Abstract
Purpose: To evaluate the ability of dexamethasone to protect against cisplatin (CDDP)-induced ototoxicity.
Methods: Male Wistar rats were divided into the following three groups: 1) Control (C): 6 animals received intraperitoneal (IP) saline solution, 8 ml/kg/day for four days; 2) C + CDDP: 11 animals received 8 ml/kg/day of IP saline and, 90 min after saline administration, 8 mg/kg/day of IP CDDP for four days; and 3) DEXA15 + CDDP: 11 animals received IP dexamethasone 15 mg/kg/day and, 90 min after dexamethasone administration, received 8 mg/kg/day of IP CDDP for four days.
Results: It was found that dexamethasone did not protect against weight loss in CDDP-exposed animals. The mortality rate was comparable with that previously reported in the literature. The auditory threshold of animals in the DEXA15 + CDDP group was not significantly altered after exposure to CDDP. The stria vascularis of animals in the DEXA15 + CDDP group was partially preserved after CDDP exposure.
Conclusions: Dexamethasone at the dose of 15 mg/kg/day partially protected against CDDP-induced ototoxicity, based on functional evaluation by brainstem evoked response audiontry (BERA) and morphological evaluation by optical microscopy. However, dexamethasone did not protect against systemic toxicity.
Key words: Dexamethasone; Cisplatin; Rats
Introduction
Cisplatin (cis-diamminedichloridoplatinum(II); CDDP) is a chemotherapy widely used in the treatment of pediatric and adult cancers1. The side effects of this drug include ototoxicity, nephrotoxicity, gastrointestinal effects, medullary suppression and peripheral neuropathy, which reduce patient quality of life and may result in treatment protocol changes2. The ototoxicity induced by CDDP is characterized by bilateral, irreversible, dose-dependent hearing loss that initially affects high frequencies and may be accompanied by tinnitus. Approximately 60-80% of CDDP-treated patients have elevated auditory thresholds, and 15% will have significant hearing loss3.
The antitumor effect of CDDP occurs through the production of reactive oxygen species (ROS), which cause apoptosis, and the increased expression of extracellular regulatory kinase (ERK) and nuclear factor kB (NF-κB), which stimulate proinflammatory cytokine production. The cochlear structures most affected by CDDP are the outer hair cells (OHC), the spiral ganglion and the stria vascularis4.
Several drugs have been used to reduce CDDP-induced ototoxicity. Glucocorticoids have shown promise as otoprotective drugs, as they are able to prevent the formation of ROS and inhibit ERK and NF-κB activation5. Most studies involving corticosteroids use intratympanic administration with satisfactory results6. The objective of this study was to evaluate the otoprotective effect of systemic corticosteroids on CDDP-induced ototoxicity.
Methods
The project was approved by the Animal Research Ethics Committee (CEPA) under protocol number 127/16.
The study used twenty-eight male Wistar rats weighing 200-260 grams that were kept in cages with free access to food and water and natural sleep and wake cycles.
The animals were divided into three groups:
Group 1 (n = 6) (Control; C): rats were treated on four consecutive days with saline solution at 8 ml/kg/day (total of 32 ml/kg). The animals were evaluated by brainstem evoked response audiometry (BERA) one day before (D0) and four days after (D4) treatment initiation.
Group 2 (n = 11) (C + CDDP): rats were treated on four consecutive days with saline solution at 8 ml/kg/day (total of 32 ml/kg) and with CDDP at 8 mg/kg (total of 32 mg/kg) 90 min after saline administration. The animals were evaluated by BERA on D0 and D4.
Group 3 (n = 11) (DEXA15 + CDDP): rats were treated on four consecutive days with dexamethasone at 15 mg/kg/day (total of 60 mg/kg) and with CDDP at 8 mg/kg/day (total of 32 mg/kg) 90 min after dexamethasone administration. The animals were evaluated by BERA on D0 and D4.
Wistar rats underwent deep anesthesia with 80 mg/kg ketamine combined with 10 mg/kg xylazine. A previous otoscopy was performed, and animals with external and middle ear alterations were excluded from the study. Those with normal otoscopy received auditory evaluation (BERA) just prior to drug administration (D0). In all groups, the medications were injected intraperitoneally. In groups 2 and 3, the chemotherapy injection was performed 90 minutes after the initial injection of dexamethasone or saline solution. On the subsequent three days, the drugs were re-administered after the rats were re-weighed. Twenty-four hours (D4) after the last injection, the rats were anesthetized, and a new otoscopy was performed to exclude any rats that acquired external or middle ear diseases during the drug administration period. All remaining rats were re-evaluated by BERA.
Immediately after the last auditory evaluation, the rats were euthanized by decapitation with a custom-made guillotine, and the right temporal bone was removed. The cochlea was dissected for histological preparation.
