| Literature DB >> 32622430 |
Eva Tibaldi1, Federica Gnudi1, Simona Panzacchi1, Daniele Mandrioli1, Andrea Vornoli1, Marco Manservigi1, Daria Sgargi1, Laura Falcioni1, Luciano Bua1, Fiorella Belpoggi2.
Abstract
Lymphomas and leukaemias involving the lung have in some cases been hard to distinguish from respiratory tract infection in Sprague-Dawley (SD) rats from long-term bioassays. In order to differentiate between tumours and immune cell infiltrates, updated pathological criteria and nomenclature were used and immunohistochemistry (IHC) was applied to haematopoietic and lymphoid tissue tumours (HLTs) in the original prenatal long-term Aspartame (APM) study performed by the Ramazzini Institute (RI). All 78 cases of HLTs from treated and control groups were re-examined based on light microscopic morphological characteristics and subjected to a panel of IHC markers including Ki67, CD3, PAX5, CD20, CD68, TdT, CD45, CD14 and CD33. The analysis confirmed the diagnoses of HLTs in 72 cases, identified 3 cases of preneoplastic lesions (lymphoid hyperplasia), and categorized 3 cases as inflammatory lesions. A statistically significant increase in total HLTs (p = 0.006), total lymphomas (p = 0.032) and total leukaemias (p = 0.031) in treated female rats was confirmed (high dose vs control), and a statistically significant linear trend for each HLT type was also observed. After the HLT cases re-evaluation, the results obtained are consistent with those reported in the previous RI publication and reinforce the hypothesis that APM has a leukaemogenic and lymphomatogenic effect.Entities:
Keywords: Aspartame; Immunohistochemistry; Leukaemias; Lymphomas; Sprague-Dawley rats
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32622430 DOI: 10.1016/j.acthis.2020.151548
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Histochem ISSN: 0065-1281 Impact factor: 2.479