Liver Hypertrophy

Author:

Hall A. P.1,Elcombe C. R.2,Foster J. R.1,Harada T.3,Kaufmann W.4,Knippel A.4,Küttler K.5,Malarkey D. E.6,Maronpot R. R.7,Nishikawa A.8,Nolte T.9,Schulte A.10,Strauss V.5,York M. J.11

Affiliation:

1. AstraZeneca Pharmaceuticals, Alderley Park, Macclesfield, Cheshire, UK

2. CXR Biosciences, Dundee, UK

3. Institute of Environmental Toxicology, Ibaraki, Japan

4. Merck KGaA, Non-Clinical Development, Toxicology, Darmstadt, Germany

5. BASF SE, Dep. GV/TD, Ludwigshafen, Germany

6. National Toxicology Program Pathology Group, Cellular and Molecular Pathology Branch, National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences, Research Triangle Park, North Carolina, USA

7. Maronpot Consulting LLC, Raleigh, North Carolina, USA

8. Biological Safety Research Center, National Institute of Health Sciences, Tokyo, Japan

9. Boehringer Ingelheim Pharma GmbH & Co, Biberach/Riss, Germany

10. Bundesinstitut für Risikobewertung, Berlin, Germany

11. GlaxoSmithKline R&D, Safety Assessment, Hertfordshire, UK

Abstract

Preclinical toxicity studies have demonstrated that exposure of laboratory animals to liver enzyme inducers during preclinical safety assessment results in a signature of toxicological changes characterized by an increase in liver weight, hepatocellular hypertrophy, cell proliferation, and, frequently in long-term (life-time) studies, hepatocarcinogenesis. Recent advances over the last decade have revealed that for many xenobiotics, these changes may be induced through a common mechanism of action involving activation of the nuclear hormone receptors CAR, PXR, or PPARα. The generation of genetically engineered mice that express altered versions of these nuclear hormone receptors, together with other avenues of investigation, have now demonstrated that sensitivity to many of these effects is rodent-specific. These data are consistent with the available epidemiological and empirical human evidence and lend support to the scientific opinion that these changes have little relevance to man. The ESTP therefore convened an international panel of experts to debate the evidence in order to more clearly define for toxicologic pathologists what is considered adverse in the context of hepatocellular hypertrophy. The results of this workshop concluded that hepatomegaly as a consequence of hepatocellular hypertrophy without histologic or clinical pathology alterations indicative of liver toxicity was considered an adaptive and a non-adverse reaction. This conclusion should normally be reached by an integrative weight of evidence approach.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Cell Biology,Toxicology,Molecular Biology,Pathology and Forensic Medicine

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