Abstract

Human and animal studies suggest that both traumatic nerve injury and toxic challenge with chemotherapeutic agents involves the reorganization of neural circuits in the brain. However, there have been no prospectivestudies, human or animal,using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)toidentify changes in brain neural circuitry that accompany the development of chemotherapy-induced neuropathic pain (i.e. within days following cessation of chemotherapy treatment and without the confound cancer). To this end, different MRI protocols were used to ascertain whether a reorganization of brain neural circuits is observed in otherwise normal rats exposed to the taxane chemotherapeutic agent paclitaxel.We conducted an imaging study to evaluate the impact of a well-established paclitaxel dosing regimen, validated to induce allodynia in control rats within eight days of treatment, on brain neural circuitry. Rats received either paclitaxel (2 mg/kg/day i.p; cumulative dose of 8 mg/kg) or its vehicle four times on alternate days (i.e. day 0, 2, 4, 6). Following the cessation of treatments (i.e. on day 8), all rats were tested for responsiveness to cold followed by diffusion weighted magnetic resonance imaging and assessment of resting state functional connectivity. Imaging data were analyzed using a 3D MRI rat with 173 segmented and annotated brain areas.Paclitaxel-treated rats were more sensitive to a cold stimulus compared to controls. Diffusion weighted imaging identified brain areas involved in the emotional and motivational response to chronic pain that were impacted by paclitaxel treatment. Affected brain regions included the prefrontal cortex, amygdala, hippocampus, hypothalamus and the striatum/nucleus accumbens. This putative reorganization of gray matter microarchitecture formed a continuum of brain areas stretching from the basal medial/lateral forebrain to the midbrain. Resting state functional connectivity showed reorganization between the periaqueductal gray, a key node in nociceptive neural circuitry, and connections to the brainstem.Our results, employing different imaging modalities to assess the central nervous system effects of chemotherapy, fit the theory that chronic pain is regulated by emotion and motivation and influences activity in the periaqueductal gray and brainstem to modulate pain perception.

Highlights

  • Cancer statistics are puzzling and humbling—in 2018, over 1.7 million new cancer cases and 600,000 cancer-related deaths are projected to occur in the United States alone (Siegel et al, 2018)

  • A full list of affected areas for the different indices of anisotropy, ranked in order of their significance from 173 brain areas, can be found in Tables 1S-4S Supplementary Data. These significant brain areas are clustered into four major brain regions and reconstructed into 3D volumes positioned in the glass brain to the left of Fig. 2

  • Within eight days of paclitaxel treatment and induction of neuropathic pain, diffusion weighted imaging identified a number of brain areas e.g. prefrontal cortex, amygdala, hippocampus, hypothalamus and the striatal/accumbens dopaminergic system involved in the emotional and motivations response to chronic pain

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Summary

Introduction

Cancer statistics are puzzling and humbling—in 2018, over 1.7 million new cancer cases and 600,000 cancer-related deaths are projected to occur in the United States alone (Siegel et al, 2018). Though grim, those statistics do not speak to the concurrent 76% drop in combined US cancer deaths since the early 1990s. The benefits of improving cancer treatments and decreasing mortality rates have given rise to a global survivor population of over 32 million. Chemotherapy is an indispensable treatment option for many common cancers and is used in neoadjuvant, adjuvant, and metastatic settings. CIPN is characterized by chronic shooting or burning pain and loss of sensation that begins at the extremities and progresses more centrally; many report mechanical sensitivity and thermal allodynia/hyperalgesia (Fukuda et al, 2017)

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