Pancreatic acinar cell neoplasia in male Wistar rats following 2 years of gabapentin exposure
1995
Abstract Gabapentin, an anticonvulsant agent designated chemically as 1-(aminomethyl)-cyclohexaneacetic acid, was evaluated in a 2-year tumor bioassay in male Wistar rats. Three groups of 50 rats were fed gabapentin at 250, 1000 and 2000 mg/kg in the diet for 104 weeks. A fourth group was fed diet without drug. All rats were subjected to full histopathological evaluation. Body weight gain suppression occurred at 1000 and 2000 mg/kg. Survival was comparable across all groups. There was a treatment-related increase in the number of pancreatic acinar cell carcinomas; 0, 4, 3 and 8 of these carcinomas were observed in the control, 250, 1000 and 2000 mg/kg groups, respectively. There were no other increases in other tumor types, and there were no tumor increases in female rats. The frequency of pancreatic acinar cell hyperplasia was similar in treated and control groups. Biologically, the pancreatic carcinomas were not invasive, did not metastasize, were of late onset and did not compromise survival. Thus, gabapentin was a carcinogen in male Wistar rats. However, the tumorigenic response was of low-grade because it constituted a late tumor response which required very high doses. We reported recently that mice treated with gabapentin had no increase in pancreatic tumors. Therefore, neoplastic development was confined to the pancreas in a single sex and species of rodent. Consequently, gabapentin at therapeutic doses poses a low carcinogenic risk to humans.
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