Over 40% elderly patients were prescribed PIMs, and pharmacists' assessments and interventions based on stopp criteria ver.2 were useful in detecting and correcting prescription of PIMs.
Hand–foot skin reaction is a most common multi-kinase inhibitor-related adverse event. This study aimed to examine whether the toxicity of sorafenib and sunitinib for human keratinocytes was associated with inhibiting signal transduction and activator of transcription 3 (STAT3). We studied whether STAT3 activity affects sorafenib- and sunitinib-induced cell growth inhibition in HaCaT cells by WST-8 assay. Stattic enhanced the cell-growth inhibitory and apoptotic effects of sorafenib and sunitinib. HaCaT cells transfected with constitutively-active STAT3 (STAT3C) were resistant to the sorafenib- and sunitinib-induced cell growth inhibition. STAT3 activity decreased after short-term treatment with sorafenib and sunitinib in a dose-dependent manner and recovered after long-term treatment with sorafenib and sunitinib at low doses. Moreover, the expression of survivin and bcl-2 decreased after treatment with sorafenib and sunitinib was concomitant with variations in STAT3 activity. Sorafenib-induced STAT3 inhibition was mediated by regulation via MAPK pathways in HaCaT cells, while sunitinib-induced STAT3 inhibition was not. Thus, STAT3 activation mediating apoptosis suppressors may be a key factor in sorafenib and sunitinib-induced keratinocyte cytotoxicity.
Rat KMT‐17 fibrosarcoma‐derived endothelial cells were isolated by Percoll gradient centrifugation with an attaching‐speed separation technique, and their properties in culture were examined. The primary cultured tumor‐derived endothelial cells (TEC) showed angiotensin‐converting enzyme activity, positivity for Factor VIII‐related antigen staining, and typical capillary‐like formation on Matrigel. The primary cultured TEC monolayer showed greater permeability than normal tissuederived endothelial cell (aorta, vena cava and epididymal fat capillary) monolayers on FITC‐dextran diffusion (molecular weight 70,000). Leukocyte adhesion to TEC was reduced compared to that to fat‐derived capillary endothelial cells. These characteristics resembled those of tumor vascular endothelium, and were observed both in the primary and first‐passage cell cultures, but not in the fourth‐passage cell cultures. Our findings indicate that primary or subcultured TEC are applicable for studies of the physiological characteristics of tumor endothelial cells.
Recent advances in pharmacogenomics have suggested the association of clinical outcome of glucocorticoid-based anti-inflammatory therapy with a single nucleotide polymorphism at position 3435 in exon 26 (C3435T) of the MDR1 gene. In the present study, the effects of the MDR1 C3435T genotype on the time-dependent profiles of gene expression and function of MDR1/P-glycoprotein were evaluated in peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) under lipopolysaccharide (LPS)-induced experimental acute inflammation. LPS treatment resulted in the rapid elevation of IL-1beta and TNF-alpha mRNA levels relative to beta-actin mRNA at 1 h, with a subsequent slight decrease at 3 h after the treatment, while the down-regulation of the relative concentration of MDR1 mRNA was found at 3 h, not at 1 h, after LPS treatment. Here, the C3435T genotype-dependent down-regulations of MDR1 mRNA level were found for CC(3435) and CT(3435), but not for TT(3435), and were 64.1+/-10.1%, 71.4+/-5.9% and 100.0+/-22.5% (+/-S.D.), respectively, of their respective baseline levels, which were independent of C3435T (0.010+/-0.005, 0.011+/-0.013 and 0.009+/-0.006 (+/-S.D.), respectively). The C3435T genotype-dependent down-regulation was supported by the increase of the intracellular accumulation of calcein in PBMCs treated with LPS for 72 h, and the increase was more predominant for CC(3435) than TT(3435). These data suggested that glucocorticoid-based anti-inflammatory therapy might be more effective for C(3435)-allele carriers than non-carriers.
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