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A mechanistic study on reduced toxicity of irinotecan by coadministered thalidomide, a tumor necrosis factor-a inhibitor

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posted on 2024-11-01, 06:27 authored by XX Yang, ZP Hu, Al Xu, Wei Duan, YZ Zhu, Min Huang, Fwu Sheu, Qiang Zhang, UA Boelsterli, JS Bian, Eli Chan, Xingli Li, JC Wang, Shufeng Zhou
Dose-limiting diarrhea and myelosuppression compromise the success of irinotecan (7-ethyl-10-[4-[1-piperidino]-1-piperidino] carbonyloxycamptothecin) (CPT-11)-based chemotherapy. A recent pilot study indicates that thalidomide attenuates the toxicity of CPT-11 in cancer patients. This study aimed to investigate whether coadministered thalidomide modulated the toxicities of CPT-11 and the underlying mechanisms using several in vivo and in vitro models. Diarrhea, intestinal lesions, cytokine expression, and intestinal epithelial apoptosis were monitored. Coadministered thalidomide (100 mg/kg i.p. for 8 days) significantly attenuated body weight loss, myelosuppression, diarrhea, and intestinal histological lesions caused by CPT-11 (60 mg/kg i.v. for 4 days). This was accompanied by inhibition of tumor necrosis factor-a, interleukins 1 and 6 and interferon-?, and intestinal epithelial apoptosis. Coadministered thalidomide also significantly increased the systemic exposure of CPT-11 but decreased that of SN-38 (7-ethyl-10-hydroxycampothecin). It significantly reduced the biliary excretion and cecal exposure of CPT-11, SN-38, and SN-38 glucuronide. Thalidomide hydrolytic products inhibited hydrolysis of CPT-11 in rat liver microsomes but not in primary rat hepatocytes. In addition, thalidomide and its major hydrolytic products, such as phthaloyl glutamic acid (PGA), increased the intracellular accumulation of CPT-11 and SN-38 in primary rat hepatocytes. They also significantly decreased the transport of CPT-11 and SN-38 in Caco-2 and parental MDCKII cells. Thalidomide and PGA also significantly inhibited P-glycoprotein (PgP/MDR1), multidrug resistance-associated protein (MRP1)- and MRP2-mediated CPT-11 and SN-38 transport in MDCKII cells. These results provide insights into the pharmacodynamic and pharmacokinetic mechanisms for the protective effects of thalidomide against CPT-11-induced intestinal toxicity.

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  1. 1.
    DOI - Is published in 10.1124/jpet.106.103606
  2. 2.
    ISSN - Is published in 00223565

Journal

Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics

Volume

319

Issue

1

Start page

82

End page

104

Total pages

23

Publisher

American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics

Place published

United States

Language

English

Former Identifier

2006012923

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2010-12-06

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