Abstract

Vascular endothelial growth factor inhibitors (VEGFi) are known to cause hypertension and renal injury that severely limits their use as an anticancer therapy. We hypothesized that the angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor captopril not only prevents hypertension, but also decreases renal injury caused by the VEGFi sorafenib. Rats were administered sorafenib (20mg/kg per day) alone or in combination with captopril (40mg/kg per day) for 4weeks. Sorafenib administration increased blood pressure, which plateaued by day 10. Concurrent treatment with captopril for 4weeks resulted in a 30mmHg decrease in blood pressure compared with sorafenib alone (155±5 vs 182±6mmHg, respectively; P<0.05). Furthermore, concurrent captopril treatment reduced albuminuria by 50% compared with sorafenib alone (20±8 vs 42±9mg/day, respectively; P<0.05) and reduced nephrinuria by eightfold (280±96 vs 2305±665μg/day, respectively; P<0.05). Glomerular injury, thrombotic microangiopathy and tubular cast formation were also decreased in captopril-treated rats administered sorafenib. Renal autoregulatory efficiency was determined by evaluating the afferent arteriolar constrictor response to ATP. Sorafenib administration attenuated the vasoconstriction to ATP, whereas concurrent captopril treatment improved ATP reactivity. In conclusion, captopril attenuated hypertension and renal injury and improved renal autoregulatory capacity in rats administered sorafenib. These findings indicate that captopril treatment, in addition to alleviating the detrimental side-effect of hypertension, decreases the renal injury associated with anticancer VEGFi therapies such as sorafenib.

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