Laboratory of Neuropharmacology and Clinical Pharmacology,
Department of Pharmacology, School of Pharmacy, Central University of
Venezuela, Caracas, Venezuela (A.M.C., L.X.C.); and Laboratory of
Behavioral Physiology, Universidad de los Andes, Merida, Venezuela
(X.P., L.H.)
Serotonin [5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT)] is involved in the
production of emesis associated with cisplatin treatment. Serotonin released from intestinal enterochromaffin cells may act either directly
on vagal afferents and/or pass to the circulation and stimulate central
emetic centers. However, the role for circulating 5-HT has not been
determined. In this study, i.v. microdialysis probes were used to
investigate 1) cisplatin-induced changes in 5-HT release and metabolism
assessed through changes in blood dialysate levels of 5-HT and
5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid (5-HIAA), 2) whether free 5-HT in blood
increases after cisplatin, and 3) whether granisetron and ondansetron
exert different effects on cisplatin-induced 5-HT release and
metabolism. Control experiments conducted in 10 healthy volunteers
revealed stable 5-HT and 5-HIAA dialysate levels for a period of 6 h. In patients with cancer (n = 16), baseline blood
dialysate 5-HIAA concentrations averaged 2.98 ± 0.38 ng/ml, which
were equivalent to a total of 94 ± 10 pg in the 30-min collection
period at a flow rate of 1 µl/min. Cisplatin (89 ± 2.9 mg of
cisplatin/m2) produced a gradual increase in blood
dialysate 5-HIAA levels (104 ± 4% increase at 4 h).
Increases in dialysate 5-HIAA were associated with increases in the
urinary excretion of this metabolite. After cisplatin, dialysate 5-HIAA
levels increased to 5.89 ± 0.5 ng/ml in granisetron and to
5.27 ± 0.9 ng/ml in ondansetron-treated patients
(P > .1). Similar time courses and percentages of
increase in blood dialysate and urinary 5-HIAA levels were observed in ondansetron- and granisetron-treated patients. Contrary to 5-HIAA, no
significant increases in dialysate 5-HT were observed from 2 to 8 h after cisplatin either for the total group or for each of the groups
separately. In conclusion, i.v. microdialysis probes coupled to HPLC-EC
allowed the continuos monitoring of free-5-HT and 5-HIAA in blood.
Cisplatin-induced increases in blood 5-HIAA were not associated with
increases in 5-HT blood dialysates. These results argue against a
possible action of free 5-HT in plasma on the chemoreceptor trigger
zone (unprotected from the blood brain barrier) but support the view
that 5-HT released within the intestinal wall triggers emesis after
cisplatin. Our results argue against the view that at clinically
effective doses, granisetron and ondansetron exert different actions on
cisplatin-induced 5-HT release and metabolism.
 |
Introduction |
Serotonin
[5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT)] plays a fundamental role in the
production of nausea and emesis associated with cancer chemotherapy
drug regimens (Cubeddu et al., 1990
; Andrews, 1994
; Alfieri and
Cubeddu, 1995
; Andrews and Davis, 1995
). Cytotoxic drugs have been
shown to induce the release of 5-HT from enterochromaffin cells
(Schwörer et al., 1991
; Fukui et al., 1993
; Minami et al., 1997
).
In patients with cancer, the acute vomiting produced by cisplatin is
paralleled by increases in the urinary excretion of
5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid (5-HIAA) and of plasma chromogranin A,
markers of enterochromaffin cell activity (Cubeddu et al., 1990
;
1995b
,c
). Once released, 5-HT triggers vomiting by stimulating 5-HT3 receptors located in vagal afferent nerves
and/or in central areas (chemoreceptor-trigger zone) (Hawthorn et al.,
1988
; Carl et al., 1989
; Andrews, 1994
). There is controversy on
whether the circulating levels of free-5-HT increase after treatment
with cytotoxic drugs (Barnes et al., 1990
; Cubeddu et al., 1992
; Fukui et al., 1993
). Part of the discrepancies may be related to the methodology used for the collection and preparation of the
platelet-free plasma (Cubeddu et al., 1995a
). The application of i.v.
microdialysis techniques may provide an answer to whether free-blood
5-HT increases after cisplatin. These techniques allow the continuous
monitoring of blood concentrations of analytes and circumvent problems
related to sample handling (i.e., 5-HT uptake into platelets during
sample processing).
