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Thalidomide metabolites in mice and patients with multiple myeloma.
Authors:Jun Lu  Brian D Palmer  Phillip Kestell  Peter Browett  Bruce C Baguley  George Muller  Lai-Ming Ching
Affiliation:Auckland Cancer Society Research Centre, Faculty of Medical and Health Sciences, The University of Auckland, New Zealand.
Abstract:PURPOSE:This research examines the profile of metabolites of thalidomide that are formed in refractory multiple myeloma patients undergoing thalidomide therapy in comparison with those that are detected in healthy mice. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: Urine or plasma samples from patients during thalidomide therapy (100-400 mg daily), or from mice treated i.p. (100 mg/kg) or p.o. with thalidomide (50 mg/kg) were analyzed using liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry. Metabolites in each of the peaks observed in the UV- and mass spectrometry-detected high-performance liquid chromatography traces were identified by comparison of retention times and spectra with those of authentic standards. RESULTS: Plasma and urine samples from mice 4 h after treatment with thalidomide contained eight major metabolites formed by hydroxylation and/or hydrolysis of thalidomide. In contrast, urine samples from seven multiple myeloma patients at steady state levels of thalidomide therapy showed the presence of only three hydrolysis breakdown products and no hydroxylated metabolites. CONCLUSIONS: Our results show that thalidomide metabolite profiles in multiple myeloma patients differ considerably from those in mice. The lack of measurable hydroxylated metabolites in urine and in 1 case plasma of these patients suggests that such metabolites are not responsible for the therapeutic effects of thalidomide in multiple myeloma. We suggest that thalidomide may act directly, down-regulating growth factors essential for multiple myeloma growth.
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