Expert Panel Evaluation of the Tumor Modes of Action for 1,4-Dioxane and Their Implications for Human Risk Assessment
- PMID: 41015149
- DOI: 10.1016/j.yrtph.2025.105950
Expert Panel Evaluation of the Tumor Modes of Action for 1,4-Dioxane and Their Implications for Human Risk Assessment
Abstract
Mode of action (MOA) plays an important role in key decisions made in risk assessments, including that for low-dose extrapolation. To support MOA-dependent decisions for 1,4-dioxane (1,4-DX), an independent panel of topic experts evaluated the available evidence on the MOA and human relevance of 1,4-DX tumors reported in rodent studies. The panel considered MOA data on liver tumors in rodents, as well as for other tissue sites (nasal cavity, peritoneal mesothelioma). For liver tumors, the panelists found strongest support for an indirect genotoxic MOA involving metabolic saturation of the enzyme that metabolizes 1,4-DX (CYP2E1), followed by induction of CYP2E1, oxidative stress, cytotoxicity, and regenerative proliferation. Metabolic saturation was identified as an early key event. Although available evidence for nasal and peritoneal tumors was limited, similar non-genotoxic MOAs were considered plausible. For all three tumor types, confidence ratings (scale of -5 to +5) from the panel for the best supported MOAs (+2.5 to +3.3) were significantly higher than the confidence rating for a direct genotoxic MOA (-3.8 to -4.5). The conclusions from this independent panel, which included careful consideration of recently published studies, provide support for use of non-linear extrapolation methods in human health risk assessment for 1,4-DX rodent tumors.
Copyright © 2025. Published by Elsevier Inc.
Conflict of interest statement
Declaration of Competing Interest ☒The authors declare the following financial interests/personal relationships which may be considered as potential competing interests: This work was funded by the American Chemistry Council (contract number 10009468). Authors CRK and SMH are owners of SciPinion, and therefore have a financial interest in this work. No other competing financial interests are identified for the remaining authors.
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