Abstract

Recent studies reported the association between increased risk of nonmelanoma skin cancers (NMSCs) and the use of hydrochlorothiazide (HCTZ), one of the most commonly prescribed diuretic, antihypertensive drug, over the world. Although HCTZ is known to be photosensitizing, the mechanisms involved in its potential prophotocarcinogenic effects remain unclear. Under acute exposure, therapeutically relevant concentrations of HCTZ (70, 140, and 370 ng/mL) amplified UVA-induced double-strand breaks, oxidative DNA, and protein damage in HaCaT human keratinocytes, and this effect was associated to a defective activity of the DNA repair enzyme, OGG1. Oxidative damage to DNA, but not that to proteins, was reversible within few hours. After chronic, combined exposure to HCTZ (70 ng/mL) and UVA (10 J/cm2), for 9 weeks, keratinocytes acquired a dysplastic-like phenotype characterized by a multilayered morphology and alterations in cell size, shape, and contacts. At the ultrastructural level, several atypical and enlarged nuclei and evident nucleoli were also observed. These transformed keratinocytes were apoptosis resistant, exhibited enhanced clonogenicity capacity, increased DNA damage and inflammation, defective DNA repair ability, and increased expression of the oncogene ΔNp63α and intranuclear β-catenin accumulation (a hallmark of Wnt pathway activation), compared to those treated with UVA alone. None of these molecular, morphological, or functional effects were observed in cells treated with HCTZ alone. All these features resemble in part those of preneoplastic lesions and NMSCs and provide evidence of a biological plausibility for the association among exposure to UVA, use of HCTZ, and increased risk of NMSCs. These results are of translational relevance since we used environmentally relevant UVA doses and tested HCTZ at concentrations that reflect the plasma levels of doses used in clinical practice. This study also highlights that drug safety data should be followed by experimental evaluations to clarify the mechanistic aspects of adverse events.

Highlights

  • Recent pharmacoepidemiological studies showed a cumulative, dose-dependent association between hydrochlorothiazide (HCTZ), one of the most widely prescribed diuretic, antihypertensive drug, over the world [1], and increased nonmelanoma skin cancers (NMSCs) risk [2, 3]

  • Within 1 h post irradiation, HCTZ increased the formation of 8-hydroxy-2′-deoxyguanosine (8-OHdG), compared to UVA alone (p < 0:01, posttest for linear trend), concentration-dependently, reaching up to 50% increase at 370 ng/mL (p < 0:05) (Figure 2(a))

  • After 6 h, DNA damage was completely repaired (Figure 2(a)), and both the mRNA expression (1:52 ± 0:001 vs. 0:41 ± 0:08; p < 0:001) and oxoguanine DNA glycosylase 1 (OGG1) activity were significantly increased in cells treated with UVA and HCTZ (370 ng/mL) compared to UVA alone (p < 0:05) (Figure 2(b))

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Summary

Introduction

Recent pharmacoepidemiological studies showed a cumulative, dose-dependent association between hydrochlorothiazide (HCTZ), one of the most widely prescribed diuretic, antihypertensive drug, over the world [1], and increased nonmelanoma skin cancers (NMSCs) risk [2, 3]. On these bases, the European Medicine Agency Pharmacovigilance. HCTZ enhanced UVA-induced DNA damage in a mice model defective in nucleotide excision repair [21] These data contributed to the decision by the International Agency for Research on Cancer Monograph Working Group, to classify HCTZ as possibly carcinogenic to humans (Group 2B) [22]

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