Carcinogenesis bioassays: study duration and biological relevance

被引:36
作者
Haseman, J [1 ]
Melnick, R [1 ]
Tomatis, L [1 ]
Huff, J [1 ]
机构
[1] NIEHS, Res Triangle Pk, NC 27709 USA
关键词
rodent carcinogenicity bioassay; time-to-tumor; National Toxicology Program; study duration; relevance to humans;
D O I
10.1016/S0278-6915(01)00010-2
中图分类号
TS2 [食品工业];
学科分类号
0832 ;
摘要
Criticisms of the scientific value of rodent carcinogenicity bioassays have focused on the arguments that the studies are too long and that most organ-specific carcinogenic effects observed in experimental animals have little or no relevance to humans. For example, Davies et al. (Davies, T.S., Lynch, B.S., Monro, A.M., Munro, I.C., Nestmann, E.R., 2000. Rodent carcinogenicity tests need be no longer than 18 months: an analysis based on 210 chemicals in the IARC Monographs. Food and Chemical Toxicology 38, 219-235) concluded that the duration of rodent bioassays should be no more than 18 months, based on their analysis of 210 International Agency for Research on cancer (IARC) rodent carcinogens in which they report that most chemicals "tumorigenic effects;'' at or before 12 months. However, many of these "tumorigenic effects" reflect the occurrence of a single neoplasm, with most tumors occurring much later in the study. Reliance on a single tumor at an early time point as providing definitive evidence of rodent carcinogenicity is a dangerous practice that could produce both false positive and false negative outcomes. An extensive evaluation of the NTP database reveals that many rodent carcinogens produce later-appearing tumors that would not be detected as statistically significant in a 12-18 month study. Such a shortened duration study would be roughly equivalent to evaluating human cancer in subjects 30-50 years of age, which would, result in markedly reduced study sensitivity. In fact, many investigators recommend extending the duration of rodent studies to 30 months or to a true lifetime to increase study sensitivity. We also do not agree with the second conclusion of Davies et al. (2000) that the mode of action of rodent carcinogenesis is sufficiently well understood to justify discounting the majority of organ-specific carcinogenic effects found in these studies. The consequences of performing rodent carcinogenicity studies with inadequate sensitivity, and then discounting most of the carcinogenic effects that are observed will be that potential human carcinogens will not be detected, thus forcing near total reliance on human studies for this purpose. This is not prudent public health policy. Published by Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:739 / 744
页数:6
相关论文
共 31 条
[1]   Paracelsus to parascience: the environmental cancer distraction [J].
Ames, BN ;
Gold, LS .
MUTATION RESEARCH-FUNDAMENTAL AND MOLECULAR MECHANISMS OF MUTAGENESIS, 2000, 447 (01) :3-13
[2]   Environmental pollution, pesticides, and the prevention of cancer: Misconceptions [J].
Ames, BN ;
Gold, LS .
FASEB JOURNAL, 1997, 11 (13) :1041-1052
[3]  
Anisimov VN, 1998, J EXP CLIN CANC RES, V17, P263
[4]  
[Anonymous], 1987, IARC MON S7
[5]  
Benigni R, 1999, ENVIRON CARCIN ECO R, V17, P45
[6]   Doses in rodent cancer studies: Sorting fact from fiction [J].
Bucher, JR .
DRUG METABOLISM REVIEWS, 2000, 32 (02) :153-163
[7]   Rodent carcinogenicity tests need be no longer than 18 months: An analysis based on 210 chemicals in the IARC monographs [J].
Davies, TS ;
Lynch, BS ;
Monro, AM ;
Munro, IC ;
Nestmann, ER .
FOOD AND CHEMICAL TOXICOLOGY, 2000, 38 (2-3) :219-235
[8]   THE CARCINOGENESIS BIOASSAY IN PERSPECTIVE - APPLICATION IN IDENTIFYING HUMAN CANCER HAZARDS [J].
FUNG, VA ;
BARRETT, JC ;
HUFF, J .
ENVIRONMENTAL HEALTH PERSPECTIVES, 1995, 103 (7-8) :680-683
[9]   Spontaneous neoplasm incidences in Fischer 344 rats and B6C3F1 mice in two-year carcinogenicity studies:: A National Toxicology Program update [J].
Haseman, JK ;
Hailey, JR ;
Morris, RW .
TOXICOLOGIC PATHOLOGY, 1998, 26 (03) :428-441
[10]  
Huff J, 1999, CARCINOGENICITY, P21