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Creative Consultants |
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MUTAGENIC POTENTIAL The genotoxicity of atorvastatin was evaluated in a variety of
test systems. In bacterial mutagenicity tests, the E. coli tester strain
WP2(uvrA) and S. typhimurium strains TA98, TA100, TA1535, TA1537 and TA1538 were
exposed to concentrations of atorvastatin as high as 5000 micrograms/plate both
in the absence (S9-) and presence (S9+) of metabolic activation. Atorvastatin
was not mutagenic in either E. coli or S. typhimurium. Chinese hamster lung V79
cell cultures were exposed to atorvastatin at concentrations of 50-300
micrograms/ml (S9-) and 100-300 micrograms/ml (S9+) and structural chromosome
aberrations were assessed. Mutation at the hgprt locus was assessed at
concentrations of 100-300 micrograms/ml (S9-) and 150-275 micrograms/ml (S9+).
Atorvastatin was neither mutagenic nor clastogenic in the absence or presence of
S9. The lack of in vitro genotoxicity was corroborated in vivo in a mouse
micronucleus study in which single oral doses of atorvastatin were administered
to male and female CD-1 mice at 1, 2500, or 5000 mg/kg. No biologically
significant increases in the frequency of micronucleated polychromatic
erythrocytes in bone marrow at 24, 48, or 72 h postdosing were observed. Thus,
atorvastatin, as with the other tested HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors, is not
genotoxic.(26)
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