Selective antagonists of 5-HT3 receptors are key
drugs in the management of nausea and vomiting associated with cancer
chemotherapeutic drugs (Costall et al., 1986
; Miner and Sanger, 1986
;
Cubeddu et al., 1990
). Ondansetron, granisetron, and others have been
shown to reduce the incidence of nausea and emesis associated with
radiation therapy and cisplatin- and cyclophosphamide-based
chemotherapies (Cunningham 1997
; Roila et al., 1997
; Perez,
1998
; Poon and Chow, 1998
). Although these agents block
5-HT3 receptors, recent studies have indicated
that ondansetron and granisetron have additional actions. Granisetron
showed noncompetitive kinetics at a 5-HT3 receptor assay, at which ondansetron behaved as a competitive antagonist (Blower, 1995
; Ito et al., 1995
). In addition, by using a
test for visceral hypersensitivity in rats, Langlois et al. (1996)
demonstrated that granisetron, but not ondansetron, inhibited the
effects of gut distention and chemical irritation. In in vitro studies,
granisetron has been shown to inhibit the release of 5-HT from
enterochromaffin cells (Minami et al., 1995
, 1997
), whereas ondansetron
failed to inhibit the increases in urinary of 5-HIAA and in plasma
chromogranin A induced by cisplatin in patients with cancer (Cubeddu et
al., 1990
, 1995b
). However, no study has assessed the effects of
ondansetron and granisetron on cisplatin-induced 5-HT release and
metabolism in vivo and in patients.
In this study, we used i.v. microdialysis probes to monitor the changes
in blood 5-HIAA and 5-HT in patients with cancer receiving cisplatin-based chemotherapy to determine 1) the applicability of i.v.
microdialysis techniques for the monitoring and quantification of
cisplatin-induced changes in 5-HT release and metabolism, 2) whether
free 5-HT in blood increases at a time at which intense emesis has been
reported to occur after treatment with cisplatin, and 3) whether
granisetron and ondansetron have different effects on 5-HT release and
metabolism, by monitoring the increases in blood 5-HT and 5-HIAA and in
urinary 5-HIAA, induced by cisplatin, in patients treated with one or
the other selective 5-HT3 antagonists. Additional
experiments were performed in untreated volunteers to assess the
variability and reproducibility of blood 5-HT and 5-HIAA dialysate
levels with our probes in subjects not treated with cisplatin.
 |
Materials and Methods |
Patients.
Ten healthy volunteers (36 ± 2 years, eight
men and two women, 71.2 ± 3 kg) were studied to assess the range
of basal levels, the presence of temporal changes, and the
reproducibility of blood 5-HT and 5-HIAA dialysate concentrations in
subjects not treated with cisplatin. A written informed consent was
obtained each subject. In addition, a total of 16 consecutive
hospitalized patients (18 years old or older) with histologically
confirmed cancer and scheduled to receive moderate- to high-dose
cisplatin-based regimens (
50 mg/m2) were enrolled in the
study. The following inclusion criteria were used: diagnosis of cancer,
age of 19 to 60 years, Karnosfky index of
80%, and treatment with
cisplatin at doses of
50 mg/m2. Cisplatin was dissolved
in 500 ml of 5% dextrose in 0.9% sodium chloride and administered as
a 60-min i.v. infusion. Patients were continuously hydrated with 5%
dextrose at a rate of 200 ml/h, starting 2 h before the session
and terminating at the end of the dialysis session. The primary agent
(cisplatin) was followed by the administration of other
chemotherapeutic drugs as required for treatment of the patient's
neoplasia. Other chemotherapies included methotrexate, 5-fluorouracil,
doxorubicin, and gemzar (Table 1).
Subjects did not ingest any food immediately before and during the
experiment. In addition, to further prevent acute gastrointestinal
toxicity (nausea, retching, and vomiting), all subjects received
effective i.v. antiemetic treatment 30 min before the initiation of the
cisplatin infusion. Cancer patients were randomized to two groups of
eight patients each: one group received antiemetic treatment with 8 mg
of ondansetron and 8 mg of dexamethasone, and the other received 2 mg
of granisetron plus 8 mg of dexamethasone. The glucocorticoid was added
to maximize the control of emesis (Roila et al., 1997
; Perez, 1998
).
