Combination of pathological, biochemical and behavioral evaluations for peripheral neurotoxicity assessment in isoniazid-treated rats

In drug development, assessment of non-clinical peripheral neurotoxicity is important to ensure human safety. Clarifying the pathological features and mechanisms of toxicity enables the management of safety risks in humans by estimating the degree of risk and proposing monitoring strategies. Publish...

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Published inJournal of Toxicologic Pathology Vol. 37; no. 2; pp. 69 - 82
Main Authors Kashimura, Akane, Nishikawa, Satomi, Ozawa, Yuhei, Hibino, Yui, Tateoka, Takashi, Mizukawa, Mao, Nishina, Hironobu, Sakairi, Tetsuya, Shiga, Takanori, Aihara, Naoyuki, Kamiie, Junichi
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Japan JAPANESE SOCIETY OF TOXICOLOGIC PATHOLOGY 01.01.2024
The Japanese Society of Toxicologic Pathology
Japan Science and Technology Agency
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Summary:In drug development, assessment of non-clinical peripheral neurotoxicity is important to ensure human safety. Clarifying the pathological features and mechanisms of toxicity enables the management of safety risks in humans by estimating the degree of risk and proposing monitoring strategies. Published guidelines for peripheral neurotoxicity assessment do not provide detailed information on which endpoints should be monitored preferentially and how the results should be integrated and discussed. To identify an optimal assessment method for the characterization of peripheral neurotoxicity, we conducted pathological, biochemical (biomaterials contributing to mechanistic considerations and biomarkers), and behavioral evaluations of isoniazid-treated rats. We found a discrepancy between the days on which marked pathological changes were noted and those on which biochemical and behavioral changes were noted, suggesting the importance of combining these evaluations. Although pathological evaluation is essential for pathological characterization, the results of biochemical and behavioral assessments at the same time points as the pathological evaluation are also important for discussion. In this study, since the measurement of serum neurofilament light chain could detect changes earlier than pathological examination, it could be useful as a biomarker for peripheral neurotoxicity. Moreover, examination of semi-thin specimens and choline acetyltransferase immunostaining were useful for characterizing morphological neurotoxicity, and image analysis of semi-thin specimens enabled us to objectively show the pathological features.
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ISSN:0914-9198
1881-915X
1347-7404
DOI:10.1293/tox.2023-0094