Hematological changes as prognostic indicators of survival: similarities between Gottingen minipigs, humans, and other large animal models.

The animal efficacy rule addressing development of drugs for selected disease categories has pointed out the need to develop alternative large animal models. Based on this rule, the pathophysiology of the disease in the animal model must be well characterized and must reflect that in humans. So far,...

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Main Authors: Maria Moroni, Eric Lombardini, Rudolph Salber, Mehdi Kazemzedeh, Vitaly Nagy, Cara Olsen, Mark H Whitnall
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2011-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3182184?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-062755110b794fc3b8b97000754840942020-11-25T01:42:55ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032011-01-0169e2521010.1371/journal.pone.0025210Hematological changes as prognostic indicators of survival: similarities between Gottingen minipigs, humans, and other large animal models.Maria MoroniEric LombardiniRudolph SalberMehdi KazemzedehVitaly NagyCara OlsenMark H WhitnallThe animal efficacy rule addressing development of drugs for selected disease categories has pointed out the need to develop alternative large animal models. Based on this rule, the pathophysiology of the disease in the animal model must be well characterized and must reflect that in humans. So far, manifestations of the acute radiation syndrome (ARS) have been extensively studied only in two large animal models, the non-human primate (NHP) and the canine. We are evaluating the suitability of the minipig as an additional large animal model for development of radiation countermeasures. We have previously shown that the Gottingen minipig manifests hematopoietic ARS phases and symptoms similar to those observed in canines, NHPs, and humans.We establish here the LD50/30 dose (radiation dose at which 50% of the animals succumb within 30 days), and show that at this dose the time of nadir and the duration of cytopenia resemble those observed for NHP and canines, and mimic closely the kinetics of blood cell depletion and recovery in human patients with reversible hematopoietic damage (H3 category, METREPOL approach). No signs of GI damage in terms of diarrhea or shortening of villi were observed at doses up to 1.9 Gy. Platelet counts at days 10 and 14, number of days to reach critical platelet values, duration of thrombocytopenia, neutrophil stress response at 3 hours and count at 14 days, and CRP-to-platelet ratio were correlated with survival. The ratios between neutrophils, lymphocytes and platelets were significantly correlated with exposure to irradiation at different time intervals.As a non-rodent animal model, the minipig offers a useful alternative to NHP and canines, with attractive features including ARS resembling human ARS, cost, and regulatory acceptability. Use of the minipig may allow accelerated development of radiation countermeasures.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3182184?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Maria Moroni
Eric Lombardini
Rudolph Salber
Mehdi Kazemzedeh
Vitaly Nagy
Cara Olsen
Mark H Whitnall
spellingShingle Maria Moroni
Eric Lombardini
Rudolph Salber
Mehdi Kazemzedeh
Vitaly Nagy
Cara Olsen
Mark H Whitnall
Hematological changes as prognostic indicators of survival: similarities between Gottingen minipigs, humans, and other large animal models.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Maria Moroni
Eric Lombardini
Rudolph Salber
Mehdi Kazemzedeh
Vitaly Nagy
Cara Olsen
Mark H Whitnall
author_sort Maria Moroni
title Hematological changes as prognostic indicators of survival: similarities between Gottingen minipigs, humans, and other large animal models.
title_short Hematological changes as prognostic indicators of survival: similarities between Gottingen minipigs, humans, and other large animal models.
title_full Hematological changes as prognostic indicators of survival: similarities between Gottingen minipigs, humans, and other large animal models.
title_fullStr Hematological changes as prognostic indicators of survival: similarities between Gottingen minipigs, humans, and other large animal models.
title_full_unstemmed Hematological changes as prognostic indicators of survival: similarities between Gottingen minipigs, humans, and other large animal models.
title_sort hematological changes as prognostic indicators of survival: similarities between gottingen minipigs, humans, and other large animal models.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2011-01-01
description The animal efficacy rule addressing development of drugs for selected disease categories has pointed out the need to develop alternative large animal models. Based on this rule, the pathophysiology of the disease in the animal model must be well characterized and must reflect that in humans. So far, manifestations of the acute radiation syndrome (ARS) have been extensively studied only in two large animal models, the non-human primate (NHP) and the canine. We are evaluating the suitability of the minipig as an additional large animal model for development of radiation countermeasures. We have previously shown that the Gottingen minipig manifests hematopoietic ARS phases and symptoms similar to those observed in canines, NHPs, and humans.We establish here the LD50/30 dose (radiation dose at which 50% of the animals succumb within 30 days), and show that at this dose the time of nadir and the duration of cytopenia resemble those observed for NHP and canines, and mimic closely the kinetics of blood cell depletion and recovery in human patients with reversible hematopoietic damage (H3 category, METREPOL approach). No signs of GI damage in terms of diarrhea or shortening of villi were observed at doses up to 1.9 Gy. Platelet counts at days 10 and 14, number of days to reach critical platelet values, duration of thrombocytopenia, neutrophil stress response at 3 hours and count at 14 days, and CRP-to-platelet ratio were correlated with survival. The ratios between neutrophils, lymphocytes and platelets were significantly correlated with exposure to irradiation at different time intervals.As a non-rodent animal model, the minipig offers a useful alternative to NHP and canines, with attractive features including ARS resembling human ARS, cost, and regulatory acceptability. Use of the minipig may allow accelerated development of radiation countermeasures.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3182184?pdf=render
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