BERA was performed with the ICS CHARTR EP 200 device (Otometrics-Denmark). After anesthesia, platinum subdermal electrodes were positioned in the vertex (positive), right retroauricular region (negative) and right front leg (ground). ER-3A insertion earphones were coupled to a probe and introduced into the external right ear canal. The stimuli used were rarefaction clicks, released at a rate of 15 per second, with a maximum total of 1000 sweeps and an analysis time of 15 msec. The bandwidth used was 0 to 2000 Hz. The stimuli were initiated at 80 dB sound pressure level (SPL) and progressively decreased until the waves disappeared completely. The lowest stimulus intensity in which wave II appeared was considered to be the electrophysiological auditory threshold.
Cochlear dissection and optical microscopy were performed according to the method described by Freitas23. After preparation of the slides, the presence/absence of lesions in the stria vascularis and in the organ of Corti was evaluated and visualized with 400 x magnification in the Leica DM LS 2 optical microscope. Photomicrographs were acquired with Leica 320 digital capture equipment.
The program GraphPad Prism 7.02 was used for statistical analysis. The normal distribution of the sample was evaluated by the Kolmogorov-Smirnov test. The results are expressed as the mean ± standard error of the mean (MED ± EPM) for continuous data. The minimum significance accepted was at the 5% level. Two-way repeated measures ANOVA with the Sidak multiple comparisons test was used to compare animal weight variation, BERA electrophysiological thresholds, and BERA I-V interval values among groups. Fisher’s exact test was used to compare stria vascularis and outer hair cells (OHC) morphological changes among groups.
Results
Systemic toxicity of CDDP
A statistically significant difference was observed in the weights of the animals of all groups between D0 and D4, with p <0.0001. The weight decreased in all groups, except in Group C, where there was weight gain (Figure 1).
Graph showing the weight variation for groups 1, 2 and 3, on days 0 (D0) and 5 (D4). C = control. C+CDDP =control + cisplatin ; DEXA15+CDDP = dexamethasone 15 mg+ cisplatin.
Functional auditory evaluation
The BERA test revealed a statistically significant difference between the beginning (D0) and the end of the experiment (D4) in the C + CDDP group (p = 0.0014) (Figure 2). There was no statistically significant difference in the I-V interval between the first (D0) and fifth (D4) days of the experiment in any of the groups (Figure 3).
Graph showing the mean eletrophysiologic thresholds of groups 1, 2 and 3 in D0 and D4. The asterisk represents statistical signficance. ANOVA-SIDAK: ** p =0.0014. C = control; C+CDDP =control + cisplatin; DEXA15+CDDP = dexamethasone 15mg + cisplatin; BERA = brainstem evoked response audiometry.
Graph of the I-V interval expressed as mean ± standard error of the mean (MED± EPM) in days 1 and 5. There was no statistically significant difference in the I-V interval between the first (D0) and fifth (D4) days of the experiment in any of the groups. C: control; C+CDDP: control + cisplatin; DEXA15 +CDDP: dexamethasone 15 mg + cisplatin. BERA = brainstem evoked response audiometry.
Evaluation by optical microscopy
In this study, the cochlea of two animals (one from group C + CDDP and one from group DEXA15 + CDDP) were lost due to inclusion errors. Therefore, the analysis was conducted with 24 slides including six from group C, ten from group C + CDDP, and eight from group DEXA15 + CDDP.
Optical microscopy of the stria vascularis
The stria vascularis was evaluated for presence or absence of retraction in the middle layer. A statistically significant difference was observed only in the C x C + CDDP group regarding the presence of morphological changes (p value <0.05), and this information was obtained through the microscopic analysis of the stria vascularis (Figure 4).
Graph showing the presence or absence of lesion in stria vascularis,in percentage. The asterisk represents statiscal significance. FISHER 2x2: * p=0.0338. C: control; C+CDDP: control + cisplatin; DEXA15 +CDDP: dexamethasone 15 mg + cisplatin.
Optical microscopy of OHC
Analysis of the optical microscopy data revealed a statistically significant difference between the groups C x C + CDDP and C x DEXA15 + CDDP for the OHC (Figure 5).
Graph showing the presence or absence of lesion in OHC, in percentage. The asterisk represents statiscal significance. FISHER 2x2. * p=0.0114; ** p <0.01. C: control; C+CDDP: control + cisplatin; DEXA15 +CDDP: dexamethasone 15 mg + cisplatin.
Discussion
CDDP is a chemotherapeutic agent widely used in the treatment of solid tumors, notably head and neck cancers7, urogenital system cancers, central nervous system tumors, osteosarcoma, and esophageal cancers8. Its use has been limited by a variety of adverse effects such as ototoxicity, nephrotoxicity, neurotoxicity, spinal cord suppression and gastrointestinal effect9. Some of the side effects of CDDP can be counteracted by the use of medications and hydration, for example nephrotoxicity and gastrointestinal effect10. However, ototoxicity remains one of the side effects that causes significant morbidity and often limits its use11.
