Cisplatin-induced reductions in renal functional reserve uncovered by unilateral nephrectomy: an experimental study in the pig |
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Authors: | Mike E. C. Robbins Darryl Campling Elizabeth Whitehouse John W. Hopewell Adam Michalowski |
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Affiliation: | (1) Medical Research Council Cyclotron Unit, Hammersmith Hospital, DuCane Road, London, UK;(2) Cancer Research Campaign, Normal tissue Radiobiology Research Group Research Institute (University of Oxford), Churchill Hospital, OX3 7LJ Oxford, U.K. |
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Abstract: | Summary Groups of mature Large White female pigs, approximately 10 months of age, received single intravenous infusions of 1.5, 2 or 2.5 mg/kg body weight (equivalent to90, 120 and 150 mg/m2) cisplatin. Glomerular filtration rate (GFR) and effective renal plasma flow (ERPF) were measured before and at 4 weeks after cisplatin infusion by renography using [99 mTc]-DTPA (diethylenetriamminepentaacetic acid and iodohippurate sodium I 131, respectively. The left kidney of each cisplatin-treated animal plus that of four age-matched control pigs was then removed surgically,and GRF and ERPF were measured in the remaining kidney at 4 weekly intervals for up to 24 weeks after unilateral nephrectomy (UN). The pigs treated with cisplatin exhibited no consistent change in either GFR or ERPF at 4 weeks after treatment. A histological evaluation of kidneys from animals treated with 2mg/kg cisplatin that had been removed at UN revealed both tubular and glomerular lesions. The latter consisted of cell proliferation on the parietal surface of the urinary space; damage to the S1 portion of the proximal convolution was also noted. Following UN there was a pronounced dose-dependent reduction in the functional status of the remaining kidney such that the increase in GRF and ERPF in pigs initially receiving 2.5 mg/kg cisplatin was <50% of that seen in age-matched UN controls. Moreover, the glomerular lesions observed at 4 weeks after cisplatin infusion had apparently progressed to glomerular hyalinisation by 24 weeks after UN. Thus, prior treatment with cisplatin may cause a permanent reduction in renal functional reserve that may be clinically silent until exposure to an additional nephrotoxic insult.This study was supported by the Cancer Research Campaign |
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