4.4 Review

Ethyl acrylate (EA) exposure and thyroid carcinogenicity in rats and mice with relevance to human health

Journal

REGULATORY TOXICOLOGY AND PHARMACOLOGY
Volume 124, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.yrtph.2021.104961

Keywords

Cancer; Endocrine disruption; Thyroid adenoma; Thyroid carcinoma; Human relevance

Funding

  1. BAMM: Basic Acrylic Monomer Manufacturers, Inc., Williamsburg, VA, USA

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The study found a small but statistically significant increase in thyroid tumors in rats and mice chronically exposed to EA vapors, but most of these tumors were benign. However, results from chronic studies did not support a genotoxic/mutagenic potential for EA, suggesting that the association between EA exposure and thyroid neoplasia may be a chance observation. Due to species-specific physiological differences, the relevance of findings in rodents to human health is questionable.
Ethyl acrylate (EA) was classified by IARC as a Group-2B Carcinogen based, in part, on data suggesting increased incidence of thyroid neoplasia in rats and mice exposed chronically to EA vapors. We examined chronic exposure of rats and mice to EA vapors, evaluated the data on the incidence of thyroid follicular neoplasia, and determined the relevance of thyroid tumors to human health risk. The data revealed a small statistically significant increase in thyroid tumors in EA-exposed male rats and mice. The tumor incidences were within the range of historical controls and were not consistently dose-dependent. Most thyroid tumors in exposed animals were benign. Chronic exposure of EA to rats and mice (drinking water or gavage) and dogs (capsules) had no evidence of thyroid neoplasia. Results from chronic studies, in vivo and in vitro data, and ToxCastTM/Tox 21 HTPS did not support genotoxic/mutagenic potential for EA. This suggests that the associations between EA exposure and thyroid neoplasia represent chance or random observations rather than a compound-mediated effect. Due to species-specific physiological differences, the hypothalamic-pituitary-thyroid axis of rodents is more sensitive to endocrine disruptive chemicals than that of humans which further suggests that findings in rodents have questionable relevance to human health.

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