Methotrexate Chemotherapy Causes Growth Impairments, Vitamin D Deficiency, Bone Loss, and Altered Intestinal Metabolism—Effects of Calcitriol Supplementation

Author:

Su Yu-Wen1,Lee Alice M. C.1,Xu Xukang1,Hua Belinda1,Tapp Heather2,Wen Xue-Sen3,Xian Cory J.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. UniSA Clinical and Health Sciences, University of South Australia, Adelaide, SA 5001, Australia

2. Department of Haematology & Oncology, Women’s and Children’s Hospital, North Adelaide, SA 5006, Australia

3. School of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Cheeloo College of Medicine, Shandong University, Jinan 250012, China

Abstract

Vitamin D deficiency or insufficiency is prevalent in childhood cancer patients and survivors after chemotherapy; further studies are needed to investigate the underlying aetiology and effectiveness of vitamin D supplementation in preventing chemotherapy-induced bone loss. This study used a rat model of treatment with antimetabolite methotrexate to investigate whether methotrexate chemotherapy causes vitamin D deficiency and if vitamin D supplementation attenuates the resultant bone loss. Methotrexate treatment (five daily injections) decreased serum vitamin D levels (from 52 to <30 ng/mL), reduced body and bone lengthening and tibial trabecular bone volume, and altered intestinal vitamin D metabolism, which was associated with intestinal mucosal damage known to cause malabsorption of nutrients, including dietary vitamin D and calcium. During the early stage after chemotherapy, mRNA expression increased for vitamin D activation enzyme CYP27B1 and for calcium-binding protein TRPV6 in the intestine. During the intestinal healing stage, expression of vitamin D catabolism enzyme CYP24 increased, and that of TRPV6 was normalised. Furthermore, subcutaneous calcitriol supplementation diminished methotrexate-induced bone loss due to its effect suppressing methotrexate-induced increased bone resorption. Thus, in young rats, methotrexate chemotherapy causes vitamin D deficiency, growth impairments, bone loss, and altered intestinal vitamin D metabolism, which are associated with intestinal damage, and vitamin D supplementation inhibits methotrexate-induced bone loss.

Funder

China–Australia Centre for Health Sciences Research

Bone Health Foundation

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

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