Receptor inhibition may prevent hearing loss due to chemotherapy drug cisplatin: Study
Canada: Toll like receptor 4 (TLR4) could be a promising therapeutic target for the prevention of hearing loss in childhood cancer survivors being treated with the drug cisplatin, finds a recent study in EMBO Reports. According to the study, identifying a TLR4 small molecule inhibitor would curtail cisplatin toxicity in vitro.
Cisplatin is an effective chemotherapeutic when it comes to treating solid tumors in children, contributing to an 80 percent overall survival rate over five years, according to U of A researcher Amit Bhavsar, an assistant professor in the Department of Medical Microbiology & Immunology. The problem has always been with the side effects. Nearly 100 percent of patients who receive higher doses of cisplatin show some degree of permanent hearing loss. The ability to prevent this side-effect would dramatically improve the quality of life of childhood cancer survivors after they recover from the disease.
As Bhavsar explains, many researchers look at cisplatin's damaging side-effects from the angle of genetics, trying to determine underlying risk factors for hearing loss or examine how it works as a chemotherapeutic. A fair amount was known about the progression of hearing loss as a side-effect, but it was the initial spark--the instigating factor kicking everything off--that remained a mystery.
Bhavsar and his team thought outside the box and took things all the way back to the periodic table with their approach, getting some clues from the chemical composition of cisplatin itself and eventually identifying a particular receptor that was getting turned on.
https://www.embopress.org/doi/full/10.15252/embr.202051280
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