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Towards a science-based testing strategy to identify maternal thyroid hormone imbalance and neurodevelopmental effects in the progeny-part III: how is substance-mediated thyroid hormone imbalance in pregnant/lactating rats or their progeny related to neurodevelopmental effects?
Marty, M Sue; Sauer, Ursula G; Charlton, Alex; Ghaffari, Rashin; Guignard, Davy; Hallmark, Nina; Hannas, Bethany R; Jacobi, Sylvia; Marxfeld, Heike-Antje; Melching-Kollmuss, Stephanie; Sheets, Larry P; Urbisch, Daniel; Botham, Philip A; van Ravenzwaay, Bennard.
  • Marty MS; Dow, Inc., Midland, MI, USA.
  • Sauer UG; Scientific Consultancy-Animal Welfare, Neubiberg, Germany.
  • Charlton A; Syngenta, Jealott's Hill, Bracknell, UK.
  • Ghaffari R; Corteva Agriscience, Newark, DE, USA.
  • Guignard D; Bayer CropScience, Sophia Antipolis, France.
  • Hallmark N; Bayer AG, Monheim, Germany.
  • Hannas BR; Corteva Agriscience, Newark, DE, USA.
  • Jacobi S; Albemarle, Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium.
  • Marxfeld HA; BASF SE, Ludwigshafen, Germany.
  • Melching-Kollmuss S; BASF SE, Limburgerhof, Germany.
  • Sheets LP; Bayer CropScience, Chesterfield, MO, USA.
  • Urbisch D; BASF SE, Limburgerhof, Germany.
  • Botham PA; Syngenta, Jealott's Hill, Bracknell, UK.
  • van Ravenzwaay B; Environmental Sciences Consulting, Altrip, Germany.
Crit Rev Toxicol ; 52(7): 546-617, 2022 08.
Article en En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36519295
ABSTRACT
This review investigated which patterns of thyroid- and brain-related effects are seen in rats upon gestational/lactational exposure to 14 substances causing thyroid hormone imbalance by four different modes-of-action (inhibition of thyroid peroxidase, sodium-iodide symporter and deiodinase activities, enhancement of thyroid hormone clearance) or to dietary iodine deficiency. Brain-related parameters included motor activity, cognitive function, acoustic startle response, hearing function, periventricular heterotopia, electrophysiology and brain gene expression. Specific modes-of-action were not related to specific patterns of brain-related effects. Based upon the rat data reviewed, maternal serum thyroid hormone levels do not show a causal relationship with statistically significant neurodevelopmental effects. Offspring serum thyroxine together with offspring serum triiodothyronine and thyroid stimulating hormone appear relevant to predict the likelihood for neurodevelopmental effects. Based upon the collated database, thresholds of ≥60%/≥50% offspring serum thyroxine reduction and ≥20% and statistically significant offspring serum triiodothyronine reduction indicate an increased likelihood for statistically significant neurodevelopmental effects; accuracies 83% and 67% when excluding electrophysiology (and gene expression). Measurements of brain thyroid hormone levels are likely relevant, too. The extent of substance-mediated thyroid hormone imbalance appears more important than substance mode-of-action to predict neurodevelopmental impairment in rats. Pertinent research needs were identified, e.g. to determine whether the phenomenological offspring thyroid hormone thresholds are relevant for regulatory toxicity testing. The insight from this review shall be used to suggest a tiered testing strategy to determine whether gestational/lactational substance exposure may elicit thyroid hormone imbalance and potentially also neurodevelopmental effects.
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Texto completo: 1 Banco de datos: MEDLINE Asunto principal: Glándula Tiroides / Enfermedades del Sistema Endocrino Tipo de estudio: Prognostic_studies / Qualitative_research Límite: Animals / Pregnancy Idioma: En Año: 2022 Tipo del documento: Article

Texto completo: 1 Banco de datos: MEDLINE Asunto principal: Glándula Tiroides / Enfermedades del Sistema Endocrino Tipo de estudio: Prognostic_studies / Qualitative_research Límite: Animals / Pregnancy Idioma: En Año: 2022 Tipo del documento: Article