Abstract

Hyperglycemia, obesity and metabolic syndrome are negative prognostic factors in breast cancer patients. Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) have revolutionized cancer treatment, achieving unprecedented efficacy in multiple malignancies. However, ICIs are associated with immune-related adverse events involving cardiotoxicity. We aimed to study if hyperglycemia could affect ipilimumab-induced anticancer efficacy and enhance its cardiotoxicity. Human cardiomyocytes and estrogen-responsive and triple-negative breast cancer cells (MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231 cell lines) were exposed to ipilimumab under high glucose (25 mM); low glucose (5.5 mM); high glucose and co-administration of SGLT-2 inhibitor (empagliflozin); shifting from high glucose to low glucose. Study of cell viability and the expression of new putative biomarkers of cardiotoxicity and resistance to ICIs (NLRP3, MyD88, cytokines) were quantified through ELISA (Cayman Chemical) methods. Hyperglycemia during treatment with ipilimumab increased cardiotoxicity and reduced mortality of breast cancer cells in a manner that is sensitive to NLRP3. Notably, treatment with ipilimumab and empagliflozin under high glucose or shifting from high glucose to low glucose reduced significantly the magnitude of the effects, increasing responsiveness to ipilimumab and reducing cardiotoxicity. To our knowledge, this is the first evidence that hyperglycemia exacerbates ipilimumab-induced cardiotoxicity and decreases its anticancer efficacy in MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231 cells. This study sets the stage for further tests on other breast cancer cell lines and primary cardiomyocytes and for preclinical trials in mice aimed to decrease glucose through nutritional interventions or administration of gliflozines during treatment with ipilimumab.

Highlights

  • Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) improved overall survival in cancer patients both as monotherapy or combined with chemotherapies for primary and metastatic cancer patients [1,2]

  • We studied how high glucose could affect the anticancer properties and cardiotoxicity induced by ipilimumab in a co-culture of cardiomyocytes or breast cancer cells with human peripheral blood mononuclear cells [19]

  • A different behavior was seen in cardiomyocytes co-cultured with PBMCs (Figure 2C): hyperglicemia increased significantly ipilimumab-induced toxicity than hypoglicemia; administration of empagliflozin during high glucose and shifting from high glucose to low glucose reduced the magnitude of the effects

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Summary

Introduction

Immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs) improved overall survival in cancer patients both as monotherapy or combined with chemotherapies for primary and metastatic cancer patients [1,2]. The combinatorial strategies of ICIs are currently under study in metastatic cancer patients, aimed to reduce immune-resistance of cancer cells, enhancing their apoptosis and necrosis [5]. ICIs showed several autoimmune or inflammatory side effects, collectively termed immune-related adverse events, including diabetes, chronic inflammatory bowel diseases, thyroiditis and cardiovascular diseases [6]. Patients with diabetes have increased risk of breast, liver, bladder, pancreatic, colorectal, endometrial and prostate cancers [10,11]. Causes of cancer risks in diabetic patients involved hyperglycemia, hyperinsulinemia, insulin resistance, distorted insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1) pathway, oxidative stress, enhanced inflammatory processes and aberrant sex hormone production [15,16]. Hyperglycemia accelerates the progression of tumor, increases the proliferation, migration and invasion of cancer cells [19]. Recent findings reported that hyperglycemia could increase anticancer-induced cardiotoxicity [20] through involvement of AMPK, mitochondrial proteins, reactive oxygen species and pro-inflammatory cytokines involved in pro-fibrogenic and pro-apoptotic signaling [21,22]

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