학술논문

Pharmacogenomics of cisplatin‐induced neurotoxicities: Hearing loss, tinnitus, and peripheral sensory neuropathy
Document Type
Report
Source
Cancer Medicine. July 2022, Vol. 11 Issue 14, p2801, 16 p.
Subject
Analysis
Health aspects
Non-Hodgkin lymphomas -- Analysis -- Health aspects
Cervical cancer -- Analysis -- Health aspects
Chemotherapy -- Health aspects -- Analysis
Genes -- Analysis -- Health aspects
Hearing loss -- Health aspects -- Analysis
Tinnitus -- Analysis -- Health aspects
Comorbidity -- Analysis -- Health aspects
Drug approval -- Health aspects -- Analysis
Pharmacogenomics -- Analysis -- Health aspects
Cisplatin -- Health aspects -- Analysis
Non-Hodgkin's lymphomas -- Analysis -- Health aspects
Cancer -- Chemotherapy
Pharmacogenetics -- Analysis -- Health aspects
Language
English
ISSN
2045-7634
Abstract
INTRODUCTION Cisplatin and other platinating agents represent the most widely used and successful class of cytotoxic drugs worldwide. More than 5.8 million patients (pediatric and adults) globally are diagnosed each [...]
: Purpose: Cisplatin is a critical component of first‐line chemotherapy for several cancers, but causes peripheral sensory neuropathy, hearing loss, and tinnitus. We aimed to identify comorbidities for cisplatin‐induced neurotoxicities among large numbers of similarly treated patients without the confounding effect of cranial radiotherapy. Methods: Utilizing linear and logistic regression analyses on 1680 well‐characterized cisplatin‐treated testicular cancer survivors, we analyzed associations of hearing loss, tinnitus, and peripheral neuropathy with nongenetic comorbidities. Genome‐wide association studies and gene‐based analyses were performed on each phenotype. Results: Hearing loss, tinnitus, and peripheral neuropathy, accounting for age and cisplatin dose, were interdependent. Survivors with these neurotoxicities experienced more hypertension and poorer self‐reported health. In addition, hearing loss was positively associated with BMIs at clinical evaluation and nonwork‐related noise exposure (>5 h/week). Tinnitus was positively associated with tobacco use, hypercholesterolemia, and noise exposure. We observed positive associations between peripheral neuropathy and persistent vertigo, tobacco use, and excess alcohol consumption. Hearing loss and TXNRD1, which plays a key role in redox regulation, showed borderline significance (p = 4.2 × 10[sup.−6]) in gene‐based analysis. rs62283056 in WFS1 previously found to be significantly associated with hearing loss (n = 511), was marginally significant in an independent replication cohort (p = 0.06; n = 606). Gene‐based analyses identified significant associations between tinnitus and WNT8A (p = 2.5 × 10[sup.−6]), encoding a signaling protein important in germ cell tumors. Conclusions: Genetics variants in TXNRD1 and WNT8A are notable risk factors for hearing loss and tinnitus, respectively. Future studies should investigate these genes and if replicated, identify their potential impact on preventive strategies.