Health & Environmental Research Online (HERO)


Print Feedback Export to File
3435273 
Journal Article 
Toxicity of hydroxyurea in rats and dogs 
Morton, D; Reed, L; Huang, W; Marcek, JM; Austin-Lafrance, R; Northcott, CA; Schelling, SH; Enerson, BE; Tomlinson, L 
2015 
Toxicologic Pathology
ISSN: 0192-6233
EISSN: 1533-1601 
43 
498-512 
English 
The toxicity of hydroxyurea, a treatment for specific neoplasms, sickle-cell disease, polycythemia, and thrombocytosis that kills cells in mitosis, was assessed in repeat-dose, oral gavage studies in rats and dogs and a cardiovascular study in telemetered dogs. Hydroxyurea produced hematopoietic, lymphoid, cardiovascular, and gastrointestinal toxicity with steep dose response curves. In rats dosed for 10 days, 50 mg/kg/day was tolerated; 500 mg/kg/day produced decreased body weight gain; decreased circulating leukocytes, erythrocytes, and platelets; decreased cellularity of thymus, lymph nodes, and bone marrow; and epithelial degeneration and/or dysplasia of the stomach and small intestine; 1,500 mg/kg/day resulted in deaths on day 5. In dogs, a single dose at 250 mg/kg caused prostration leading to unscheduled euthanasia. Dogs administered 50 mg/kg/day for 1 month had decreased circulating leukocytes, erythrocytes, and platelets; increased bone marrow cellularity with decreased maturing granulocytes; increased creatinine kinase activity; and increased iron pigment in bone marrow and hepatic sinusoidal cells. In telemetered dogs, doses 15 mg/kg decreased systolic blood pressure (BP); 50 mg/kg increased diastolic BP, heart rate, and change in blood pressure over time (+dP/dt), and decreased QT and PR intervals and maximum left ventricular systolic and end diastolic pressures with measures returning to control levels within 24 hr. 
bone marrow; blood; dog; heart; hydroxyurea; rat 
IRIS
• RDX (121-82-4)
• LitSearch-NOx (2024)
     Keyword Search
          Toxicology
               March 2014-November 2016