Mechanisms of cisplatin‐induced acute kidney injury: Pathological mechanisms, pharmacological interventions, and genetic mitigations

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Abstract

Administration of the chemotherapeutic agent cisplatin leads to acute kidney injury (AKI). Cisplatin‐induced AKI (CIAKI) has a complex pathophysiological map, which has been linked to cellular uptake and efflux, apoptosis, vascular injury, oxidative and endoplasmic reticulum stress, and inflammation. Despite research efforts, pharmaceutical interventions, and clinical trials spanning over several decades, a consistent and stable pharmacological treatment option to reduce AKI in patients receiving cisplatin remains unavailable. This has been predominately linked to the incomplete understanding of CIAKI pathophysiology and molecular mechanisms involved. Herein, we detail the extensively known pathophysiology of cisplatin‐induced nephrotoxicity that manifests and the variety of pharmacological and genetic alteration studies that target them.

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McSweeney, K. R., Gadanec, L. K., Qaradakhi, T., Ali, B. A., Zulli, A., & Apostolopoulos, V. (2021, April 1). Mechanisms of cisplatin‐induced acute kidney injury: Pathological mechanisms, pharmacological interventions, and genetic mitigations. Cancers. MDPI AG. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers13071572

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