| Literature DB >> 21768606 |
James W Simpkins1, James A Swenberg, Noel Weiss, David Brusick, J Charles Eldridge, James T Stevens, Robert J Handa, Russell C Hovey, Tony M Plant, Timothy P Pastoor, Charles B Breckenridge.
Abstract
The causal relationship between atrazine exposure and the occurrence of breast cancer in women was evaluated using the framework developed by Adami et al. (2011) wherein biological plausibility and epidemiological evidence were combined to conclude that a causal relationship between atrazine exposure and breast cancer is "unlikely". Carcinogenicity studies in female Sprague-Dawley (SD) but not Fischer-344 rats indicate that high doses of atrazine caused a decreased latency and an increased incidence of combined adenocarcinoma and fibroadenoma mammary tumors. There were no effects of atrazine on any other tumor type in male or female SD or Fischer-344 rats or in three strains of mice. Seven key events that precede tumor expression in female SD rats were identified. Atrazine induces mammary tumors in aging female SD rats by suppressing the luteinizing hormone surge, thereby supporting a state of persistent estrus and prolonged exposure to endogenous estrogen and prolactin. This endocrine mode of action has low biological plausibility for women because women who undergo reproductive senescence have low rather than elevated levels of estrogen and prolactin. Four alternative modes of action (genotoxicity, estrogenicity, upregulation of aromatase gene expression or delayed mammary gland development) were considered and none could account for the tumor response in SD rats. Epidemiological studies provide no support for a causal relationship between atrazine exposure and breast cancer. This conclusion is consistent with International Agency for Research on Cancer's classification of atrazine as "unclassifiable as to carcinogenicity" and the United States Environmental Protection Agency's classification of atrazine as "not likely to be carcinogenic."Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21768606 PMCID: PMC3179673 DOI: 10.1093/toxsci/kfr176
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Toxicol Sci ISSN: 1096-0929 Impact factor: 4.849
Effect of Oral Administration of Atrazine on the Incidence and/or Latency of Tumors in Rodents
| Study reference | Species | Strain | Sex | Levels tested (mg/kg/day) | Duration (months) | Results |
| Mouse | C57BL/6 X C3H/Anf; C57BL/6 X AKR | M and F | 21.5 | 18 | Negative | |
| Mouse | CD-1 | M and F | 0, 10, 300, and 1000 | M 21, F 22 | Negative | |
| Mouse | CD-1 | M and F | 0, 1.6, 47.9, 246.9, and 482.7 | 21 | Negative | |
| Rat | Fischer-344 | M and F | 0, 375, and 750 | 29 | Inconclusive | |
| Rat | Fischer-344 | F | 0, 0.7, 4.7, 13.6, and 27.4 | 24 | Negative | |
| Rat | Fischer-344 | M and F | 0, 0.7, 4.7, 13.6, and 27.4 | 24 | Negative | |
| Rat | SD | M and F | 0, 0.5, 5.5, and 60 | 24 | Male: negative | |
| Female: positive (0.5, 60 mg/kg/day) | ||||||
| Increased incidence | ||||||
| Rat | SD | M and F | 0, 0.5, 3.5, 29.5, and 64.7 | 24 | Male: negative; Female: positive (3.5, 29.5, 64.7 mg/kg/day) | |
| (Increased incidence) | ||||||
| Rat | SD | F | 0, 0.7, 3.5, and 37.6 | 24 | Negative | |
| Rat | SD | F | 0, 4.3, and 25.6 | 24 | Positive: (early onset) at 25.6 mg/kg/day | |
| No effect on incidence | ||||||
| Rat | SD | F | 0, 4.3, and 25.6 | 24 | Positive: (early onset) at 25.6 mg/kg/day | |
| No effect on incidence | ||||||
| Rat | SD | F (intact) | 0, 1.5, 3.1, 4.2, and 24.4 | 12, 24 | Positive: (early onset) at 24.4 mg/kg/day | |
| No effect on incidence | ||||||
| Rat | SD | F (ovex) | 0, 1.2, 2.5, 3.5, and 20.9 | 12, 24 | Negative | |
| Pettersen and Turnier (1995) | Rat | SD | F | 0, 0.8, 1.7, 2.8, 4.1, and 23.9 | 12 | Positive: (early onset) at 23.9 mg/kg/day |
| No effect on incidence |
Only female doses given.
Presented in ppm only, as conversion data were unavailable.
Study has not been published.
