Rankin, S. et al. (2024) Arterial effects of anthracycline: structural and inflammatory assessments in non-human primates and lymphoma patients using 18F-FDG positron emission tomography. bioRxiv, (doi: 10.1101/2024.05.30.596741)
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Abstract
Background Anthracyclines, such as doxorubicin, are important anti-cancer therapies but are associated with arterial injury. Histopathological insights have been limited to small animal models and the role of inflammation in the arterial toxic effects of anthracycline is unclear in humans. Our aims were: 1) To evaluate aortic media fibrosis and injury in non-human primates treated with anthracyclines; 2) To assess the effect of anthracycline on aortic inflammation in patients treated for lymphoma. Methods 1) African Green monkeys (AGM) received doxorubicin (30–60 mg/m2/biweekly IV, cumulative dose: 240 mg/m2). Blinded histopathologic analyses of collagen deposition and cell vacuolization in the ascending aorta were performed 15 weeks after the last doxorubicin dose and compared to 5 age- and gender-matched healthy, untreated AGMs. 2) Analysis of the thoracic aorta of patients with diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL), at baseline and after doxorubicin exposure, was performed using 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose (18F-FDG) positron emission tomography/computed tomography (PET/CT) in this observational study. The primary outcome was change in maximal tissue-to-background ratio (TBRmax) of the thoracic aorta from baseline to their end-of-treatment clinical PET/CT. Results In AGMs, doxorubicin exposure was associated with greater aortic fibrosis (collagen deposition: doxorubicin cohort 6.23±0.88% vs. controls 4.67±0.54%; p=0.01) and increased intracellular vacuolization (doxorubicin 66.3 ± 10.1 vs controls 11.5 ± 4.2 vacuoles/field, p<0.0001) than untreated controls. In 101 patients with DLBCL, there was no change in aortic TBRmax after anthracycline exposure (pre-doxorubicin TBRmax 1.46±0.16 vs post-doxorubicin TBRmax 1.44±0.14, p=0.14). The absence of change in TBRmax was consistent across all univariate analyses. Conclusions In a large animal model, anthracycline exposure was associated with aortic fibrosis. In patients with lymphoma, anthracycline exposure was not associated with aortic inflammation. Further research is required to elucidate the mechanisms of anthracycline-related vascular harm.
Item Type: | Articles (Pre-print) |
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Additional Information: | Preprint. SR receives support through an unrestricted grant from Roche Diagnostics. NNL and MCP are supported by a British Heart Foundation Centre of Research Excellence Grant (RE/18/6/34217). Animal study work was partially funded by an investigator-initiated grant from Merck & Co., Kenilworth, NJ (GCM), from Vervet Research Colony as a Biomedical Resource, Bethesda, MA (P40-OD010965) and NIH funding (US National Institute of Health) K award to GCM (K01HL145329). |
Keywords: | doxorubicin, anthracycline, PET, vascular toxicity, lymphoma, fibrosis. |
Status: | Published |
Refereed: | No |
Glasgow Author(s) Enlighten ID: | McKay, Dr Pamela and Venugopal, Dr Balaji and Henderson, Dr Alasdair and Rankin, Dr Stephen and Petrie, Professor Mark and Colville, Dr David and Lang, Professor Ninian and GEMMELL, Mr ALASTAIR and McClure, Dr John and Small, Dr Sandy |
Authors: | Rankin, S., Fountain, C., Gemmell, A., Quinn, D., Henderson, A., McClure, J., Small, S., Venugopal, B., McKay, P., Slomka, P. J., Colville, D., Petrie, M. C., Meléndez, G. C., and Lang, N. N. |
College/School: | College of Medical Veterinary and Life Sciences > School of Cancer Sciences College of Medical Veterinary and Life Sciences > School of Cardiovascular & Metabolic Health College of Medical Veterinary and Life Sciences > School of Medicine, Dentistry & Nursing |
Journal Name: | bioRxiv |
Copyright Holders: | Copyright: © 2024 The Authors |
First Published: | First published in BioRxiv 06 June 2024 |
Publisher Policy: | Reproduced under a Creative Commons licence |
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