Zicong Zheng, Ting Du, Song Gao, Taijun Yin, Li Li, Lijun Zhu, Rashim Singh, Rongjin Sun, Ming Hu
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Irinotecan-induced severe diarrhea (IISD) not only limits irinotecan's application but also significantly affects patients' quality of life. However, existing animal models often inadequately represent the dynamics of IISD development, progression, and resolution across multiple chemotherapy cycles, yielding non-reproducible and highly variable response with limited clinical translation. Our studies aim to establish a reproducible and validated IISD model that better mimics the pathophysiology progression observed in patients, enhancing translational potential. We investigated the impact of dosing regimens (including different dose, infusion time, and two cycles of irinotecan administration), sex, age, tumor-bearing conditions, and irinotecan formulation on the IISD incidence and severity in mice and rats. Lastly, we investigated above factors' impact on pharmacokinetics of irinotecan, intestinal injury, and carboxylesterase activities. In summary, we successfully established a standard model establishment procedure for an optimized IISD model with highly reproducible severe diarrhea incidence rate (100%) and a low mortality rate (11%) in F344 rats. Additionally, the rats tolerated at least two cycles of irinotecan chemotherapy treatment. In contrast, the mouse model exhibited suboptimal IISD incidence rates (60%) and an extremely high mortality rate (100%). Notably, dosing regimen, age and tumor-bearing conditions of animals emerged as critical factors in IISD model establishment. In conclusion, our rat IISD model proves superior in mimicking pathophysiology progression and characteristics of IISD in patients, which stands as an effective tool for mechanism and efficacy studies in future chemotherapy-induced gut toxicity research.
期刊介绍:
Toxicology Mechanisms and Methods is a peer-reviewed journal whose aim is twofold. Firstly, the journal contains original research on subjects dealing with the mechanisms by which foreign chemicals cause toxic tissue injury. Chemical substances of interest include industrial compounds, environmental pollutants, hazardous wastes, drugs, pesticides, and chemical warfare agents. The scope of the journal spans from molecular and cellular mechanisms of action to the consideration of mechanistic evidence in establishing regulatory policy.
Secondly, the journal addresses aspects of the development, validation, and application of new and existing laboratory methods, techniques, and equipment. A variety of research methods are discussed, including:
In vivo studies with standard and alternative species
In vitro studies and alternative methodologies
Molecular, biochemical, and cellular techniques
Pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics
Mathematical modeling and computer programs
Forensic analyses
Risk assessment
Data collection and analysis.