All measurements were made the day of the cisplatin treatment (first
day of chemotherapy). Written informed consent was obtained from each
patient, and the protocols were evaluated and approved by the
Institutional Review Board of the Luis Razetti Oncology Hospital
(Caracas, Venezuela).
Intravenous Microdialysis Probes.
The flexible removable
probes were constructed at the Laboratory of Behavioral Physiology of
the Universidad de los Andes (Merida, Venezuela) and validated as
described in detail by Paez and Hernandez (1996
, 1997
). The active
dialysis area of the probes consisted of a 20-mm-long cellulose hollow
fiber with a 200-µm outside diameter and a 13,000 mol. wt. cutoff
size (Spectrum Medical Industries, Los Angeles, CA). The probes and
connections of polyethylene were individually packed and sterilized
with ethylene oxide for 12 h and ventilated for 24 h before
use. The time response of the probe was less than minutes. The
calculated dead end volume for the probe was 2.1 µl, which
represented 7% of the volume of the collected sample in the present
experiments. The dead volume from the probe to the collection tube was
20 µl; because the flow rate was 1 µl/min, the delay between the
changes in plasma and the changes recorded by us was 20 min. The in
vivo recovery for 5-HT and 5-HIAA averaged 98.6% (Paez and Hernandez,
1998
).
Dialysis Session.
A similar procedure was used for healthy
subjects and patients with cancer. A 1-inch long, 22-gauge sterile
Teflon catheter (Jelco; Dupont) was placed in one antebrachial vein of
the arm not receiving chemotherapeutic drugs. The i.v. dialysis probe was inserted into the venous catheter, and the entire 20-mm-long cellulose hollow fiber passed through and protruded into the
bloodstream (active dialysis area). The dialysis probe was connected to
a syringe pump and continuously perfused with 0.9% sterile saline at a
rate of 1 µl/min. A 150-min period of equilibration was used to
minimize any possibility of contamination of plasma dialysates with any
5-HT that might have been released from platelets during the probe
insertion. Subsequently, the dialysis probe outflow was collected into
polypropylene tubes, placed on dry ice, and subsequently stored at
60°C until assayed. Thirty-minute samples were collected throughout
the experiment. All samples were assayed within 24 h of collection.
Analytical Methods.
All samples were assayed within 24 h of collection. 5-HT and 5-HIAA were quantified by means of HPLC with
an amperometric electrochemical detection (model 464; Waters). The
detector potential (oxidation potential) was set at +710 mV between a
glassy carbon working electrode and an Ag/AgCl reference electrode. A
20-µl aliquot of each sample dialysate was injected into the
HPLC system. Separation of the compounds was achieved by a means of a
3-µm Waters Novapack C18 (3.9 × 150 mm) reversed phase column.
The mobile phase consisted of 0.1 mM citric acid, 0.1 mM formic acid, acetonitrile (9 v/v), 1 mM disodium EDTA, and 0.08 mM octanesulfonic acid. The pH of the mobile phase was adjusted to 3.4 with potassium hydroxide. The mobile phase was filtered and degassed and delivered with a dual piston pump (model 510; Waters) at a constant flow rate of
0.7 ml/min. Peaks were captured in and analyzed by a Waters Data Module
(model 740). Separation of interfering peaks was achieved on an
individual basis by adjusting the pH and the acetonitrile concentration
of the mobile phase. Identification on the basis of retention times and
measurements of the compounds by peak heights in the samples
were achieved by comparisons with 5-HT and 5-HIAA external
standards. The standards were prepared as 1 mg/ml stock solution in 0.1 M HCl with 100 µM disodium EDTA. Linearity was determined by
injecting increasing concentrations of 5-HT and 5-HIAA (10-400 pg/20
µl). The detection limit was established as the mass of 5-HT or
5-HIAA that generated a signal three times as large as noise. For 5-HT,
the detection signal was 10 pg, and its average retention time of 8.4 min. For 5-HIAA, the assay sensitivity was 10 pg, and the average
retention time was 5.7 min. The intra-assay and interassay variations
for 5-HT and 5-HIAA were 5.9 to 6.5% (S.D.) and 8.2 to 10.3%,
respectively. .
Urinary 5-HIAA.
