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Cancer Therapies and Cardiomyocyte Viability: Which Drugs are Directly Cardiotoxic?
Balachandran, Lohis; Haw, Tatt Jhong; Leong, Angeline Jia Wen; Croft, Amanda J; Chen, Dongqing; Kelly, Conagh; Sverdlov, Aaron L; Ngo, Doan T M.
  • Balachandran L; Newcastle Centre of Excellence in Cardio-Oncology, Hunter Medical Research Institute, Hunter New England Local Health District, The University of Newcastle and Calvary Mater Newcastle, Newcastle, NSW, Australia.
  • Haw TJ; Newcastle Centre of Excellence in Cardio-Oncology, Hunter Medical Research Institute, Hunter New England Local Health District, The University of Newcastle and Calvary Mater Newcastle, Newcastle, NSW, Australia.
  • Leong AJW; Newcastle Centre of Excellence in Cardio-Oncology, Hunter Medical Research Institute, Hunter New England Local Health District, The University of Newcastle and Calvary Mater Newcastle, Newcastle, NSW, Australia.
  • Croft AJ; Newcastle Centre of Excellence in Cardio-Oncology, Hunter Medical Research Institute, Hunter New England Local Health District, The University of Newcastle and Calvary Mater Newcastle, Newcastle, NSW, Australia.
  • Chen D; Newcastle Centre of Excellence in Cardio-Oncology, Hunter Medical Research Institute, Hunter New England Local Health District, The University of Newcastle and Calvary Mater Newcastle, Newcastle, NSW, Australia.
  • Kelly C; Newcastle Centre of Excellence in Cardio-Oncology, Hunter Medical Research Institute, Hunter New England Local Health District, The University of Newcastle and Calvary Mater Newcastle, Newcastle, NSW, Australia.
  • Sverdlov AL; Newcastle Centre of Excellence in Cardio-Oncology, Hunter Medical Research Institute, Hunter New England Local Health District, The University of Newcastle and Calvary Mater Newcastle, Newcastle, NSW, Australia. Electronic address: aaron.sverdlov@newcastle.edu.au.
  • Ngo DTM; Newcastle Centre of Excellence in Cardio-Oncology, Hunter Medical Research Institute, Hunter New England Local Health District, The University of Newcastle and Calvary Mater Newcastle, Newcastle, NSW, Australia. Electronic address: doan.ngo@newcastle.edu.au.
Heart Lung Circ ; 33(5): 747-752, 2024 May.
Article en En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38365500
ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND:

Increased cancer survivorship represents a remarkable achievement for modern medicine. Unfortunately, cancer treatments have inadvertently contributed to cardiovascular (CV) damage, significantly threatening the health and quality of life of patients living with, through and beyond cancer. Without understanding the mechanisms, including whether the cardiotoxicity is due to the direct or indirect effects on cardiomyocytes, prevention and management of cardiotoxicity can pose challenges in many patients. To date, the cardiotoxicity profiles of most of the chemotherapy drugs are still poorly understood.

AIM:

To conduct a pilot study to investigate the direct effects of a range of cancer therapies on cardiomyocyte viability.

METHODS:

Primary human cardiomyocytes (HCM) were cultured and seeded into 96-well culture plates. A total of 35 different Food and Drug Administration-approved anti-cancer drugs were added to the HCM cells with a concentration of 1uM for 72 hours. The viability of HCMs was determined using CellTitre-Glo. The experiments were repeated at least three times for each drug with HCMs of different passages.

RESULTS:

We identified 15 anti-cancer agents that significantly reduced HCM viability. These drugs were (1) anthracyclines (daunorubicin [HCM viability, mean %±standard error, 13.7±3.2%], epirubicin [47.6±5.3%]), (2) antimetabolite (azacitidine [67.1±2.4%]), (3) taxanes (paclitaxel [60.2±3.0%]), (4) protein kinase inhibitors (lapatinib [49.8±7.0%], ponatinib [42.4±9.0%], pemigatinib [68.1±2.3%], sorafenib [52.9±10.6%], nilotinib [64.4±4.5%], dasatinib [38.5±3.6%]), (5) proteasome inhibitors (ixazomib citrate [65.4±7.2%]), (6) non-selective histone-deacetylase inhibitor (panobinostat [19.1±4.1%]), poly adenosine diphosphate-ribose polymerase inhibitor (olaparib [68.2±1.7%]) and (7) vinca alkaloids (vincristine [44.6±7.4%], vinblastine [31.2±3.9%]).

CONCLUSIONS:

In total, 15 of the 35 commercially available anti-cancer drugs have direct cardiotoxic effects on HCM. Some of those, have not been associated with clinical cardiotoxicity, while others, known to be cardiotoxic do not appear to mediate it via direct effects on cardiomyocytes. More detailed investigations of the effects of cancer therapies on various cardiovascular cells should be performed to comprehensively determine the mechanisms of cardiotoxicity.
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Texto completo: 1 Banco de datos: MEDLINE Asunto principal: Supervivencia Celular / Miocitos Cardíacos / Cardiotoxicidad / Antineoplásicos Límite: Female / Humans Idioma: En Año: 2024 Tipo del documento: Article

Texto completo: 1 Banco de datos: MEDLINE Asunto principal: Supervivencia Celular / Miocitos Cardíacos / Cardiotoxicidad / Antineoplásicos Límite: Female / Humans Idioma: En Año: 2024 Tipo del documento: Article