Abstract

In the long-term safety testing of chemicals for carcinogenicity the toxicologist needs to be aware of a number of scenarios where renal tubule tumors, or their precursors, arise that are not due to a carcinogenic action of the test article. Situations producing false positive results in the kidney include exacerbation of chronic progressive nephropathy (CPN) in rats, confusion of atypical tubule hyperplasia (the obligate precursor of renal tubule tumor) with foci of benign CPN-related renal tubule cell proliferation, inclusion of spontaneous tumor entities, such as the amphophilic-vacuolar tumor, in the test article tumor count, the possibility of a link between spontaneous forms of tubule dilatation and renal tubule tumor formation in mice, and the supposed predictivity of chemically-induced karyomegaly for renal carcinogenicity in both rats and mice. Examples of these misleading situations are described and discussed.

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