Purpose: There is currently substantial clinical interest in pentoxifylline as an inhibitor of radiation-related normal tissue injury. To further assess this drug's potential toxicity-sparing effects, pentoxifylline was studied in rats using a radiation-induced lung injury model.
Methods and materials: Adult male rats were exposed to either sham irradiation or a single fraction of 21 Gy delivered to the left hemithorax. Four study groups were defined: those that received neither radiation nor pentoxifylline, those that received pentoxifylline (500 mg/L in drinking water) but no irradiation, those that underwent irradiation without pentoxifylline, and those that received both pentoxifylline and radiation. Lung injury was measured by changes in relative left:right lung perfusion ratios derived from quantitative gamma camera imaging of 99mTechnetium-macroaggregated albumin uptake in the pulmonary circulation. Serial scans were done over a 40-week period following radiation. Skin toxicity was also assessed. After 40 weeks, the animals were killed, and lung tissue was assayed for angiotensin converting enzyme activity as a marker for endothelial cell damage.
Results: Both groups of radiated (with or without pentoxifylline) rats showed equivalent acute sharp decreases in left:right lung perfusion ratios compared to the nonirradiated groups, reaching a mean nadir value of 0.29 at week 4. Irradiated lung perfusion in subsequent weeks in the radiation-only group showed minimal recovery, with a plateau mean ratio of 0.37 (0.36-0.39). However, there was apparent later recovery of lung perfusion in the radiation with pentoxifylline group from weeks 14 through 40, to a mean ratio of 0.47 (0.43-0.52) (p < 0.01 compared to the radiation-only group). Angiotensin converting enzyme activity correlated closely with lung perfusion data. No effect of pentoxifylline on acute or late skin toxicity was detected.
Conclusions: This study suggests that pentoxifylline does not have any measurable effect on acute lung injury following hemithoracic irradiation in rats, but does result in sparing of later lung toxicity.