Literature DB >> 14644627

Dietary controlled carcinogenicity study of chloral hydrate in male B6C3F1 mice.

Julian E A Leakey1, John E Seng, John R Latendresse, Nursreen Hussain, Laura J Allen, William T Allaben.   

Abstract

Chloral hydrate, which is used as a sedative in pediatric medicine and is a by-product of water chlorination, is hepatocarcinogenic in B6C3F1 mice, a strain that can exhibit high rates of background liver tumor incidence, which are associated with increased body weight. In this study, dietary control was used to manipulate body growth in male B6C3F1 mice in a 2-year bioassay of chloral hydrate. Male B6C3F1 mice were treated with water or 25, 50, or 100 mg/kg chloral hydrate by gavage. The study compared ad libitum-fed mice with dietary controlled mice. The latter received variably restricted feed allocations to maintain their body weights on a predetermined "idealized" weight curve predictive of a terminal background liver tumor incidence of 15-20%. These mice exhibited less individual body weight variation than did their ad libitum-fed counterparts. This was associated with a decreased variation in liver to body weight ratios, which allowed the demonstration of a statistically significant dose response to chloral hydrate in the dietary controlled, but not the ad libitum-fed, test groups. Chloral hydrate increased terminally adjusted liver tumor incidence in both dietary controlled (23.4, 23.9, 29.7, and 38.6% for the four dose groups, respectively) and ad libitum-fed mice (33.4, 52.6, 50.6, and 46.2%), but a statistically significant dose response was observed only in the dietary controlled mice. This dose response positively correlated with markers of peroxisomal proliferation in the dietary controlled mice only. The study suggests that dietary control not only improves terminal survival and decreases interassay variation, but also can increase assay sensitivity by decreasing intra-assay variation.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 14644627     DOI: 10.1016/j.taap.2003.07.007

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Toxicol Appl Pharmacol        ISSN: 0041-008X            Impact factor:   4.219


  7 in total

Review 1.  Hepatocellular carcinoma and the risk of occupational exposure.

Authors:  Venerando Rapisarda; Carla Loreto; Michele Malaguarnera; Annalisa Ardiri; Maria Proiti; Giuseppe Rigano; Evelise Frazzetto; Maria Irene Ruggeri; Giulia Malaguarnera; Nicoletta Bertino; Mariano Malaguarnera; Vito Emanuele Catania; Isidoro Di Carlo; Adriana Toro; Emanuele Bertino; Dario Mangano; Gaetano Bertino
Journal:  World J Hepatol       Date:  2016-05-08

2.  Short-term chloral hydrate administration and cancer in humans.

Authors:  Tmirah Haselkorn; Alice S Whittemore; Natalia Udaltsova; Gary D Friedman
Journal:  Drug Saf       Date:  2006       Impact factor: 5.606

3.  Micronucleus induction by oxidative metabolites of trichloroethylene in cultured human peripheral blood lymphocytes: a comparative genotoxicity study.

Authors:  Meenu Varshney; Abhijit Chandra; L K S Chauhan; Sudhir K Goel
Journal:  Environ Sci Pollut Res Int       Date:  2013-05-30       Impact factor: 4.223

4.  Biological Basis of Differential Susceptibility to Hepatocarcinogenesis among Mouse Strains.

Authors:  Robert R Maronpot
Journal:  J Toxicol Pathol       Date:  2009-04-06       Impact factor: 1.628

Review 5.  Key issues in the modes of action and effects of trichloroethylene metabolites for liver and kidney tumorigenesis.

Authors:  Jane C Caldwell; Nagalakshmi Keshava
Journal:  Environ Health Perspect       Date:  2006-09       Impact factor: 9.031

Review 6.  Non‑infective occupational risk factors for hepatocellular carcinoma: A review (Review).

Authors:  Caterina Ledda; Carla Loreto; Christian Zammit; Andrea Marconi; Lucrezia Fago; Serena Matera; Valentina Costanzo; Giovanni Fuccio Sanzà; Stefano Palmucci; Margherita Ferrante; Chiara Costa; Concettina Fenga; Antonio Biondi; Cristoforo Pomara; Venerando Rapisarda
Journal:  Mol Med Rep       Date:  2016-12-14       Impact factor: 2.952

7.  Occupational health hazards of trichloroethylene among workers in relation to altered mRNA expression of cell cycle regulating genes (p53, p21, bax and bcl-2) and PPARA.

Authors:  Meenu Varshney; Abhijit Chandra; Rajeev Jain; Riaz Ahmad; Vipin Bihari; C Keshava Chandran; Mohana K R Mudiam; Satykam Patnaik; S K Goel
Journal:  Toxicol Rep       Date:  2015-05-15
  7 in total

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