FIG. 1.(a) Atrazine administered at dietary concentrations of 500 or 1000 ppm caused a decreased latency of the combined incidence of adenocarcinoma and fibroadenoma mammary tumors in female SD rats. The 500 ppm had no effect on the terminal incidence of mammary tumors; 70 ppm was the no observed effect level (NOEL) for both latency and incidence (Study SDR1, Stevens ). (b) Atrazine administered at dietary concentration of 400 ppm caused a decreased latency of the combined incidence of adenocarinoma and fibroadenoma mammary tumors in female SD. The NOEL was 70 ppm (Studies SDR3; Stevens ). (c) Atrazine administered at dietary concentration of 70 or 400 ppm had no effect on the latency or the combined incidence of adenocarinoma and fibroadenoma mammary tumors in female Fischer-344 rats (Study FR4; Stevens ).
FIG. 2.Key events associated with the earlier appearance and increased incidence of mammary tumors in atrazine-treated female SD rats.
FIG. 3.(a) Characterization of the estrous cycle in individual control female SD rats (Study SDR3 Stevens ) during treatment weeks 1 and 2, 9 and 10, 13 and 14, 17 and 18, 21 and 22, and weeks 25 and 26. A normal estrous cycle was defined as a cycle lasting four or five days. Persistent diestrus was defined as occurring when there were more than two successive days of diestrus; persistent estrus was defined as occurring when there were two or more successive days when the vaginal smear indicated that the rat was in estrus. Each row represents the result from 1 of 90 rats evaluated in each group. (b) Characterization of the estrous cycle in individual 400 ppm atrazine-treated female SD rats (Study SDR3, Stevens ).
FIG. 4.(a) Dose- and time-dependent effect of 0, 25, 50, or 400 ppm atrazine administered in the diet on the percent days in estrus in female SD rat; 50 ppm was the no observed effect level (Study SDR3, Stevens ). (b) Comparison of the dose- and the time-dependent effects of atrazine administered at dietary concentrations of 0, 70, or 400 ppm on the percent days in estrus in female SD rats; 70 ppm was the no observed effect level (Study SDR3, Stevens ). (c) Atrazine administered at dietary concentrations of 70 or 400 ppm had no effect on the percent days in estrus in female Fischer 344 rats (Study FR2, Stevens ).
FIG. 5.(a) Atrazine administered for 6 months at dietary concentration of 400 ppm significantly suppressed the estrogen-induced LH surge in female SD rats; 50 ppm was the no observed effect level (Study SDR3, Stevens ). (b) Atrazine administered for 6 months at a dietary concentration of 400 ppm had no effect on the estrogen-induced LH surge in female Fischer-344 rats (Study FR2, Stevens ).
Species Differences in Reproductive Senescence (Adapted from Chapin )
| Parameter | SD rat | Fischer-344 rat | Women |
| Start of Senescence (% of normal lifespan) | 30–40% | 60–70% | 60–70% |
| Principal cause of senescence | Hypothalmic failure to stimulate LH/FSH | Hypothalmic failure to control prolactin surges | Depletion of ovarian follicle content |
| LH surge capability | Lost | Maintained | Maintained |
| Predominant cycle pattern | Persistent estrus | Pseudopregnancy episodes | Menopause |
| Estrogen/progesterone ratio | Elevated/prolonged | Reduced | Reduced |
| Prolactin secretion | Persistently elevated | Episodically elevated | Reduced |
| Spontaneous mammary tumor incidence (lifetime) | 30–40% | 2–5% | 8–10% |
| Principal known factors that increase MT Risk | Prolactin, estrogen, chemical mutagens | Prolactin, estrogen, chemical mutagens | Estrogen, nulliparity, family history |
| Prolactin dependence | High | Medium | None |
FIG. 6.Summary of the weight of evidence of the mode of action (biological plausibility) and the epidemiological evidence for a causal relationship between atrazine exposure and the occurrence of breast cancer in women.
Framework Assessment of the Animal Mode of Action, the Relevance of the MOA to Breast Cancer in Women and the Epidemiology Evidence
| EPA human cancer classification | Carcinogenic | Likely | Suggestive | Not likely |
| Human evidence | ||||
| Causation established | No | |||
| Association established | No | |||
| Animal evidence | ||||
| Multi versus single (sex, species, strain, and site) | Yes | |||
| Mode of action | ||||
| Key events proposed | Yes | |||
| Concordance of dose response relationships | Yes | |||
| Temporal association of key events | Yes | |||
| Strength, consistency, and specificity of association | Yes | |||
| Biological plausibility and coherence | Yes | |||
| Alternative MOAs evaluated | Yes | |||
| Human relevance | ||||
| MOA operative at any dose | No | |||
| MOA operative at plausible human dose | No | |||
| Framework: unlikely (category 4) | ||||