4.7 Article

Diphenhydramine may be a preventive medicine against cisplatin-induced kidney toxicity

Journal

KIDNEY INTERNATIONAL
Volume 99, Issue 4, Pages 885-899

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.kint.2020.10.041

Keywords

cisplatin; diphenhydramine; nephrotoxicity

Funding

  1. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science KAKENHI [18K08480, 20K17285]
  2. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [18K08480, 20K17285] Funding Source: KAKEN

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Research suggests that diphenhydramine may serve as a novel treatment for cisplatin-induced kidney toxicity by inhibiting cell death and reducing oxidative stress to alleviate kidney injury, with clinical evidence from patients supporting this finding.
Cisplatin is widely used as an anti-tumor drug for the treatment of solid tumors. Unfortunately, it causes kidney toxicity as a critical side effect, limiting its use, given that no preventive drug against cisplatin-induced kidney toxicity is currently available. Here, based on a repositioning analysis of the Food and Drug Administration Adverse Events Reporting System, we found that a previously developed drug, diphenhydramine, may provide a novel treatment for cisplatin-induced kidney toxicity. To confirm this, the actual efficacy of diphenhydramine was evaluated in in vitro and in vivo experiments. Diphenhydramine inhibited cisplatininduced cell death in kidney proximal tubular cells. Mice administered cisplatin developed kidney injury with significant dysfunction (mean plasma creatinine: 0.43 vs 0.15 mg/dl) and showed augmented oxidative stress, increased apoptosis, elevated inflammatory cytokines, and MAPKs activation. However, most of these symptoms were suppressed by treatment with diphenhydramine. Furthermore, the concentration of cisplatin in the kidney was significantly attenuated in diphenhydramine-treated mice (mean platinum content: 70.0 vs 53.4 mg/g dry kidney weight). Importantly, diphenhydramine did not influence or interfere with the anti-tumor effect of cisplatin in any of the in vitro or in vivo experiments. In a selected cohort of 98 1:1 matched patients from a retrospective database of 1467 patients showed that patients with malignant cancer who had used diphenhydramine before cisplatin treatment exhibited significantly less acute kidney injury compared to ones who did not (6.1 % vs 22.4 %, respectively). Thus, diphenhydramine demonstrated efficacy as a novel preventive medicine against cisplatin-induced kidney toxicity.

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