Insulin glargine (LANTUS) is a new, long-acting insulin analogue with a stable profile of action. The purpose of these studies was to evaluate the carcinogenic potential of insulin glargine in rats and mice. General toxicity studies were conducted in NMRI mice (3 months' duration) and rats (Wistar rats in the 3- and 6-month studies and Sprague-Dawley rats in the 12-month study) to determine the optimal dose of insulin glargine for long-term carcinogenicity studies. Based on these results, groups of Sprague-Dawley rats or NMRI mice (50 male, 50 female) received a daily subcutaneous dose of 2, 5, or 12.5 IU/kg of insulin glargine or 12.5 (mice) or 5 IU/kg (rats) of the reference insulin (NPH insulin) in a lifetime study. Similarly treated control and vehicle-control animals received isotonic sodium chloride (NaCl) solution or the vehicle solution, respectively. In mice, the mortality rate was comparable between all groups. In rats, the mortality rate compared with the NaCl control was significantly increased in the following groups: males treated with the vehicle control, all insulin glargine and NPH insulin groups, and in females in the high-dose insulin glargine and NPH insulin groups. There was no difference in the incidence of mammary tumors reported in both mice and rats when comparing the insulin glargine groups with the NaCl, vehicle-control, or the NPH insulin groups. In rats and mice, the distribution of subcutaneous malignant fibrous histiocytomas found at the injection site were not dose-dependent. These lesions are a rodent-specific event and were related to chronic tissue irritation and inflammation. In rats, neuronal necrosis of the cerebrum was attributed to persistent repeated episodes of hypoglycemia induced by high doses of insulin. In these studies, there were no neoplastic findings to indicate that insulin glargine had a systemic carcinogenic potential in mice or rats.
Insulin glargine (LANTUS) is a new insulin analog that has a prolonged duration of action with no pronounced peak of activity, rendering it an ideal basal insulin for the treatment of diabetes. The aim of these studies was to assess the reproductive and embryotoxicity of insulin glargine. Reproductive toxicity was assessed in 25 male and 25 female Wistar rats per group treated with a daily subcutaneous injection of control; 1 IU/kg, 3 IU/kg, and 10 IU/kg insulin glargine; or 3 IU/kg NPH insulin in the premating and mating periods, and throughout pregnancy and lactation in the females. Embryotoxicity was assessed in 20 female rats per group injected with daily subcutaneous doses of control; 2 IU/kg, 6.3 IU/kg, and 20 IU/kg insulin glargine; or 6.3 IU/kg NPH insulin from the 7th to 18th day of pregnancy. Embryotoxicity was also assessed in 20 female rabbits per group treated with 0 IU/kg, 0.5 IU/kg, 1 IU/kg, and 2 IU/kg insulin glargine, or 1 IU/kg NPH insulin from the 6th to 18th day of pregnancy. The data demonstrated that, with the exception of toxicologic effects induced by hypoglycemia in response to high doses of insulin glargine and NPH insulin (including the premature dropout of female rats in the reproductive toxicity study, and increased incidence of abortions, early intrauterine deaths, and single anomalies in the rabbit embryotoxicity study), insulin glargine had no effects on reproduction, embryofetal development, and postnatal development in rats. Maternal and embryofetal toxicity in rabbits treated with middle and high doses of insulin glargine was related to the hypoglycemic effect of insulin.
Receptor binding and signaling and the mitogenic potential of insulin glulisine (glulisine), regular human insulin (RHI), and Asp(B10) were compared in vivo and in vitro. Insulin and insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-1) receptor binding was studied with human insulin receptors (293HEK cells) and the human osteosarcoma-derived cell line B10. Insulin receptor-mediated signaling was assessed in rat-1 fibroblasts overexpressing insulin receptors. Activation of insulin receptor substrates 1 and 2 (IRS-1/ IRS-2) was studied in rat and human myoblasts and rat cardiomyocytes. DNA synthesis induction was assessed by [3H] thymidine incorporation in the human epithelial breast cell line MCF10. Interaction with the IGF-1 receptor, DNA synthesis, and intracellular signal transduction were assessed in cardiac K6 myoblasts. Immunohistochemical examination of Sprague-Dawley rat tissue treated with glulisine for 6 months (n = 40), and glulisine and RHI for 12 months (n = 60), was performed. Steady-state insulin receptor binding affinity was slightly lower for glulisine versus RHI (approximately 0.70). IGF-1 receptor binding affinity was lower (four- to fivefold) for glulisine, but significantly higher (four-fold) for Asp(B10) versus RHI. Glulisine, Asp(B10), and RHI showed similar insulin receptor-association kinetics; however, Asp(B10) revealed increased insulin receptor affinity. Glulisine and RHI showed similar insulin receptor-mediated phosphorylation and IRS-2 activation. Activation of IRS-1 was 6- to 10-fold lower with glulisine; glulisine was less potent and Asp(B10) slightly more potent in stimulating DNA synthesis versus RHI. Stimulation of DNA synthesis was comparable for glulisine and RHI in K6 myoblasts. At 12 months, there was no significant difference between glulisine and RHI in proliferative activity. This preclinical evaluation suggests that structural changes in glulisine versus RHI are not associated with any safety issues.
The 1995 to 1997 lifetime carcinogenicity studies of insulin glargine in rats and mice were reanalyzed and reassessed for their validity according to current guidelines. In 2-year studies, 50 animals per sex and per group were used. Survival rates between weeks 80 and 90 in female mice and rats were greater than 20 animals in all groups, fulfilling current Food and Drug Administration requirements that enough animals lived long enough to provide adequate exposure to glargine and to be at risk of forming late-developing tumors. Exposure to 5 or 12.5 IU/kg glargine was similar to or 2 to 3 times greater than 5 IU/kg neutral protamine Hagedorn insulin, respectively. Using statistical methods recommended by current guidelines, no significant effect of glargine on mammary gland neoplastic lesions in female rodents was found, confirming earlier results. Thus, both studies can be considered valid according to contemporary standards. Insulin glargine does not present a carcinogenic risk.
Wistar rats were treated in utero on day 16 of gestation either by X-irradiation (1 and 2 Gy), N-ethyl-N-nitrosourea (ENU, 50 mg/kg), or both in combination. The O6-alkylguanine-DNA alkyltransferase (AT) activity of the fetal brain and liver was analyzed and long-term observations were made to reveal any relationship between the O6-ethylguanine repair capability and tumour incidence in the organs of the offspring. The AT activity in the brain was affected to the same extent in the fetuses as in the dams. There was a 60.9% decrease in AT activity in fetuses 24 h after ENU treatment. This correlates with a significant increase in the incidence of brain tumours in the treated offspring (44.1%) compared to control animals. The inductive effect of X-irradiation on AT activity (131.3% for 1 Gy and 201.6% for 2 Gy) corresponded in turn with a reduction of the incidence of tumours after the combined treatment (26.8% and 8.3% tumour incidence, 103.1% and 157.8% AT activity). In the liver of the rat fetuses, there was generally no effect of treatment on AT activity in contrast to the results obtained for the dams, where an increased AT activity (127.70% and 157.4% after X-irradiation, 149.0% and 156.1% after combined treatment) was observed. There were no tumours of the liver observed in the offspring after either treatment alone or after combined treatment. Comparing biochemical and morphological results, it is suggested that X-irradiation of rat fetuses--with relatively low doses--and subsequent treatment with the ethylating carcinogen ENU, could significantly reduce the incidence of brain tumours in adult life. This is possibly a result of the corresponding induction of AT.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.