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2 March 2016 Clinically Relevant Doses of Enalapril Mitigate Multiple Organ Radiation Injury
Eric P. Cohen, Brian L. Fish, John E. Moulder
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Abstract

Angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors (ACEi) are effective mitigators of radiation nephropathy. To date, their experimental use has been in fixed-dose regimens. In clinical use, doses of ACEi and other medication may be escalated to achieve greater benefit. We therefore used a rodent model to test the ACEi enalapril as a mitigator of radiation injury in an escalating-dose regimen. Single-fraction partial-body irradiation (PBI) with one hind limb out of the radiation field was used to model accidental or belligerent radiation exposures. PBI doses of 12.5, 12.75 and 13 Gy were used to establish multi-organ injury. One third of the rats underwent PBI alone, and two thirds of the rats had enalapril started five days after PBI at a dose of 30 mg/l in the drinking water. When there was established azotemic renal injury enalapril was escalated to a 60 mg/l dose in half of the animals and then later to a 120 mg/l dose. Irradiated rats on enalapril had significant mitigation of combined pulmonary and renal morbidity and had significantly less azotemia. Dose escalation of enalapril did not significantly improve outcomes compared to fixed-dose enalapril. The current data support use of the ACEi enalapril at a fixed and clinically usable dose to mitigate radiation injury after partial-body radiation exposure.

Eric P. Cohen, Brian L. Fish, and John E. Moulder "Clinically Relevant Doses of Enalapril Mitigate Multiple Organ Radiation Injury," Radiation Research 185(3), 313-318, (2 March 2016). https://doi.org/10.1667/RR4243.S1
Received: 24 August 2015; Accepted: 1 January 2016; Published: 2 March 2016
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