A quantitative weight-of-evidence review of preclinical studies examining the potential developmental and reproductive toxicity of acetaminophen.

Journal: Critical Reviews In Toxicology
Published:
Abstract

We previously developed a quantitative weight-of-evidence (QWoE) framework using prespecified scoring criteria for preclinical acetaminophen data to characterize potential developmental neurotoxicity outcomes with considerations for biological relevance of the response to adverse outcomes and the strength of methods and study design. The current analysis uses this framework to characterize potential developmental and reproductive toxicity (DART) outcomes following exposure to acetaminophen. Two-hundred forty-two QWoE entries were documented from in vivo rodent studies identified in 110 publications across five categories: DART endpoints in the context of (1) periadolescent/adulthood (nonpregnancy) exposures; (2) pregnant female exposures; and, for in utero or other developmental exposures, (3) anatomical abnormalities, (4) reproductive development, and (5) other physical development. A mean outcome score and methods score were calculated for 242 QWoE entries. Data analyzed in our framework were of moderate quality showing no consistent evidence of DART in male and female rodents following exposure to acetaminophen at therapeutic and/or non-systemically toxic doses. Similar results were found for the individual context- and outcome-related endpoint analyses and as segregated by sex. Overall, this QWoE analysis on the in vivo rodent data demonstrated no consistent evidence of adverse effects following exposure to therapeutic and/or non-systemically toxic acetaminophen on development or on the structure and function of the reproductive system.

Authors
Daniel Kougias, Michael Southall, Anthony Scialli, Evren Atillasoy, Sadaff Ejaz, Tammi Schaeffer, Christopher Chu, Bamidele Jeminiwa, Andrey Massarsky, Kenneth Unice, Michael Kovochich