Advanced Humanities and Social Sciences
Deciphering the mechanisms underlying ASNase-associated pancreatitis (AAP)

Authors: Dr. Sohail Zakiuddin Hussain

Keywords:

Deciphering, Mechanisms, underlying, associated, pancreatitis

Abstract

Pancreatitis is a life-threatening inflammatory disorder of the pancreas, and drug-induced
pancreatitis is an important iatrogenic contributor to the problem. The drug asparaginase
(ASNase) is a cornerstone therapy for leukemia, but about 10% of patients taking the cancer
drug develop the complication of pancreatitis. Furthermore, discontinuation of ASNase due
to pancreatitis leads to a suboptimal duration of ASNase treatment, and this shortfall tends
to jeopardize event-free survival from leukemia. Thus, the goal of our proposed work is to

address the major unmet need of deciphering the mechanisms underlying ASNase-
associated pancreatitis (AAP). This is in order to come up with strategies that will predict

who is at high risk for developing pancreatitis and, more importantly, to devise rescue
therapies that will subvert the problem altogether. We hypothesized that patients who
succumb to AAP have baseline metabolic alterations that predispose them to the
development of pancreatitis. The specific aims of the proposal are thus to examine whether
patients who succumb to AAP manifest at baseline (i.e. before receiving ASNase)
metabolomic changes in comparison to matched control patients at baseline who did not
develop pancreatitis with ASNase. In the current study, we will present preliminary findings
from a metabolomic profile we performed from a case-control group of AAP and non-AAP patient plasma samples. The significance of the findings is that they will offer novel insight
into devising rational diagnostic tools and rescue therapies to prevent the problem of AAP.
On a broader level, the work will provide a framework to harness pharmaco-metabolomics,
using AAP as a prime example, for designing personalized approaches to optimal drug
selection and patient care.

Article Type:Conference abstract
Received: 2018-10-15
Accepted: 2018-10-25
First Published:5/25/2024 8:28:56 PM
First Page & Last Page: 23 - 24
Collection Year:2018