Glucocorticoids have been evaluated as potential otoprotective drugs based on their anti-inflammatory effects, ionic homeostasis and immunosuppressive effects12. Systemic glucocorticoid administration is common and routine in the management of inner ear diseases13. Corticosteroids inhibit mitogen-activated protein kinases (MAPKs), important regulators of transcription factors of pro-inflammatory agents14. MAPKs regulate various cellular events, including differentiation, proliferation and apoptosis15. ERK, p38 and JNK belong to the family of these mitogen-activated protein kinases and are important components in the signal transduction pathway involved in the production of proinflammatory cytokines and apoptosis16. All three MAPKs are also implicated in the NF-κB activation pathway through the phosphorylation of their inhibitor, IkB17. Glucocorticoids may also induce the expression of IkB-α, which suppresses NF-κB by inhibiting the inflammatory cascade18. Pharmacological inhibition of ERK is more effective in suppressing the secretion of proinflammatory cytokines and preventing cell death when compared with CDDP inhibition of p38 and JNK19.
Although there are few quantifiable ways of assessing CDDP for systemic toxicity, such as anorexia and diarrhea20, objective and measurable parameters such as weight loss and final survival rate have been preferred.
The weight of the animals decreased significantly in all groups, except in the control group where there was weight gain. In the C + CDDP group, there was a mean weight loss of 13% in D4, and in the DEXA15 + CDDP group, the weight loss was 25%. Kamimura et al.21, using a 16 mg/kg dose of CDDP, showed a mean weight loss of 24.5% in Wistar rats, which was similar to that observed in the DEXA15 + CDDP group in this study. Tanaka et al.22 found a similar result as described with a 23% weight loss in animals treated with a dose of 13 mg/kg. However, other authors such as Freitas et al.23 found a mean weight loss, after 3 days of evaluation, of 14% for the dose of 16 mg/kg of CDDP. In group C, there was an increase in the weight of the animals of approximately 6%, and although the animals were also submitted to the stress of intraperitoneal injection, they did not present diarrhea or reduced appetite like the animals exposed to CDDP.
Intraperitoneal injection of dexamethasone was performed 90 min prior to administration of CDDP, given that the maximum concentration of glucocorticoid by this route of administration in the perilymph occurs within 2 hours24.
The effect of dexamethasone at a dose of 15 mg/kg on ototoxicity revealed the protective role in the functional evaluation by BERA. There was no statistically significant difference between auditory potentials on D0 and D4 in this group, which demonstrated that corticosteroid use had a protective effect on the action of CDDP with no significant increase in auditory thresholds. In the C + CDDP group, a significant difference was found between auditory potentials on D0 and D4, showing the ototoxic potential of CDDP in the C + CDDP group. Sun et al.25 also demonstrated that administration of multidose dexamethasone multidoses can significantly protect hearing function. However, most studies using intraperitoneal dexamethasone alone as an otoprotective agent found no significant protection against CDDP ototoxicity through BERA26,27.
The 15 mg/kg dose of dexamethasone plus functional protection, as revealed through the BERA, also revealed histological protection. The present study did not find a statistically significant difference when comparing group C with the DEXA15 + CDDP group in relation to preservation of stria vascularis, demonstrating that there was protection with this dose of corticoid because there was no significant structural disarrangement. Sun et al.25 also showed protection of the cochlear morphology. In the CDDP + multidose dexamethasone group, a virtually normal stria vascularis was seen when compared with the control (serum) group; in addition, the quantification of residual hair cells in this group was significantly higher than in the CDDP alone group. Waissbluth et al.26 demonstrated preservation of stria vascularis morphology with the use of systemic corticosteroids but did not have the same finding for OHCs, which were partially destroyed.
In relation to the OHCs, the result found was similar to that described by Waissbluth et al.26, as there was a statistically significant difference between the groups C x DEXA15 + CDDP. This demonstrated a lack of histological protection of the OHCs.
This study verified that the auditory lesion triggered by CDDP comes from the cochlear structures because there was no significant increase in interval IV in the treated animals. A similar result was observed by Rebert et al.28, as well as by Freitas23. However, in hamsters, Church et al.29 reported prolongation of the I-IV interval with the 15 mg/kg dose of CDDP, suggesting retrocochlear damage by this drug.
Conclusion
The use of dexamethasone at a dose of 15 mg/kg/day partially protected against CDDP-induced ototoxicity in rats, as determined by BERA evaluation and morphological evaluation.
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Publication Dates
-
Publication in this collection
Oct 2017
History
-
Received
08 June 2017 -
Reviewed
10 Aug 2017 -
Accepted
13 Sept 2017