On the day of chemotherapy, urine was
collected for 24 h starting with the infusion of cisplatin (time
0). Four consecutive 2-h samples were obtained (0-2, 2-4, 4-6, and
6-8), followed by a 16-h sample to complete the 24-h collection
period. Urine samples were acidified with HClO4 (0.1 M
final concentration), centrifuged, and diluted 1:50 in mobile phase
before quantification. A 20-µl aliquot of the acidified, diluted
urine was injected (loop injection) into the injection port. Urinary
5-HIAA was quantified with an HPLC procedure with electrochemical
detection as described above.
Statistical Analysis.
Comparisons between baseline
values and values obtained at different times after administration of
cisplatin was achieved with ANCOVA because each patient provided basal
and post-treatment values. Comparisons between ondansetron and
granisetron were evaluated by two-way ANOVA, followed by Duncan's
test. Results were expressed either as ng/ml dialysate, pg/30-min
sample, or percentage of change from baseline levels. Urinary excretion
of 5-HIAA was expressed as µg/2 h. Results were expressed as
mean ± S.E. for n observations. Significance was
set at P < .05.
 |
Results |
The demographic characteristics of the patients with cancer are
shown in Table 1. Most patients had solid tumors of head and neck. The
mean dose of cisplatin administered to the patients was 89 ± 2.9 mg/m2. With the antiemetic protection provided,
none of the patients experienced any vomiting during the period of
microdialysis. For the patients with cancer, the duration of the
microdialysis session averaged 9.3± 0.5 h. After 150 min of
stabilization, the 30-min sample collection began. The time course for
the changes in dialysate 5-HIAA and 5-HT levels is shown in Fig.
1. Baseline 5-HIAA averaged 2.98 ± 0.38 ng/ml, which corresponded to 94 ± 10 pg/30 min (95% confidence interval, 72-116 pg/30 min). 5-HIAA showed a gradual increase, reaching its maximum (104 ± 4% above baseline levels) from 3.5 to 6 h after cisplatin. Similarly to blood dialysate levels, the urinary excretion rate of 5-HIAA peaked at 4 to 6 h
after cisplatin, returning to baseline levels in the 8- to 24-h sample
(Table 2). Higher dialysate levels were
associated with higher urinary excretion rates.

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Fig. 1.
Blood dialysate levels of 5-HT and 5-HIAA in patients
with cancer: effects of cisplatin. A microdialysis probe was inserted
in an antebrachial vein. 5-HT and 5-HIAA concentrations (ng/ml) were
measured in the dialysate (30-min collection samples). Abscissa, time
in hours after cisplatin and period of cisplatin infusion (solid bar).
Shown are mean ± S.E. values (n = 16).
*P < .05 and **P < .01, significantly different from baseline.
|
|
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|
TABLE 2
Urinary excretion of 5-HIAA in patients with cancer treated with
cisplatin
Urines were collected for 24 h, beginning with the infusion of
cisplatin (time 0). Four consecutive 2-h samples were obtained (0-2,
2-4, 4-6, and 4-8), followed by a 16-h sample to complete the 24-h
collection period. Shown are mean ± S.E. values for the urinary
excretion of 5-HIAA expressed as µg/2 h.
|
|
Baseline dialysate 5-HIAA averaged 3.26± 0.98 ng/ml in the
granisetron group and 2.84 ± 0.57 ng/ml in the ondansetron group (P > .1; Fig. 2).
Cisplatin induced similar quantitative and qualitative changes in blood
dialysate 5-HIAA levels in ondansetron- and granisetron-treated patients. For granisetron-treated patients, peak levels averaged 5.89 ± 0.49 ng/ml, and for ondansetron-treated patients, peak levels were 5.27 ± 0.12 ng/ml (P > .1). No
significant differences were observed for the magnitude and the time
course of the increase in dialysate 5-HIAA between granisetron- and
ondansetron-treated patients (Fig. 2). The urinary excretion of 5-HIAA
increased after cisplatin administration in both ondansetron- and
granisetron-treated groups (Fig. 3). Peak
urinary excretion rates (µg/2 h) were observed for both groups from 4 to 6 h after cisplatin. No significant differences for the
increases in urinary 5-HIAA induced by cisplatin were observed between
ondansetron- and granisetron-treated patients (Fig. 3).

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Fig. 2.
