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Human & Experimental Toxicology
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Immunotoxicity evaluation of nelfinavir in rats

Leigh Ann Burns-Naas

Worldwide Safety Sciences, Pfizer Global Research and Development, 10777 Science Center Drive, San Diego, CA 92121, USA Leighann.burns{at}pfizer.com

Kimber L White, Jr

ImmunoTox, Inc., Richmond, VA, USA

J Ann McCay

Immuno Tox, Inc., Richmond, VA, USA; Division of Consolidated Laboratory Services, 600 North 5th Street, Richmond, VA 23219, USA

James Ivett

Covance Laboratories, Vienna, VA, USA

Stephanie Webber

Agouron Pharmaceuticals, Inc.; Stephanie Webber Consulting; San Diego, CA, USA

Mark Zorbas

Worldwide Safety Sciences, Pfizer Global Research and Development, San Diego, CA USA

The objective of these investigations was to determine whether exposure to the HIV-1 protease inhibitor nelfinavir compromises immune function in Sprague Dawley rats. Animals (20/sex per group) were exposed orally for 1 or 6 months to nelfinavir at doses of 0 (1% carboxymethylcellulose vehicle), 100, 300 or 1000 mg/kg per day. Animals were observed daily for morbidity/mortality and for clinical signs of toxicity. Body weights were recorded weekly (weeks 1-14) and then monthly there-after and at study termination. At termination (1 month or 6 months; 10/sex per group), serum was collected and retained for toxicokinetic analysis. The spleen, thymus and liver were removed from each animal and weighed; thymuses and liver were discarded after weighing. Spleens were prepared and immunophenotyping, natural killer (NK) cell activity, and proliferative responses to mitogenic stimuli (e.g., concanavalin A, Salmonella typhimurium) were evaluated. There were no treatment-related effects on immune cell populations (absolute or percent values) or in proliferative responses. At the 1-month interval, a decrease in NK cell activity (0.45-fold control) was noted in male rats at 100 and 1000 mg/kg per day but not at the middle dose of 300 mg/kg per day. Female rats at 1 month were noted for an increase in NK cell activity (1.4-fold control) at 100 mg/kg per day, but there was no difference in the NK response between vehicle-treated animals and those exposed to higher doses of nelfinavir. No effects on NK activity were noted in female animals after 6 months of nelfinavir treatment. Assay difficulties prevented evaluation of male rats at the 6-month interval. Taken together, the absence of a dose-response effect for NK activity in male rats treated for 1 month, the lack of suppressive effects in females treated for either 1 or 6 months, and the unchanged splenic NK cell numbers in nelfinavir-treated animals at both 1 and 6 months suggest that the decreased NK activity noted in male rats at 1 month is not biologically relevant. It was therefore concluded that, under the experimental conditions used, oral treatment with nelfinavir for 1 or 6 months at doses up to 1000 mg/ kg per day is not immunosuppressive in rats. C8hr values following nelfinavir treatment at 1000 mg/kg per day for 6 months were between 1-and 2.7-fold the reported Cmaxvalues in humans.

Key Words: nelfinavir • HAART • HIV • immunophenotyping • immunotoxicity • innate immunity

Human & Experimental Toxicology, Vol. 24, No. 2, 67-78 (2005)
DOI: 10.1191/0960327105ht497oa


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This article has been cited by other articles:


Home page
Hum Exp ToxicolHome page
L A Burns-Naas, M Zorbas, B Jessen, W Evering, G Stevens, J L Ivett, T E Ryan, J C Cook, C C Capen, M Chen, et al.
Increase in thyroid follicular cell tumors in nelfinavir-treated rats observed in a 2-year carcinogenicity study is consistent with a rat-specific mechanism of thyroid neoplasia
Human and Experimental Toxicology, December 1, 2005; 24(12): 643 - 654.
[Abstract] [PDF]



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