ATYPICAL TUBULE HYPERPLASIA AND RENAL TUBULE TUMORS IN CONVENTIONAL RATS ON 90-DAY TOXICITY STUDIES

Citation
Gc. Hard et al., ATYPICAL TUBULE HYPERPLASIA AND RENAL TUBULE TUMORS IN CONVENTIONAL RATS ON 90-DAY TOXICITY STUDIES, Toxicologic pathology, 22(5), 1994, pp. 489-496
Citations number
NO
Categorie Soggetti
Toxicology,Pathology
Journal title
ISSN journal
01926233
Volume
22
Issue
5
Year of publication
1994
Pages
489 - 496
Database
ISI
SICI code
0192-6233(1994)22:5<489:ATHART>2.0.ZU;2-S
Abstract
Bilateral, multicentric renal tubule tumors were found in 4 rats at th e termination of 3 separate 90-day toxicity studies during the safety evaluation of 3 unrelated chemicals. The 3 studies were conducted at 2 separate locations, but the rats used were obtained from the same com mercial source, The rat strains were Fischer-344 (1 male and 1 female case) and Sprague-Dawley (2 female cases). Three of the renal tumor ca ses were from either the high-dose or mid-dose treatment groups, and 1 case was an untreated control. The tumors were accompanied by multipl e foci of atypical tubule hyperplasia but only in the tumor-bearing ra ts. There were no lesions associated with renal tumor pathogenesis in any of the remaining treated or untreated animals in the 3 studies. In addition, there was no indication of nephrotoxicity in the treated or untreated animals. Tumor morphology was characterized by a generally vacuolated appearance, eosinophilia, cytoplasmic and nuclear pleomorph ism, and conspicuously hypertrophied nucleoli. The renal tubule tumors in these 90-day studies were compared to hereditary renal tubule tumo rs occurring in the Eker rat, a Long-Evans derivative with a genetic p redisposition to this tumor type. The multiplicity of renal tubule tum ors, early age of onset, and tumor morphology described in the cases f rom the 90-day studies were very similar to those characterizing the h ereditary renal tumor model. The following evidence demonstrates that the 4 cases of renal tubule tumor developing in young rats in the cour se of 90-day studies were of spontaneous origin and not compound-induc ed: the tumors could not be reproduced by the test compound in a repet ition of the 90-day toxicity study in which 2 of the cases occurred; p ertinent renal lesions, including atypical hyperplasia, were seen only in tumor-bearing rats; there was an absence of nephrotoxicity in any of the treated rats and an absence of a dose-response relationship for the observed kidney alterations; 1 case was found in an untreated rat . The striking similarity of the tumors in these 4 cases to hereditary renal tumors occurring spontaneously in Eker rats suggests that the 9 0-day kidney alterations described here may be compatible with a genet ic defect. As an alternative explanation, the possibility of a viral e tiology was also considered.