Proctor Deborah M, Gatto Nicole M, Hong Sandra J, Allamneni Krishna P
Exponent, Irvine, California 92618, USA.
Toxicol Sci. 2007 Aug;98(2):313-26. doi: 10.1093/toxsci/kfm075. Epub 2007 Apr 10.
Studies have shown that a majority of known human carcinogens also cause cancer in laboratory animals. The converse, however, is not as well established-known animal carcinogens are not equally predictive of human carcinogenicity. A particularly controversial aspect of interspecies extrapolation is application of rodent forestomach tumor data for predicting cancer risk in humans, given that a human counterpart for the rodent forestomach does not exist. Proliferative lesions in the rodent forestomach may result from a combination of factors related to route-specific tissue irritation and/or unnatural dosing regimens and are less likely to be relevant in evaluating human carcinogenic potential, particularly when tumors are exclusive to the forestomach. We review the comparative functional anatomy, physiology, tumor biology, tissue concordance, and historical regulatory practices in the use of forestomach tumors for cancer risk assessment, examining specific chemical examples. We also propose a standardized mode-of-action approach that combines multiple risk characterization criteria, including relevance to human exposure conditions, physiologically based toxicokinetics, genotoxicity, and comparative/mechanistic toxicology. Forestomach tumors associated with chronic irritation of the forestomach epithelium, particularly those induced by repeated oral gavage dosing, should not form the basis for carcinogenic classification or quantitative cancer potency estimates for humans. Genotoxic chemicals and those that cause tumors at multiple sites, at doses at or below the maximum tolerated dose, and in the absence of forestomach irritation, are more likely to be relevant human carcinogens. Cancer risk assessment that utilizes forestomach tumor data should consider relevant human exposures, systemic bioavailability, tissue dosimetry and concordance.
研究表明,大多数已知的人类致癌物在实验动物中也会引发癌症。然而,反之则不然——已知的动物致癌物并不能同样有效地预测人类致癌性。种间外推中一个特别有争议的方面是,鉴于人类不存在与啮齿动物前胃相对应的器官,利用啮齿动物前胃肿瘤数据来预测人类癌症风险。啮齿动物前胃的增殖性病变可能是由与特定途径的组织刺激和/或非自然给药方案相关的多种因素共同导致的,在评估人类致癌潜力时相关性较小,尤其是当肿瘤仅发生在前胃时。我们回顾了在使用前胃肿瘤进行癌症风险评估时的比较功能解剖学、生理学、肿瘤生物学、组织一致性以及历史监管实践,并研究了具体的化学实例。我们还提出了一种标准化的作用模式方法,该方法结合了多种风险特征标准,包括与人类暴露条件的相关性、基于生理学的毒代动力学、遗传毒性以及比较/机制毒理学。与前胃上皮慢性刺激相关的前胃肿瘤,尤其是那些由反复经口灌胃给药诱导的肿瘤,不应作为人类致癌分类或定量癌症效力估计的依据。遗传毒性化学物质以及那些在最大耐受剂量或以下剂量时,在多个部位引发肿瘤且不存在前胃刺激的化学物质,更有可能是与人类相关的致癌物。利用前胃肿瘤数据进行的癌症风险评估应考虑相关的人类暴露、全身生物利用度、组织剂量学和一致性。