Carcinogenic potential of some pesticides in a medium-term multi-organ bioassay in rats.
The carcinogenic potential of 5 pesticides was analyzed using a medium-term multi-organ bioassay for carcinogenicity. Male F344 rats were initially treated with 3 known carcinogens (diethylnitrosamine, N-methyl-N-nitrosourea and N-bis(2-hydroxypropyl)nitrosamine) during a period of 4 weeks to induce neoplastic changes in a variety of organs, and then given one of 5 pesticides in the diet for a further 16 weeks. Neoplastic and pre-neoplastic lesions were found in the thyroid, kidney and urinary bladder with propineb, in the forestomach, kidney and thyroid with captan and folpet. The number of glutathione S-transferase placental-form-positive liver-cell foci was significantly increased in the captan- and phosmet-treated groups. Based on these findings, captan and propineb can be considered as carcinogens and carcinogenicity is suspected for folpet and phosmet. These results are in concordance with reported long-term carcinogenicity for captan, folpet and propineb. Daminozide was considered not to be carcinogenic. Thus, the present assay of 20 weeks' duration is useful for the prediction of potential carcinogens.[1]References
- Carcinogenic potential of some pesticides in a medium-term multi-organ bioassay in rats. Hasegawa, R., Cabral, R., Hoshiya, T., Hakoi, K., Ogiso, T., Boonyaphiphat, P., Shirai, T., Ito, N. Int. J. Cancer (1993) [Pubmed]
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