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      Dexrazoxane does not protect against doxorubicin-induced damage in young rats.

      American Journal of Physiology - Heart and Circulatory Physiology
      Age Factors, Animals, Antineoplastic Agents, pharmacology, Body Weight, Cell Differentiation, Doxorubicin, toxicity, Female, Heart Diseases, chemically induced, drug therapy, pathology, Heme Oxygenase (Decyclizing), metabolism, Heme Oxygenase-1, Myocardium, Myocytes, Cardiac, cytology, drug effects, Organ Size, Oxidative Stress, Proto-Oncogene Proteins, biosynthesis, Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-bcl-2, Rats, Rats, Sprague-Dawley, Razoxane, Vesicular Transport Proteins, bcl-2-Associated X Protein

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          Abstract

          Doxorubicin (DOX), an anticancer drug, causes a dose-dependent cardiotoxicity. Some evidence suggests that female children have an increased risk for DOX-mediated cardiac damage. To determine whether the iron chelator dexrazoxane (DXR) could reduce DOX-induced cardiotoxicity in the young, we injected day 10 neonate female and male rat pups with a single dose of saline or DOX, DXR, or DXR + DOX (20:1). We followed body weight gain with growth, measured cardiac hypertrophy after a 2-wk swim exercise program, markers of apoptosis (Bcl-2, BAX, BNIP1, caspase 3 activation), oxidative stress (heme oxygenase 1, protein carbonyl levels), the chaperone protein clusterin, and the transcriptional activator early growth response gene-1 (Egr-1) in hearts of nonexercised and exercised rats on neonate day 38. All DOX-alone and DXR + DOX-treated rats showed decreased weight gain, with female rats affected earlier than male rats. DXR-alone, DOX-alone, and DXR + DOX-treated rats had an increased heart weight-to-body weight (heart wt/body wt) ratio after the exercise program with female rats showing the largest increase in heart wt/body wt. Drug-treated females also showed increased cardiac apoptosis, as measured by the increased expression of the proapoptotic proteins BAX and BNIP1 and the appearance of caspase 3 activation products, and oxidative stress, as measured by increased heme oxygenase 1 expression, and reduced Egr-1 and clusterin expression when compared with the similarly treated male rats. We conclude that DXR preinjection did not reduce DOX-induced noncardiac and cardiac damage and that young female rats were more susceptible to DXR and DOX toxicities than age-matched male rats.

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