Comparative effects of ondansetron and granisetron on
cisplatin-induced increases in 5-HIAA levels in blood dialysates in
patients with cancer. A microdialysis probe was inserted in an
antebrachial vein, and 5-HIAA concentrations were measured in the
dialysate (30-min collection samples) before and after cisplatin
administration. Granisetron ( ; 2 mg) combined with 8 mg of
dexamethasone or ondansetron ( ; 8 mg) combined with 8 mg of
dexamethasone was administered i.v. 30 min before the cisplatin. Top,
5-HIAA concentrations (ng/ml) in blood dialysates. Bottom, percentage
of increase above baseline in 5-HIAA concentrations in blood
dialysates. Abscissa, time in hours after cisplatin and period of
cisplatin infusion (solid bar). Shown are mean ± S.E. values
(n = 8 for granisetron and n = 8 for ondansetron). *P < .05 and
**P < .01, significantly different from baseline.
Bottom, significances were only displayed once because similar
P values were obtained for both groups.
|
|

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Fig. 3.
Comparative effects of ondansetron and granisetron on
cisplatin-induced increases in the urinary excretion of 5-HIAA. On the
day of chemotherapy, urine samples were collected for 24 h
starting with the infusion of cisplatin (time 0). Four consecutive 2-h
samples were obtained (0-2, 2-4, 4-6, and 6-8), followed by a 16-h
sample to complete the 24-h collection period. Granisetron ( ; 2 mg)
combined with 8 mg of dexamethasone or ondansetron ( ; 8 mg) combined
with 8 mg of dexamethasone was administered i.v. 30 min before the
cisplatin. Shown are mean ± S.E. values (n = 8 for ondansetron and n = 8 for
granisetron).**P < .01, significantly different
from baseline.
|
|
Contrary to 5-HIAA, dialysate 5-HT showed a gradual decrease throughout
the experiment (Fig. 1). From 2 to 7 h after cisplatin, dialysate
5-HT levels averaged 2.1 ± 0.1 ng/ml, and no significant increases were observed during this period of observation, despite marked increases in dialysate 5-HIAA concentrations. Although the
baseline concentrations of 5-HT in the blood dialysates were 25%
greater in ondansetron- than in granisetron-treated patients, no
increases in blood 5-HT dialysate levels were observed in either group
of patients after cisplatin treatment (Fig.
4).

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Fig. 4.
5-HT concentrations in blood dialysates of patients
with cancer treated with cisplatin: effects of ondansetron and
granisetron. A microdialysis probe was inserted in an antebrachial
vein. 5-HT and 5-HIAA concentrations (ng/ml) were measured in the
dialysate (30-min collection samples). Granisetron ( ; 2 mg) combined
with 8 mg of dexamethasone or ondansetron ( ; 8 mg) combined with 8 mg of dexamethasone was administered i.v. 30 min before the cisplatin.
Abscissa, time in hours after cisplatin and period of cisplatin
infusion (solid bar). Shown are mean ± S.E. values
(n = for ondansetron and n = 8 for granisetron).
|
|
Blood dialysate 5-HIAA and 5-HT concentrations were measured in healthy
volunteers (Table 3). The duration of the
microdialysis session was 8 h. After 150 min of stabilization, the
30-min sample collection began. Baseline values ranged from 0.55 to 4.6 ng/ml for 5-HT and from 0.70 to 3.5 ng/ml for 5-HIAA. No significant increases or decreases in the dialysate concentrations of 5-HT and
5-HIAA were observed during the period of collection (Table 3). No
significant differences in the concentrations of 5-HIAA and 5-HT in
dialysates were encountered between patients with cancer and healthy
volunteers.
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TABLE 3
Blood dialysate 5-HT and 5-HIAA concentrations in healthy volunteers
A microdialysis probe was inserted in an antebrachial vein. After 150 min of stabilization, 5-HT and 5-HIAA concentrations were measured in
the dialysates for a period of 6 h. Shown are mean ± S.E.
values (n = 10). For 5-HT and 5-HIAA, no significant
differences were observed between basal levels and levels at 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6 h.
