Abstract

The prevention of cyclophosphamide-induced urotoxicity by disulfiram was studied in mice. A single dose of cyclophosphamide (100-400 mg/kg, intraperitoneally) produced a significant dose-dependent increase in urinary bladder weight within 48 hr of treatment. Disulfiram prevented cyclophosphamide-induced bladder damage in a dose-dependent manner in mice when orally administered simultaneously with antitumour agents, but failed to diminish the acute toxicity, leukocytotoxicity and immunotoxicity of cyclophosphamide. The protective effect of disulfiram on the bladder was critically dependent on administration timing. Oral administration of disulfiram between 60 min. before and 60 min. after the injection of cyclophosphamide was found to be effective. The optimum time was simultaneous administration of both drugs. Diethyldithiocarbamate and carbon disulfide, metabolites of disulfiram, prevented cyclophosphamide-induced bladder damage when administered simultaneously with cyclophosphamide 1 to, 3 or 5 hr afterwards. Disulfiram slightly potentiated the antitumour activity of cyclophosphamide against Sarcoma 180 or EL-4 leukaemia in vivo when administered simultaneously with cyclophosphamide. In contrast, diethyldithiocarbamate or carbon disulfide did not interfere with cyclophosphamide antitumour activity when administered 3 hr after cyclophosphamide. From these preliminary studies, disulfiram appears to be a likely candidate for protection against cyclophosphamide-induced urotoxicity without compromising the therapeutic utility of the alkylating agent.

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