A 90-day drinking water study in mice to characterize early events in the cancer mode of action of 1,4-dioxane.

A 90-day drinking water study in mice to characterize early events in the cancer mode of action of 1,4-dioxane. Regul Toxicol Pharmacol. 2020 Nov 12;:104819 Authors: Lafranconi M, Budinsky R, Corey L, Klapacz J, Crissman J, LeBaron M, Golden R, Pleus R Abstract Studies demonstrate that with sufficient dose and duration, 1,4-dioxane (1,4-DX) induces liver tumors in laboratory rodent models. The available evidence aligns with a threshold-dependent, tumor promotion mode of action (MOA). The MOA and key events (KE) in rats are well developed but less so in the mouse. Therefore, we conducted a 90-day drinking water study in female mice to evaluate early KE at 7, 28, and 90 days. Female B6D2F1/Crl mice consumed drinking water containing 0, 40, 200, 600, 2000 or 6000 ppm. 1,4-DX was detected in blood at 90-days of exposure to 6000 ppm, but not in the other exposure groups, indicating a metabolic clearance threshold between 2000 and 6000. Early events identified in this study include glycogen-like vacuolization, centrilobular hypertrophy, centrilobular GST-P staining, apoptosis, and pan-lobular increase in cell proliferation observed after 90-days of exposure to 6000 ppm 1,4-DX. There was minimal evidence of hepatotoxicity over the duration of this study. These findings demonstrate a previously unreported direct mitogenic response following exposures exceeding the metabolic clearance threshold of 1,4-DX. Collectively, the information g...
Source: Regulatory Toxicology and Pharmacology : RTP - Category: Toxicology Authors: Tags: Regul Toxicol Pharmacol Source Type: research