|
|
 |
Discussion |
Previous studies have shown the advantages of i.v. microdialysis
for the continuous monitoring of endogenous compounds. Our microdialysis probes have been shown to have a quick response time and
high and reproducible in vitro and in vivo recoveries for substances
such as glucose, 5-HT, and 5-HIAA (Paez and Hernandez, 1996
, 1997
;
present study). Due to the very high recoveries, the 5-HIAA and 5-HT
concentrations in the dialysates were comparable to those described for
the normal range of both substances in plasma (Anderson et al., 1987
;
Cubeddu et al., 1992
; Lechin et al., 1996
). The i.v. microdialysis
probes used detected large increases in blood dialysate 5-HIAA levels
after cisplatin administration, supporting the view that cisplatin
induces the release of 5-HT. The increases in blood dialysate 5-HIAA
were associated with increases in the urinary excretion of this
metabolite (present study). The increases in 5-HIAA are due to the
cisplatin and not to any additional treatment or factor because 1) no
changes in blood dialysate 5-HIAA levels were observed in untreated
healthy volunteers (present study), 2) the urinary excretion of 5-HIAA
(µg/2 h or µg/mg creatinine) does not increase throughout a period
of 10 h in volunteers exposed to a diuretic/hydration protocol
similar to that received by patients with cancer (Cubeddu et al.,
1990
), 3) cisplatin increases 5-HIAA excretion and plasma chromogranin
A in the absence of antiemetic treatment (Cubeddu et al., 1992
, 1995a
),
and 4) no increases in 5-HIAA excretion and of plasma chromogranin A
occur in patients treated with cyclophosphamide (not cisplatin) who
received ondansetron as prophylactic antiemetic (Cubeddu et al., 1992
,
1995c
).
The increases in dialysate and in urinary 5-HIAA occurred at times
(2-6 h after cisplatin) at which intense vomiting is known to develop
after treatment with cisplatin (Cubeddu et al., 1990
; Cubeddu and
Hoffmann, 1994
). The increases in blood dialysate 5-HIAA were not
accompanied with increases in dialysate 5-HT (present study). With the
use of repeated venipuncture (or blood draws from the same catheter),
anticoagulant addition (sodium citrate), and sample processing
(centrifugation for the separation of plasma from cells), other two
studies failed to report increases in plasma 5-HT after cisplatin or
cyclophosphamide treatments (Barnes et al., 1990
; Cubeddu et al.,
1992
). Because 5-HT is avidly and effectively taken up by platelets,
its rapid uptake into platelets may account for the failure to observe
increases in blood dialysate levels. However, this is unlikely because
the content and concentration of 5-HT in platelets were not increased
after treatment with cisplatin, despite large increases in the urinary
excretion of 5-HIAA (1.5-2 mg in 4 h; Cubeddu, 1992
; Cubeddu et
al., 1992
). In conclusion, our findings support the view that free 5-HT
in plasma does not increase at times at which cisplatin is known to
produce intense emesis and at which it induces large increases in
dialysate and urinary 5-HIAA levels. Previous studies have shown that
cisplatin-induced increases in 5-HIAA were paralleled by increases in
plasma chromogranin A concentrations (Cubeddu et al., 1995b
,c
). It is
known that in the absence of endocrine tumors, the increases in 5-HIAA
and chromogranin A levels represent 5-HT release from the
gastrointestinal tract (Bertaccini, 1960
; Bertaccini and Chieppa, 1960
;
Bargsten and Grube, 1992
; Cubeddu et al., 1995a
). Therefore, these
results, as well as other obtained in experimental animals (Hawthorn et al., 1988
; Schwörer et al., 1991
; Fukui et al., 1993
; Andrews, 1994
), suggest that cisplatin releases 5-HT from gastrointestinal stores (enterochromaffin cells). The 5-HT released within the gut would
stimulate 5-HT3 receptors located in vagal
afferents inducing marked increases in visceral afferent inputs to the
emetic centers, leading to nausea and emesis (for reviews, see Andrews and Davis, 1995
; Andrews et al., 1998
). Accordingly, the majority of
the 5-HT released from the enterochromaffin cells would be metabolized
to 5-HIAA within the intestinal wall and/or during its passage through
the liver, leading to large increases in plasma and urinary 5-HIAA not
associated with increases in plasma 5-HT. The results of this study
support the view that circulating 5-HT does not play a role in the
emetic response associated with cisplatin treatment.
