Frontiers in Oncology (Dec 2020)

The Anti-Inflammatory Drug Aspirin Does Not Protect Against Chemotherapy-Induced Memory Impairment by Paclitaxel in Mice

  • Aeson Chang,
  • Ni-Chun Chung,
  • Adam J. Lawther,
  • Alexandra I. Ziegler,
  • David M. Shackleford,
  • Erica K. Sloan,
  • Erica K. Sloan,
  • Adam K. Walker,
  • Adam K. Walker,
  • Adam K. Walker,
  • Adam K. Walker

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fonc.2020.564965
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

Read online

Inflammation has been proposed to play a causal role in chemobrain which—if true—would represent an opportunity to repurpose existing anti-inflammatory drugs for the prevention and treatment of chemobrain. Here, we show that the chemoagent paclitaxel induces memory impairment and anhedonia in mice within 24 h of treatment cessation, but inflammation is not present until 2 weeks after treatment. We find no evidence of brain inflammation as measured by cytokine analysis at any time point. Furthermore, treating with aspirin to block inflammation did not affect paclitaxel-induced memory impairment. These findings suggest that inflammation may not be responsible for memory impairment induced by paclitaxel. These results contrast with recent findings of a causal role for inflammation in cancer-induced memory deficits in mice that were prevented by treatment with oral aspirin, suggesting that cognitive impairment in cancer patients undergoing treatment may arise from multiple convergent mechanisms.

Keywords