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9 January 2024 Sodium thiosulfate does not protect ovarian reserve from cisplatin-induced gonadotoxicity
Wonmi So, Amirhossein Abazarikia, Mary B. Zelinski, So-Youn Kim
Author Affiliations +
Abstract

Cisplatin, a platinum-containing alkylating agent, is used in the treatment of various tumors owing to its potent antitumor activity. However, it causes permanent and adverse effects, particularly hearing loss and depletion of ovarian reserve. Until recently, there were no clinically available protective agents to mitigate the adverse side effects of cisplatin-induced cytotoxicity. In 2022, sodium thiosulfate (STS) was approved by the Food and Drug Administration for mitigating hearing loss in children and adolescents undergoing cisplatin treatment. Consequently, our investigation aimed to determine if STS could protect ovarian reserve against cisplatin-induced gonadotoxicity. In an ex vivo culture, the cisplatin-only group exhibited a loss of primordial follicles, while post-STS administration after cisplatin exposure effectively protected primordial follicles. However, when post-STS was administrated either 6 or 4 h after cisplatin exposure, it did not confer protection against cisplatin-induced gonadotoxicity in postnatal day 7 or adolescent mouse models. Immunofluorescence assays using γH2AX and cPARP revealed that oocytes within primordial follicles exhibited DNA damage after cisplatin exposure, irrespective of post-STS administration. This underscores the rapid and heightened sensitivity of oocytes to gonadotoxicity. In addition, oocytes demonstrated an increased expression of pCHK2 rather than pERK, suggesting that the pathway leading to oocyte death differs from the pathway observed in the inner ear cell death following cisplatin exposure. These results imply that while the administration of STS after cisplatin is highly beneficial in preventing hearing loss, it does not confer a protective effect on the ovaries in mouse models.

Summary Sentence

Post-administration of sodium thiosulfate does not compromise cisplatin-induced toxicity in ovarian reserve.

Graphical Abstract

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Wonmi So, Amirhossein Abazarikia, Mary B. Zelinski, and So-Youn Kim "Sodium thiosulfate does not protect ovarian reserve from cisplatin-induced gonadotoxicity," Biology of Reproduction 110(4), 772-781, (9 January 2024). https://doi.org/10.1093/biolre/ioae003
Received: 21 August 2023; Accepted: 4 January 2024; Published: 9 January 2024
KEYWORDS
cisplatin
oocyte death
ovarian reserve
sodium thiosulfate
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