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A weight of evidence assessment of the genotoxicity of 2,6-xylidine based on existing and new data, with relevance to safety of lidocaine exposure
- Source :
- Regulatory toxicology and pharmacology : RTP. 119
- Publication Year :
- 2020
-
Abstract
- Lidocaine has not been associated with cancer in humans despite 8 decades of therapeutic use. Its metabolite, 2,6-xylidine, is a rat carcinogen, believed to induce genotoxicity via N-hydroxylation and DNA adduct formation, a non-threshold mechanism of action. To better understand this dichotomy, we review literature pertaining to metabolic activation and genotoxicity of 2,6-xylidine, identifying that it appears resistant to N-hydroxylation and instead metabolises almost exclusively to DMAP (an aminophenol). At high exposures (sufficient to saturate phase 2 metabolism), this may undergo metabolic threshold-dependent activation to a quinone-imine with potential to redox cycle producing ROS, inducing cytotoxicity and genotoxicity. A new rat study found no evidence of genotoxicity in vivo based on micronuclei in bone marrow, comets in nasal tissue or female liver, despite high level exposure to 2,6-xylidine (including metabolites). In male liver, weak dose-related comet increases, within the historical control range, were associated with metabolic overload and acute systemic toxicity. Benchmark dose analysis confirmed a non-linear dose response. The weight of evidence indicates 2,6-xylidine is a non-direct acting (metabolic threshold-dependent) genotoxin, and is not genotoxic in vivo in rats in the absence of acute systemic toxic effects, which occur at levels 35 × beyond lidocaine-related exposure in humans.
- Subjects :
- Metabolite
010501 environmental sciences
Pharmacology
Toxicology
medicine.disease_cause
030226 pharmacology & pharmacy
01 natural sciences
Activation, Metabolic
03 medical and health sciences
chemistry.chemical_compound
0302 clinical medicine
In vivo
medicine
Animals
Humans
Anesthetics, Local
Cytotoxicity
Carcinogen
0105 earth and related environmental sciences
Aniline Compounds
Mutagenicity Tests
Lidocaine
General Medicine
chemistry
Mechanism of action
Micronucleus test
medicine.symptom
Drug metabolism
Genotoxicity
Mutagens
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 10960295
- Volume :
- 119
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Regulatory toxicology and pharmacology : RTP
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....8e102464ba00baa8b11fae744f621ae8