Non-clinical single- and repeated-dose toxicity studies of ET-26 hydrochloride in rats.
YiNan ZhangYu Jun ZhangChaoYi DengDeYing GongYi KangJin LiuWenSheng ZhangPublished in: Journal of applied toxicology : JAT (2020)
ET-26 hydrochloride (ET-26HCl), a novel analog of etomidate, induces as effective sedation, with good cardiac and respiratory stability, as etomidate but with mild adrenocortical suppression. The objective of this study was to evaluate the potential adverse effects of ET-26HCl in rats. In a single-dose toxicity study, abnormal urine color (red) was observed in all groups: control (100%), 8 mg/kg (10%), 16 mg/kg (50%), and 20 mg/kg (70%) ET-26HCl, which returned to normal on the day of dosing. There were no mortalities or serious toxicological signs; the maximum tolerable dose of ET-26HCl was 20 mg/kg. In the repeated-dose toxicity study, deaths occurred in the 12- (13.33% of males) and 16-mg/kg/day (20% of males and 3.33% of females) groups. Abnormal urine color (red or brown) was detected in the control group (10%) and all treatment groups (30%, 46.67%, and 40% at 8, 12 and 16 mg/kg/day, respectively), at a frequency of 1.43% in the control group, 4.76% in 8 mg/kg/day, 7.62% in 12 mg/kg/day, and 4.29% in 16 mg/kg/day. Increases in neutrophils and plasma fibrinogen were temporary and recoverable effects. Macroscopic and histopathologic changes were found only at the injection sites: abnormal skin color, scabbing, thrombus, ulceration, and inflammation. During the recovery period, there was evidence of reversibility, including fibroblast proliferation and vessel recanalization. The no-observed-adverse-effect level of ET-26HCl was 8 mg/kg/day. Toxicokinetic variables of ET-26HCl, except the calculated initial concentration in females on Day 1, showed a dose-dependent increase to exposure, with no gender difference and no evidence of accumulation.