi et al., 2018 [ |
| Ototoxicity in Wistar albino rats | Distortion product otoacoustic emission; | Female rats: more pronounced hearing toxicity. | Kirkim et al., 2015 [ |
| Neuropathic pain in mice | Cold/mechanical allodynia | No sex-related differences in cold or mechanical allodynia were observed. | Naji-Esfahani et al., 2016 [ |
| Neuropathy in rats | Heat latency of hind paw; sciatic motor nerve conduction velocity; | Male rats: higher severity of weight loss, prolonged heat latency, slow motor nerve conduction velocity, atrophy of neuronal cell body and nucleus. | Wongtawatchai et al., 2009 [ |
Figure 1A summary of sex/gender-dependent cisplatin-based toxicity data reported by the current literature [4,33,35].
Platinum compounds as chemotherapeutic agents with their possible advantages and therapeutic limitations as compared to cisplatin (adapted from [55]).
| Platinum Compound | Benefits | Limitations | Normal Tissue Toxicity |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cisplatin | Potent cytotoxicity | High normal tissue toxicity | Nephrotoxicity |
| Carboplatin | Reduced normal tissue toxicity (no nephrotoxicity). | Inferior tumour response rate. | Myelosuppression |
| Oxaliplatin | Reduced normal tissue toxicity and better tolerability. | Conflicting results on the efficacy on cisplatin-resistant cell lines. | Neurotoxicity |
| Nedaplatin | Reduced nephrotoxicity and gastrointestinal toxicity. | Often exhibits cross-resistance with cisplatin thus its clinical application is limited. | Thrombocytopenia |
| Mitaplatin | Exhibits toxic effects on cisplatin-resistant head and neck tumour cells. | More research is needed to prove its clinical efficacy. | Neurotoxicity |
| Enloplatin | Tested in the 90 s without successful clinical implementation | ||
| Lobaplatin | Shows activity in various tumour types. Overcomes certain forms of cisplatin/carboplatin resistance. | Underexplored agent, needs trialling in combination with radiation. | Thrombocytopenia |
| Satraplatin | Efficient in cisplatin-resistant cell lines. | New generation of orally active platinum agents. More investigations are needed. | Carboplatin-like toxicity profile |
| Tetraplatin/ormaplatin | Tested in the 90 s; under investigation by some research groups | ||