Abstract

The administration of lipid-lowering drugs to rodents, notably those related to clofibrate, rapidly provokes a hepatic response characterized by hepatomegaly, proliferation of smooth endoplasmic reticulum and proliferation of peroxisomes in hepatocytes. In some studies hepatocellular carcinoma has been found in rats or mice exposed for their entire life-span to high dose levels of various fibrates. In the present study liver biopsy samples were obtained from 38 hyperlipidemic patients, 28 of whom had been receiving fenofibrate for between 2 months and approximately 3 years (mean values: males 1.79, females 1.98 years). The remaining 10 patients had never been treated with a lipid-lowering drug. Examination of the biopsy samples by a variety of optical techniques and by electron microscopy failed to reveal any difference between the groups. Peroxisomes were relatively rare, there being no evidence of the clear proliferation seen in rodent studies. Other microscopic features of interest were some variation of nuclear size, mitochondria containing paracrystalline inclusions, dilated endoplasmic reticulum associated with reduced amounts of rough endoplasmic reticulum, and the presence of lipid droplets in the liver cells. However, these variations from normal were in general not much more apparent in samples from the fenofibrate-treated patients than in the untreated group. Light-and electron-microscopic observations did not suggest liver intoxication or a carcinogenic pattern.

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