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Risk assessment of thyroid follicular cell tumors.

Thyroid follicular cell tumors arise in rodents from mutations, perturbations of thyroid and pituitary hormone status with increased stimulation of thyroid cell growth by thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH), or a combination of the two. The only known human thyroid carcinogen is ionizing radiation. It...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Hill, R N, Crisp, T M, Hurley, P M, Rosenthal, S L, Singh, D V
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 1998
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1533213/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9681971
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author Hill, R N
Crisp, T M
Hurley, P M
Rosenthal, S L
Singh, D V
author_facet Hill, R N
Crisp, T M
Hurley, P M
Rosenthal, S L
Singh, D V
author_sort Hill, R N
collection PubMed
description Thyroid follicular cell tumors arise in rodents from mutations, perturbations of thyroid and pituitary hormone status with increased stimulation of thyroid cell growth by thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH), or a combination of the two. The only known human thyroid carcinogen is ionizing radiation. It is not known for certain whether chemicals that affect thyroid cell growth lead to human thyroid cancer. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency applies the following science policy positions: 1) chemically induced rodent thyroid tumors are presumed to be relevant to humans; 2) when interspecies information is lacking, the default is to assume comparable carcinogenic sensitivity in rodents and humans; 3) adverse rodent noncancer thyroid effects due to chemically induced thyroid-pituitary disruption are presumed to be relevant to humans; 4) linear dose-response considerations are applied to thyroid cancer induced by chemical substances that either do not disrupt thyroid functioning or lack mode of action information; 5) nonlinear thyroid cancer dose-response considerations are applied to chemicals that reduce thyroid hormone levels, increase TSH and thyroid cell division, and are judged to lack mutagenic activity; and 6) nonlinear considerations may be applied in thyroid cancer dose-response assessments on a case-by-case basis for chemicals that disrupt thyroid-pituitary functioning and demonstrate some mutagenic activity. Required data for risk assessment purposes is mode of action information on mutagenicity, increases in follicular cell growth (cell size and number) and thyroid gland weight, thyroid-pituitary hormones, site of action, correlations between doses producing thyroid effects and cancer, and reversibility of effects when dosing ceases.
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spelling pubmed-15332132006-08-08 Risk assessment of thyroid follicular cell tumors. Hill, R N Crisp, T M Hurley, P M Rosenthal, S L Singh, D V Environ Health Perspect Research Article Thyroid follicular cell tumors arise in rodents from mutations, perturbations of thyroid and pituitary hormone status with increased stimulation of thyroid cell growth by thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH), or a combination of the two. The only known human thyroid carcinogen is ionizing radiation. It is not known for certain whether chemicals that affect thyroid cell growth lead to human thyroid cancer. The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency applies the following science policy positions: 1) chemically induced rodent thyroid tumors are presumed to be relevant to humans; 2) when interspecies information is lacking, the default is to assume comparable carcinogenic sensitivity in rodents and humans; 3) adverse rodent noncancer thyroid effects due to chemically induced thyroid-pituitary disruption are presumed to be relevant to humans; 4) linear dose-response considerations are applied to thyroid cancer induced by chemical substances that either do not disrupt thyroid functioning or lack mode of action information; 5) nonlinear thyroid cancer dose-response considerations are applied to chemicals that reduce thyroid hormone levels, increase TSH and thyroid cell division, and are judged to lack mutagenic activity; and 6) nonlinear considerations may be applied in thyroid cancer dose-response assessments on a case-by-case basis for chemicals that disrupt thyroid-pituitary functioning and demonstrate some mutagenic activity. Required data for risk assessment purposes is mode of action information on mutagenicity, increases in follicular cell growth (cell size and number) and thyroid gland weight, thyroid-pituitary hormones, site of action, correlations between doses producing thyroid effects and cancer, and reversibility of effects when dosing ceases. 1998-08 /pmc/articles/PMC1533213/ /pubmed/9681971 Text en
spellingShingle Research Article
Hill, R N
Crisp, T M
Hurley, P M
Rosenthal, S L
Singh, D V
Risk assessment of thyroid follicular cell tumors.
title Risk assessment of thyroid follicular cell tumors.
title_full Risk assessment of thyroid follicular cell tumors.
title_fullStr Risk assessment of thyroid follicular cell tumors.
title_full_unstemmed Risk assessment of thyroid follicular cell tumors.
title_short Risk assessment of thyroid follicular cell tumors.
title_sort risk assessment of thyroid follicular cell tumors.
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1533213/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/9681971
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