Abstract
Cisplatin-based chemotherapy causes hearing loss in 40-60 % of all patients, yet effective preventative options remain limited. Building on prior animal studies, we demonstrate that oral administration of AZD5438, a potent and selective CDK2 inhibitor, provides dose-dependent protection against hearing loss in a clinically relevant multi-dose cisplatin mouse model. Protective doses (4.7 and 9.4 mg/kg b.i.d.) fall within the human-equivalent maximum tolerated dose range established in AstraZeneca trials, and exhibit plasma pharmacokinetics comparable to those in humans. Importantly, AZD5438 at 9.4 mg/kg b.i.d. does not reduce cisplatin's anti-tumor efficacy in a testicular cancer xenograft model, consistent with in vitro findings. These results support AZD5438 as a promising candidate for clinical trials to prevent cisplatin-induced hearing loss while preserving cancer treatment efficacy.