Selective 5-HT3 receptor antagonists are key
drugs for the management of nausea and vomiting associated with cancer
chemotherapeutic drugs (Costall et al., 1986
; Miner and Sanger, 1986
;
Cubeddu et al., 1990
; Andrews, 1994
; Cunningham, 1997
). Recent findings
suggest the existence of differences among 5-HT3
antagonists (Blower, 1995
; Ito et al., 1995
; Langlois et al., 1996
).
Granisetron has been reported to inhibit the release of 5-HT from
enterochromaffin cells (Minami et al., 1995
, 1997
), whereas ondansetron
failed to inhibit the increases in urinary 5-HIAA and in plasma
chromogranin A induced by cisplatin in patients with cancer (Cubeddu et
al., 1990
, 1995b
). It has been proposed that release-facilitatory
5-HT3 autoreceptors on enterochromaffin cells
could differ from the 5-HT3 receptors located on
vagal afferent fibers (Gebauer et al., 1993
; Minami et al., 1995
;
Schwörer and Ramadori, 1998
) and that granisetron would be
effective in blocking both receptors. The blockade of facilitatory
5-HT3 autoreceptors would be expected to reduce
5-HT release. However, our findings in patients with cancer argue
against the existence of differences between ondansetron and
granisetron on cisplatin-induced 5-HT release, because comparable increases in blood dialysate and urinary 5-HIAA levels were produced by
cisplatin in ondansetron- and granisetron-treated subjects. Previous
studies have shown that ondansetron neither inhibits nor enhances
cisplatin-induced increases in urinary 5-HIAA and in plasma
chromogranin A in patients with cancer, an effect concordant with its
mechanism of action (i.e., antagonism of 5-HT3
receptors; Cubeddu et al., 1992
, 1995a
; Andrews et al., 1998
).
Although we cannot rule out other sites of action, our findings favor
the view that similar to ondansetron, granisetron prevents emesis mainly by blocking the effects of 5-HT at 5-HT3
receptors on vagal afferents and does not seem to exert an additional
inhibitory effect on 5-HT release.
For ethical reasons, all of our study patients received preventive
antiemetic therapy. In this study, dexamethasone was used in
combination with the 5-HT3 antagonist to maximize
emetic control. The addition of dexamethasone to granisetron or
ondansetron improves the control of emesis in patients treated with
moderately to highly emetogenic chemotherapies (Roila et al., 1997
;
Perez, 1998
). The possibility that dexamethasone would affect the
release of 5-HT induced by cisplatin is improbable because the
increases in urinary 5-HIAA induced by cisplatin were not affected by
dexamethasone at doses 2.5 times higher than those used in this study
(Cubeddu and Hoffmann, 1993
, 1994
). In addition, similar increases in
urinary 5-HIAA and in plasma chromogranin A were observed in patients treated with dexamethasone, metoclopramide, ondansetron, or placebo (Cubeddu and Hoffmann, 1993
; Cubeddu et al., 1995a
). Furthermore, cisplatin did not increase plasma-free and platelet 5-HT levels in
patients receiving placebo antiemetic or ondansetron as the sole
antiemetic (no dexamethasone; Cubeddu et al., 1992
). Therefore, the use
of dexamethasone should not be the reason for the similar effects of
granisetron and ondansetron on blood dialysate 5-HIAA concentrations
and for the lack of increases in dialysate 5-HT after cisplatin.
In conclusion, i.v. microdialysis probes coupled to HPLC-EC allowed the
continuous monitoring of free-5-HT and 5-HIAA levels in the blood of
healthy volunteers and of patients with cancer. The increases in 5-HIAA
levels were associated with increases in urinary 5-HIAA, and these
increases occurred at times at which acute emesis is known to develop
after cisplatin (Cubeddu et al., 1990
, 1995a
). The increases in free
5-HIAA were not associated with increases in free 5-HT. These results
argue against the role of a central action of circulating 5-HT on the
chemoreceptor trigger zone (unprotected from the blood-brain barrier)
but rather support the view that the free 5-HT within the intestinal
wall is involved in triggering the emetic response after cisplatin
chemotherapy. The increases in circulating 5-HIAA levels represent the
5-HT metabolized either within the gut or on its passage through the liver after being released from the gut. Our results also indicate that
at clinically effective doses, granisetron and ondansetron do not
differently affect the magnitude and time course of 5-HT release
induced by cisplatin.
Accepted for publication July 21, 1999.
Received for publication May 7, 1999.