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Incisor Degeneration in Rats Induced by Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor/Fibroblast Growth Factor Receptor Tyrosine Kinase Inhibition
16
Citations
90
References
2010
Year
Incisor DegenerationPathologyOsteoporosisRats InducedOdontologyAngiogenesisFibroblast Growth FactorPeriodontologyCell SignalingFibrosisOral CavityDental DiseaseVascular BiologyNeovascularizationVascular Endothelial Growth FactorPharmacologyCell BiologyDental PulpTumor MicroenvironmentEndothelial DysfunctionOral BiologyFgf SignalingMedicineExtracellular Matrix
BMS-645737, an inhibitor of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) receptor-2 and fibroblast growth factor (FGF) receptor-1, has anti-angiogenic activity and was evaluated in nonclinical studies as a treatment for cancer. This article characterizes the BMS-645737-induced clinical, gross, and histologic lesions of incisor teeth in Sprague-Dawley (SD) rats. Rats received 0 800 mg/kg BMS-645737 in a single-dose study or consecutive daily doses of 0 20 mg/kg/day in a 1-month study. The reversibility of these effects was assessed in the 1-month study. White discoloration and fracture of incisors were observed clinically and grossly in the 1-month study. In both studies, dose-dependent histopathologic lesions of incisors were degeneration and/or necrosis of odontoblasts and ameloblasts; decreased mineralization of dentin; inflammation and necrosis of the dental pulp; and edema, congestion, and hemorrhage in the pulp and periodontal tissue adjacent to the enamel organ. Partial recovery was observed at lower doses after a two-week dose-free period in the one-month study. Drug-induced incisor lesions were considered to be related to the pharmacologic inhibitory effects on VEGF and FGF signaling, that is, inhibition of growth and maintenance of small-diameter vessels that support the formation of dentin and enamel in growing teeth and/or to perturbances of function of odontoblasts and ameloblasts or their precursors.
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