4.6 Article

Aromatase-Inhibitor-Induced Musculoskeletal Inflammation Is Observed Independent of Oophorectomy in a Novel Mouse Model

Journal

PHARMACEUTICALS
Volume 15, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ph15121578

Keywords

breast cancer; hormone-receptor-positive cancer; estrogen; aromatase inhibitor; aromatase-inhibitor-induced arthralgia (AIIA)

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [P30CA016058]
  2. National Center for Advancing Translational Science [UL1TR001070]

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Aromatase inhibitors block estrogen production and improve survival in hormone-receptor-positive breast cancer patients, but can also induce joint inflammation (AIIA). A study using a novel animal model found that AIIA is characterized by enhanced NF kappa B activation and inflammation in the joints and surrounding tissue. The findings suggest that AIIA pathogenesis may not be mediated by estrogen deficiency, as previously hypothesized.
Aromatase Inhibitors (AIs) block estrogen production and improve survival in patients with hormone-receptor-positive breast cancer. However, half of patients develop aromatase-inhibitor-induced arthralgia (AIIA), which is characterized by inflammation of the joints and the surrounding musculoskeletal tissue. To create a platform for future interventional strategies, our objective was to characterize a novel animal model of AIIA. Female BALB/C-Tg(NF kappa B-RE-luc)-Xen mice, which have a firefly luciferase NF kappa B reporter gene, were oophorectomized and treated with an AI (letrozole). Bioluminescent imaging showed significantly enhanced NF kappa B activation with AI treatment in the hind limbs. Moreover, an analysis of the knee joints and legs via MRI showed enhanced signal detection in the joint space and the surrounding tissue. Surprisingly, the responses observed with AI treatment were independent of oophorectomy, indicating that inflammation is not mediated by physiological estrogen levels. Histopathological and pro-inflammatory cytokine analyses further demonstrated the same trend, as tenosynovitis and musculoskeletal infiltrates were detected in all mice receiving AI, and serum cytokines were significantly upregulated. Human PBMCs treated with letrozole/estrogen combinations did not demonstrate an AI-specific gene expression pattern, suggesting AIIA-mediated pathogenesis through other cell types. Collectively, these data identify an AI-induced stimulation of disease pathology and suggest that AIIA pathogenesis may not be mediated by estrogen deficiency, as previously hypothesized.

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