4.5 Article

Correlation of Platinum Cytotoxicity to Drug-DNA Adduct Levels in a Breast Cancer Cell Line Panel

Journal

CHEMICAL RESEARCH IN TOXICOLOGY
Volume 31, Issue 12, Pages 1293-1304

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.chemrestox.8b00170

Keywords

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Funding

  1. DOE [DE-AC52-07NA27344]
  2. NIH/NCRR Resource for Biomedical Accelerator Mass Spectrometry [P41 RR013461]
  3. DOE LDRD grant [08-LW-100]
  4. American Cancer Society Institutional Research Grant
  5. VA Career Development Award-2
  6. NCI Cancer Center Support Grant
  7. Cancer Clinical Investigator Team Leadership Award
  8. NIH [HHSN261201200048C, HHSN261201200084C, R01CA155642]
  9. Susan and Gerry Knapp Family Fund
  10. U.S. Department of Energy [DE-AC52-07NA27344]

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Platinum drugs, including carboplatin and oxaliplatin, are commonly used chemotherapy drugs that kill cancer cells by forming toxic drug-DNA adducts. These drugs have a proven, but modest, efficacy against several aggressive subtypes of breast cancer but also cause several side effects that can lead to the cessation of treatment. There is a clinical need to identify patients who will respond to platinum drugs in order to better inform clinical decision making. Diagnostic microdosing involves dosing patients or patient samples with subtherapeutic doses of radiolabeled platinum followed by measurement of platinum-DNA adducts in blood or tumor tissue and may be used to predict patient response. We exposed a panel of six breast cancer cell lines to C-14-labeled carboplatin or oxaliplatin at therapeutic and microdose (1% therapeutic dose) concentrations for a range of exposure lengths and isolated DNA from the cells. The DNA was converted to graphite, and measurement of radiocarbon due to platinum-DNA adduction was quantified via accelerator mass spectrometry (AMS). We observed a linear correlation in adduct levels between the microdose and therapeutic dose, and the level of platinum-DNA adducts corresponded to cell line drug sensitivity for both carboplatin and oxaliplatin. These results showed a clear separation in adduct levels between the sensitive and resistant groups of cell lines that could not be fully explained or predicted by changes in DNA repair rates or mutations in DNA repair genes. Further, we were able to quantitate oxaliplatin-DNA adducts in the blood and tumor tissue of a metastatic breast cancer patient. Together, these data support the use of diagnostic microdosing for predicting patient sensitivity to platinum. Future studies will be aimed at replicating this data in a clinical feasibility trial.

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