- 著者
- 
             
             Keiko Makita-Suzuki
             
             Chihaya Kakinuma
             
             Akira Inomata
             
             Yasuhiro Shimada
             
             Takefumi Hara
             
             Takashi Yao
             
          
- 出版者
- JAPANESE SOCIETY OF TOXICOLOGIC PATHOLOGY
- 雑誌
- Journal of Toxicologic Pathology (ISSN:09149198)
- 巻号頁・発行日
- vol.33, no.1, pp.1-9, 2020 (Released:2020-01-24)
- 参考文献数
- 40
- 被引用文献数
- 
             
             
             2
             
             
          
        
        Although several liposomal drugs, including liposomal doxorubicin, have been approved,          the etiology of the pathological responses caused by their physicochemical properties          remains unknown. Herein, we investigated the pathological changes in the liver and the          gallbladder of dogs following a single injection of liposomal doxorubicin (1 or 2.5 mg/kg)          or an empty liposomal formulation (i.e., liposomal formulation without doxorubicin, ca. 21          mg/kg as lipid content). Injection of liposomal doxorubicin or the empty liposomal          formulation induced hemorrhagic changes in the liver and the gallbladder. These changes          were accompanied by minimal cellular infiltration with no obvious changes in the blood          vessels. As there were no differences in the incidence and severity of hemorrhage between          the groups administered comparable amounts of total lipid, the physicochemical properties          of the liposomal formulation rather than an active pharmacological ingredient,          doxorubicin, were associated with the hemorrhagic changes. Furthermore, decreased          cytoplasmic granules with low electron density in mast cells beneath the endothelium of          the hepatic vein were observed in the liver of dogs treated with liposomal doxorubicin or          empty liposomal formulation. Injection of compound 48/80, a histamine releaser induced          comparable hemorrhage in dogs, implying that hemorrhage caused by injection of liposomal          doxorubicin or the empty liposomal formulation could be attributed to the histamine          released from mast cells. The absence of similar hemorrhagic lesions in other species          commonly used in toxicology studies (i.e., rats and monkeys), as well as humans, is due to          the lack of mast cells beneath the endothelium of the hepatic vein in these species.