RESUMEN
Occupational exposure limits for unstudied pharmaceutical synthetic intermediates are often established under the assumption that penultimate and near-ultimate intermediates have the same structure-activity and dose-response as the ultimate active pharmaceutical ingredient (API). This is seldom the case because moieties that render biological activity to the API are often protected or modified for synthetic purposes. Incorrectly assuming that intermediates have biological activity similar to the API may lead to excessive exposure controls that in turn impose unnecessary ergonomic hazards on workers and greatly reduces the scale and efficiency of production. Instead of assuming intermediates have the same toxicity profile as the API, it is feasible to use a parallelogram approach to establish exposure limits for synthetic intermediates using low-cost in vitro data. By comparing in vitro responses of intermediates to structurally similar data-rich molecules such as the API, occupational exposure categories can be established for unstudied intermediates. In this contribution (1) methods for setting occupational exposure limits for data-poor compounds are reviewed; (2) applications and limitations of in vitro assays are discussed; (3) two exposure categorization examples are presented that rely on an in vitro parallelogram approach; and (4) inherent safeguards for uncertainties in pharmaceutical risk assessment are identified. In vitro hazard and dose-response information for unstudied intermediates that are structurally similar to well-studied APIs can greatly enhance the basis for setting occupational exposure limits for unstudied synthetic intermediates.
Asunto(s)
Industria Farmacéutica , Efectos Colaterales y Reacciones Adversas Relacionados con Medicamentos , Enfermedades Profesionales/prevención & control , Exposición Profesional/prevención & control , Salud Laboral , Animales , Células Cultivadas , Relación Dosis-Respuesta a Droga , Humanos , Exposición Profesional/efectos adversos , Preparaciones Farmacéuticas/metabolismo , Medición de RiesgoRESUMEN
Genome-wide oligonucleotide DNA microarrays and real time RT-PCR were used to assess differential gene expression in rat glioma and hepatoma cell lines after exposure to the aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR) agonist 3,3',4,4',5-pentachlorobiphenyl (penta-CB). Under maximal inducing concentrations for cytochrome P450 1A1 (CYP1A1) in H4IIE rat hepatoma cells, both H4IIE and C6 rat glioma cells were exposed to sub-micromolar concentrations of penta-CB for 24h. Differential gene expression for approximately 28,000 gene probes were computationally analyzed and compared. As expected, penta-CB potently activated CYP1A1/2 transcription in liver-derived H4IIE hepatoma cells yet did not do so in brain-derived C6 glioma cells. Additionally, we show that penta-CB causes: (1) distinct patterns of gene expression between tumor cells derived from liver or brain; (2) robust transcriptional activation of select C6 glioma gene ontologies; (3) over-expression of H4IIE hepatoma genes associated with tumor progression in liver; (4) greater than 100-fold over-expression of C6 glioma genes associated with protein processing and programmed cell death and/or metastasis; (5) tissue-selective histone deacetylase inhibition in C6 glioma, but not H4IIE hepatoma cells as signaled by galectin-1 over-expression.