In agreement with previous reports, we found that dexamethasone may induce radioresistance in human carcinoma cells. Including the published data from the literature, dexamethasone induced enhancement in radioresistance in 4 of 12 carcinoma cell lines (33%), but not in 3 glioblastoma cell lines, nor in 3 fibroblast strains. Dexamethasone also induced enhanced resistance to carboplatin with a similar probability in fresh samples of ovarian cancer evaluated prospectively (in 4 of 13 samples; 31%). We worry that induction of resistance by corticosteroids given to patients undergoing either radiotherapy or chemotherapy with agents causing DNA damage might be associated with a reduced clinical responsiveness in a significant fraction of patients with a carcinoma.
In C4-1 and SW 756 cells, treatment with dexamethasone induces radioresistance, and changes in expression levels of HPV 18 genes E6 and E7 do not correlate with the changes in radiosensitivity. Dexamethasone-induced radioresistance has previously been observed in HeLa cells, another human cervical carcinoma cell line. This leads us to speculate that dexamethasone-induced radioresistance may be important in certain clinical situations, and that therefore, the phenomenon deserves further study.
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