Acta Dermato-Venereologica 99-6CompleteContent | Page 25
620
CORRESPONDENCE
Antipruritic vs. Antitumour Action of Aprepitant: A Question of Dose
Miguel MUÑOZ 1,2 , Julio PARRILLA 2 , Marisa ROSSO 1 and Rafael COVEÑAS 3
1
Research Laboratory on Neuropeptides (IBIS), 2 Virgen del Rocío University Hospital, Pediatric Intensive Care United (PICU), Av. Manuel
Siurot s/n, ES-41013 Seville, and 3 Institute of Neurosciences of Castilla y León (INCYL), Laboratory of Neuroanatomy of the Peptidergic
Systems, University of Salamanca, Salamanca, Spain. E-mail: [email protected]
Accepted Feb 7, 2019; E-published Feb 8, 2019
A recently published study of 8 patients with cutaneous
T-cell lymphomas (CTCL) treated with aprepitant (1)
reported that the neurokinin-1 receptor (NK-1R) antago-
nist aprepitant did not completely modify CTCL disease
activity. The authors concluded that these findings do not
support future research focused on the anti-lymphoma
action of NK-1R antagonists (1). The same group publi
shed another study of 17 patients, which reported that, in
primary CTCL, there was an improvement in refractory
pruritus, and that aprepitant was safe, well-tolerated and
effective for treatment of severe chronic itch in patients
with CTCL who failed to respond to classical antipruritic
treatments (2). The latter study is in agreement with the
data suggesting that, in the skin, NK-1R antagonists play
an important role in anti-itch activity (2). These authors
reported that the best antipruritic response was found
in lymphomas limited to skin (stages IB–IIB) and non-
erythroderma cutaneous lesions (stage T4) (2). In both
studies (1, 2), aprepitant (standard 125–80–80 mg) was
administered every 2 weeks for a mean of 20 weeks, or
weekly for 8 weeks. In standard clinical practice, apre-
pitant (first day 125 mg; second day 80 mg; third day
80 mg) is used to treat chemotherapy-induced nausea
and vomiting.
The aim of this short correspondence is to explain why,
in the studies described above (1, 2), the authors found
that aprepitant did not modify global disease activity in
CTCL or, in other words, why aprepitant exerted antipru-
ritic, but not antitumour, action.
It is known that undecapeptide substance P (SP) is a
main mediator in pain (pruritus is a type of pain) and
neurogenic inflammation, and that tumour cells express
SP and NK-1R (e.g. T-lymphocytes and human IM-9 B-
lymphoblasts express 7,000–10,000 and 25,000–30,000
NK-1R per cell, respectively) (3, 4). After binding to
NK-1R, undecapeptide (through autocrine and/or para-
crine mechanisms) promotes mitogenesis/migration of
tumour cells, an antiapoptotic effect in these cells and
an angiogenic effect (3). In later-stage CTCL (stages
IIB–III), a significant increase in SP level has been re-
ported; however, the undecapeptide level in erythroderma
(stages T4) has not been investigated (in this case it is
possible that the SP level was higher) (5). By contrast,
NK-1R antagonists (e.g. aprepitant), in a concentration-
dependent manner, block the above-mentioned actions
mediated by SP (3). There are 2 isoforms of NK-1R; full-
length (fl-NK-1R) and truncated forms (tr-NK-1R) (3). In
papillary or epidermal CD3 + T lymphocytes of patients
doi: 10.2340/00015555-3148
Acta Derm Venereol 2019; 99: 620–621
with CTCL, the expression of fl-NK-1R is lacking (1,
5). However, it is important to note that the anti-NK-1R
antibody used to detect the fl-NK-1R form in papillary
or epidermal CD3+ T lymphocytes was unable to detect
the truncated form (5), which means that the presence of
the tr-NK-1R form in these lymphocytes is unknown. In
sum, fl-NK-1R has not been observed in malignant CTCL
cells, but tr-NK-1R has not being studied (5). Thus, the
presence of the truncated form must not be discounted
until it is determined whether truncated receptors are
present in malignant CTCL cells. It is also important to
note that tumour cells predominantly express the tr-NK-
1R isoform (e.g. acute lymphoblastic leukaemia T (ALL)
cells express both isoforms of NK-1R and overexpress
NK-1R 30-fold higher than non-tumour cells) (4, 6).
Many in vitro and in vivo studies have reported the
antitumour action of NK-1R antagonists. For example,
aprepitant exerts an antitumour action against acute leu-
kaemia T-ALL cells (IC 50 and IC 100 were 19.5 and 45.6
µM, respectively) (6). Extrapolating these concentrations
to mg/kg/day, the doses are approximately 10.5 and 24.3
mg/kg/day, respectively. That is, in the studies mentio-
ned above (1, 2), the concentration of aprepitant had an
antipruritic effect, but, to exert an antitumour effect, the
patients should be given a dose of approximately 25 mg/
kg/day. Moreover, to obtain an antitumour effect, apre-
pitant should be administered daily, and hence treatment
should not be stopped, as it was in the previous studies
(1, 2) focused on the antipruritic effect of aprepitant
(this drug is eliminated in 24 h). In sum, the antipruritic
(125–80–80 mg aprepitant) dose administered to patients
with CTCL (1, 2) is much lower than is necessary to exert
an antitumour effect (25 mg aprepitant/kg/day).
Thus, in patients with CTCL, a higher dose of apre-
pitant than was used in these studies (1, 2) will exert
both antipruritic and antitumour action. However, it is
not known if the antitumour dose suggested here is safe.
This key question must be resolved in further clinical
studies. Doses of aprepitant higher than that used in
standard clinical practice (120–80–80 mg) have been
tested. In all cases, aprepitant was safe and well tolera-
ted. Thus, aprepitant (300 mg/day, during 45 days) had
the same antidepressant effect as paroxetine, and similar
side-effects to those of placebo (7). However, in another
clinical trial, aprepitant (160 mg/day, during 45 days) did
not have an antidepressant effect (8). This was because
the dose of aprepitant did not reach the threshold needed
to exert a therapeutic effect, in relation to the amount
This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC license. www.medicaljournals.se/acta
Journal Compilation © 2019 Acta Dermato-Venereologica.