Evaluation of the Single-Dose Toxicity of TA Pharmacopuncture in Rats
Ji Hye Hwang 1 *, Hyo Won Jung 2, Chul Jung 3 *
1 Department of Acupuncture & Moxibustion Medicine, College of Korean Medicine, Gachon University, Seongnam 13120, Republic of Korea
2 College of Korean Medicine, Dongguk University, Gyeongju 38066, Republic of Korea
3 Namsangcheon Korean Medicine Clinic, Seoul 06656, Republic of Korea
* Chul Jung. Namsangcheon Korean Medicine Clinic, Seoul 06656, Republic of Korea. E-mail: jcnu2000@daum.net
[received date: 2019-02-11 / accepted date: 2019-09-03]
Abbreviations
TA: a seven-herb extract consisting of Scutellariae Radix, Phellodendri Cortex, Pulsatillae Radix, Sophorae Tonkinensis Radix et Rhizoma, Aucklandiae Radix, Aquilariae Lignum, and Carthami Fructus KM: Korean medicine
Objectives:
TA is a polyherbal extract comprising seven herbs, typically used for the pharmacopuncture treatment of patients with traffic accident-related injuries and musculoskeletal diseases. This animal study was conducted to evaluate the safety of the TA extract, using a single-dose toxicity test.
Methods:
The dose range and sampling time were first established. Six-week-old Sprague–Dawley rats were administered 1.0 mL of TA or normal saline (control), intramuscularly, for the single-dose toxicity test. The general condition, mortality, and histology of all rats were observed for 2 weeks.
Results:
No abnormal symptoms or deaths were observed in any group. The body weights of the rats in the TA and control groups were similar. No significant differences in histopathology were observed between the groups.
Conclusion:
Our study indicates that 1.0 mL of TA extract may be safely administered for pharmacopuncture for treatment of patients in traditional medicine clinics.
safety, single-dose intramuscular toxicity, TA pharmacopuncture, traditional medicine, acupuncture
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The safety and efficacy of medicinal plants and their formulae used in Korean medicine (KM) have been proven by long-term clinical experience. However, there is a misconception that these medications are hepatotoxic or nephrotoxic, which may lead to patients avoiding traditional medicine for treatment. Thus, despite the clinical and empirical proof of safety, there remains a need to demonstrate the safety of this treatment through scientific toxicity evaluation. Pharmacopuncture, an acupoint injection used in traditional Chinese medicine and TKM, is a new method of acupuncture involving the injection of herbal medicine. Pharmacopuncture is considered to be faster and more effective than oral administration, because it can deliver the pharmacological agent to the target tissue/organ directly, without passing through the digestive system [
1,
2]; therefore, it is often used to provide quick analgesia. TA is a polyherbal extract used for pharmacopuncture. It consists of Scutellariae Radix, Phellodendri Cortex, Pulsatillae Radix, Sophorae Tonkinensis Radix et Rhizoma, Aucklandiae Radix, Aquilariae Lignum, and Carthami Fructus and was thus, named for its principal use in treating traffic accident-related injuries. TA consists of raw plant-based materials only, with an assured stable supply, since Bovis Calculus-Ursi Fel-Moschus extracts [BUM or V], the animal-based extracts which are used to treat acute inflammatory and painful diseases in TKM, are difficult to procure, owing to the international trade conventions regarding endangered species of wild fauna and flora.[
3,
4] In vitro studies have reported that TA inhibits the production of nitric oxide and inflammatory cytokines, such as IL-6 and TNF-α. [
3]The TA extract was developed in 2015 to treat musculoskeletal diseases and traffic-accident injuries in clinical practice. Thus, it has not been widely used to date, and few clinical studies of its therapeutic effects on thoracic pain induced by seat-belts in traffic accidents [
5] and frequent sprains [
6] have been reported. Although the safety of the TA extract has been confirmed by clinical experience, its efficacy and safety require further scientific verification, before it can be used widely in clinical practice. Our earlier studies confirmed the safety of TA by a bacterial reverse mutation test and by assessing in vitro chromosomal abnormalities in TA-treated mammalian-cultured cells [
7,
8]. However, since various types of toxicological data are required to recognize the safety of herbal medicines, additional experimental studies on the safety of TA are required. Therefore, in this study, we investigated the safety of TA using a single-dose intramuscular toxicity test in a murine model.
