Long-Term Exposure to Temozolomide Affects Locomotor Activity and Cartilage Structure of Elderly Experimental Rats

Biomedicines. 2020 Nov 26;8(12):541. doi: 10.3390/biomedicines8120541.

Abstract

Chemotherapy with temozolomide (TMZ) is an essential part of anticancer therapy of various malignant tumours; however, its long-term effects on patients' health and life quality need to be further investigated. Here, we studied the effects of TMZ and/or companion drug dexamethasone (DXM) on the locomotor activity and cartilage structure of elderly Wistar rats (n = 40). Long-term TMZ treatment selectively inhibited the horizontal, but not vertical locomotor activity of the rats (6.7-fold, p < 0.01) and resulted in delamination of the superficial epiphyseal cartilage of the femoral epiphysis of knee joints, a 2-fold decrease in mean thickness of epiphyseal cartilage (p < 0.001), and changes in the proliferative and maturation cartilage zones ratio. The simultaneous use of DXM attenuated TMZ-induced changes in cartilage thickness and integrity and compensated the decrease in horizontal locomotor activity of experimental animals. Nevertheless, combined TMZ/DXM treatment still significantly affected the structure of proximal tibial, but not distal femoral epiphysis of knee joints of the rats. These changes were accompanied by the increased content of total glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) and their partial re-localisation from chondrocytes into tissue matrix, as well as the decrease in sulfated GAGs content in both compartments. Taken together, the results demonstrate that long-term treatment with TMZ results in a significant decrease in locomotor activity of elderly Wistar rats and the reorganisation of their knee joint cartilage structure, while DXM treatment attenuates those effects. So, use of DXM or chondroprotective drugs might be beneficial to maintain quality of life for TMZ-treated cancer patients.

Keywords: cartilage morphology; dexamethasone; glycosaminoglycan content; locomotor activity; temozolomide.