Preclinical Research, F. Hoffmann-La Roche Ltd., Basel, Switzerland.
Mutat Res. 2009 Aug;678(2):101-7. doi: 10.1016/j.mrgentox.2009.04.005. Epub 2009 Apr 17.
The presence of ethyl methanesulfonate (EMS) in tablets of a HIV medication triggered non-clinical studies into the dose response for mutation analysis after chronic dosing. Although there are a multitude of in vitro and in vivo studies on the genotoxic activity of EMS, no lifetime carcinogenicity studies, repeat dose mutation data or exposure analysis are available to serve as a solid basis for risk assessment. For alkylators like EMS it is generally assumed that the dose response for mutagenicity (and by default for carcinogenicity) is linear - indicating that no 'safe' dose does exist. A recent in vitro genotoxicity study [S.H. Doak, G.J. Jenkins, G.E. Johnson, E. Quick, E.M. Parry, J.M. Parry, Mechanistic influences for mutation induction curves after exposure to DNA-reactive carcinogens, Cancer Res. 67 (2007) 3904-3911] provided evidence, however, that the dose-response curve for mutagenic and clastogenic activity of EMS was thresholded - in contrast to ethylnitrosourea (ENU) tested in parallel. For risk assessment we sought to verify the existence of a threshold for mutagenic and clastogenic activity in vivo using the micronucleus test (MNT) and gene mutation test (MutaMouse), with the aim to provide reassurance to the patients that their exposure to EMS did not carry a toxicological risk. Dose levels ranging from 1.25 to 260mg/(kgday) were applied for up to 28 days. As reference we included ENU at doses of 1.1-22mg/(kgday). Our studies showed that daily doses of EMS up to 25mg/(kgday) (bone marrow, GI tract) and 50mg/(kgday) (liver) did not induce mutations in the lacZ gene in the three organs tested. Doses of EMS up to 80mg/(kgday) did not induce micronuclei in mouse bone marrow. Only at higher dose levels the genotoxic activity of EMS became apparent. Dose fractionation of EMS (28 times 12.5mg/kg versus a single high dose 380mg/kg) in the MutaMouse study provided further convincing evidence for the thresholded dose response of EMS and showed that no accumulation below the threshold was occurring. For ENU no threshold was apparent and dose fractionation indicated additivity. However, there are arguments that a threshold in the dose region of about 0.4mg/(kgday) ENU might exist.
片剂中乙基甲磺酸(EMS)的存在引发了非临床研究,以了解慢性给药后突变分析的剂量反应。尽管有大量关于 EMS 遗传毒性活性的体外和体内研究,但没有终生致癌性研究、重复剂量突变数据或暴露分析可作为风险评估的坚实基础。对于像 EMS 这样的烷化剂,通常假定诱变剂的剂量反应(默认情况下为致癌性)是线性的-表明不存在“安全”剂量。然而,最近的一项体外遗传毒性研究[S.H. Doak、G.J. Jenkins、G.E. Johnson、E.Quick、E.M.Parry、J.M.Parry,暴露于 DNA 反应性致癌物后诱导突变曲线的机制影响,癌症研究 67(2007)3904-3911]提供了证据,表明 EMS 致突变和致断裂活性的剂量反应曲线是有阈值的-与平行测试的乙基亚硝脲(ENU)形成对比。为了进行风险评估,我们试图通过微核试验(MNT)和基因突变试验(MutaMouse)验证体内诱变和断裂活性的阈值是否存在,以向患者保证他们接触 EMS 不会带来毒理学风险。应用了从 1.25 至 260mg/(kg·天)的剂量水平,为期 28 天。作为参考,我们包括剂量为 1.1-22mg/(kg·天)的 ENU。我们的研究表明,在三个测试的器官中,每天剂量高达 25mg/(kg·天)(骨髓、胃肠道)和 50mg/(kg·天)(肝脏)的 EMS 不会诱导 lacZ 基因的突变。在小鼠骨髓中,EMS 剂量高达 80mg/(kg·天)不会诱导微核。只有在更高的剂量水平,EMS 的遗传毒性活性才变得明显。EMS 的剂量分割(28 次 12.5mg/kg 与单次高剂量 380mg/kg)在 MutaMouse 研究中提供了进一步令人信服的证据,表明低于阈值没有累积发生。对于 ENU,没有明显的阈值,剂量分割表明具有相加性。然而,有人认为在大约 0.4mg/(kg·天)ENU 的剂量区域可能存在阈值。