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Candidate mechanisms for capecitabine-related hand-foot syndrome
Authors:Milano Gérard  Etienne-Grimaldi Marie-Christine  Mari Mireille  Lassalle Sandra  Formento Jean-Louis  Francoual Mireille  Lacour Jean-Philippe  Hofman Paul
Affiliation:Centre Antoine Lacassagne, INSERM ERI-21, Facultéde Médecine and;Dermatology Department, CHU de Nice, Nice, France
Abstract:

AIMS

The oral fluoropyrimidine prodrug capecitabine is widely used in oncology. Capecitabine was designed to generate 5FU via the thymidine phosphorylase (TP) enzyme, preferentially expressed in tumoral tissues. Hand–foot syndrome (HFS) is a limiting toxicity of capecitabine. A pilot study on healthy volunteers was conducted in order to test the hypothesis that the occurrence of HFS could be related to tissue-specific expression of drug-metabolizing enzymes in the skin of the palm and sole. To this end, the expression of TP (activating pathway), dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase (DPD, catabolic pathway) and cell proliferation (Ki67) were measured in the skin of the palm (target tissue for HFS) and of the lower back (control area).

METHODS

Two paired 4-mm diameter punch biopsy specimens (palm and back) were taken in 12 healthy volunteers. Immunohistochemical analyses were performed on frozen tissues.

RESULTS

Proliferation rate (Ki67 staining) was significantly higher in epidermal basal cells of the palm compared with the back (P = 0.008). Also, TP and DPD expression were significantly greater in the palm relative to the back (P = 0.039 and 0.012, respectively). TP and Ki67 expression were positively and significantly correlated in the palm.

CONCLUSIONS

The high proliferation rate of epidermal basal cells in the palm could make them more sensitive to the local action of cytotoxic drugs. TP-facilitated local production of 5FU in the palm during capecitabine treatment could explain the occurrence of HFS. This observation may support future strategies to limit the occurrence of HFS during capecitabine therapy.

WHAT IS ALREADY KNOWN ABOUT THIS SUBJECT

  • Hand–foot syndrome (HFS) is a limiting toxicity of the widely used fluorouracil (5FU) prodrug capecitabine.
  • The pharmacological origin of HFS has not been elucidated.
  • The expression of capecitabine-metabolizing enzymes thymidine phosphorylase (TP, activating pathway) and dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase (DPD, catabolic pathway) in the skin of the palm (target tissue for HFS) is unknown.

WHAT THIS STUDY ADDS

  • This pilot study, conducted in healthy volunteers, clearly demonstrated that TP expression is significantly greater in the palm compared with the lower back (control area).
  • This suggests TP-facilitated enhanced production of 5FU in the palm that could explain the occurrence of HFS.
  • This result may support strategies to prevent HFS.
Keywords:capecitabine    dihydropyrimidine dehydrogenase    hand–foot syndrome    Ki67    skin    thymidine phosphorylase
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