Literature DB >> 9923821

Protection against doxorubicin-induced cardiotoxicity in weanling rats by dexrazoxane.

P Della Torre1, G Mazué, A Podestà, D Moneta, U Sammartini, A R Imondi.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: Dexrazoxane (DZR) protects against anthracycline-induced cardiotoxicity in several laboratory animal species and in patients with breast cancer. Encouraging results have also been obtained in a limited number of pediatric oncology patients. We conducted studies to determine the safety and cardioprotective activity of DZR in the doxorubicin (DOX)-treated weanling rat simulating the rapidly growing immature child.
METHODS: Male weanling rats and young adult rats, 20 days old and 7 weeks old, respectively, were given 1 mg/kg DOX i.v., either alone or with 20 mg/kg DZR, once weekly for 7 weeks. Rats were sacrificed at weeks 8, 12 or 26 following blood collection for hematology and serum chemistry. Hearts were weighed and examined histologically.
RESULTS: DOX, either alone or with DZR, inhibited growth, and body weight remained below that of controls throughout the 26 weeks of study. There were no biologically significant hematologic changes in either the DOX- or DZR + DOX-treated young rats. DOX caused a slight increase in liver and kidney weights relative to body weight and a slight increase in serum cholesterol and triglycerides in the young rats. These effects were ameliorated or delayed by DZR. DOX, either alone or with DZR, caused a marked atrophy of the testes in the young rats which had recovered by week 26. In the mature rats, DOX caused a significant decrease in the WBC 1 week after the last treatment, and the WBC was significantly lower in the rats given DZR + DOX compared to those given DOX alone. There were marked increases in liver and kidney weight, serum cholesterol and triglycerides in the mature rats given DOX alone but not in those given DZR + DOX. There was also a marked testicular atrophy in the mature rats given either DOX or DZR + DOX but, unlike that observed in the young rats, this had not returned to normal by week 26. DOX-induced cardiotoxicity was less severe in the younger rats than in the mature rats but in both age groups, the lesion progressed rapidly until week 12, 5 weeks after the last dose, and remained relatively stable or progressed slightly thereafter. DZR provided significant cardioprotection in both age groups at all time points examined. Moreover, in both age groups, the severity of the cardiomyopathy in the DZR-treated rats was somewhat less at week 26 than it was at week 12.
CONCLUSIONS: The results indicate that the pharmacologic effects of DZR, including its ability to protect against cardiotoxicity, are similar in immature and adult male animals treated with DOX.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 9923821     DOI: 10.1007/s002800050876

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cancer Chemother Pharmacol        ISSN: 0344-5704            Impact factor:   3.333


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4.  A Biophysical Systems Approach to Identifying the Pathways of Acute and Chronic Doxorubicin Mitochondrial Cardiotoxicity.

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Review 5.  Clinical and preclinical evidence of sex-related differences in anthracycline-induced cardiotoxicity.

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