2.1. Preparation of TA extract and control materials
TA consists of seven herbs (Table
1) All materials were purchased from an herbal materials company (Jayeondameun, Yangju, Korea). The TA extract was manufactured as the finished product (60.5 mg/mL in a sealed vial) using water and alcohol (v/v = 1:1) at an extramural facility, meeting Korean Good Manufacturing Practice standards (Namsangcheon Herbal Medicine Dispensary, Yongin, Korea). The TA extract was stored in a refrigerator at 4.2–5.4°C. Normal saline was used as a control, in the single-dose intramuscular toxicity test.
Fig. 1
(Table
1) Composition of the TA extract
2.2. Experimental animals
For the single-dose intramuscular toxicity test, Sprague–Dawley (SD) rats (6-weeks-old, male, and female, n = 5, per group) were purchased from Orient Bio Inc (Seongnam, Korea). The body weight ranged from 190.1–206.2 g for the male and 147.4–163.4 g for the female rats, respectively. When the animals first arrived, a visual inspection was performed and their weight was recorded with electronic scales (CP3202S, Sartorius, Gottingen, Germany). The general condition and changes in the animals were checked, once daily, during 1 week of acclimatization, and all the animals were judged to be normal. SD rats were housed under controlled environmental conditions with an ambient temperature of 22.5 ± 2°C, relative humidity of 54 ± 6%, 12-h/12-h light/dark cycle, and free access to food (Teklad Certified Irradiated Global 18% Protein Rodent Diet 2918C, Envigo, Huntingdon, UK) and water. The mice were divided into two groups after the acclimatization period. The animal were cared for and treated according to the Korean National Institute of Health and the Korean Academy of Medical Sciences guidelines. This study was conducted at Biotoxtech (Cheongwon, Korea) under the Good Laboratory Practice regulations [
9], with approval of the Institutional Animal Ethics Committee of Biotoxtech (No. 170574, 170549).
2.3. Single-dose intramuscular toxicity test in Sprague–Dawley rats
2.3.1. Administration and group designation
Since the muscles are the target tissues for pharmacopuncture, the rats were administered TA extract was via intramuscular injection. The expected clinical dose of the test extract, TA, is 0.1 to 1.0 mL (0.1 mL/time) in humans. In a preliminary test (Biotoxtech Study No.: B17513P1), no mortalities were observed after intramuscular injection with a single dose of 0.25, 0.5, and 1.0 mL of TA in male and female rats. Based on the preliminary test, the dose of TA was set to 1.0 mL in this study (G2) and the same amount of saline was administered in the control group (G1) (Table
2) Ten male and 10 female rats, with body weights closest to the mean weight were selected for this experiment. The selected animals were divided into two groups (5 rats of each sex per group) and were administered intramuscular injections into the muscles of the left and the right femur, with a total dose of 1.0 mL per animal.
Fig. 2
(Table
2) Group designation of a single-dose intramuscular toxicity test in rats
2.3.2. Observation and inspection
On the day of injection, day 0, the general conditions, including toxicity indication type, toxicity expression and recovery times, and any deaths, were observed at 30 minutes, and 1, 2, 4, and 6 hours after injection. Their general conditions were observed once daily, from day 1 to day 14 after injection. The animals’ body weights were measured before injection on day 0, and on days 3, 7, and 14 after injection.
After the observation period, all animals were anesthetized with CO2 and exsanguinated through the abdominal aorta. Complete postmortem examinations were performed for all animals. During the autopsy, the injection sites were harvested and preserved in 10% neutral buffered formalin. For the histopathological evaluation, preserved tissues were trimmed, dehydrated, paraffin-embedded, and then sectioned and stained with hematoxylin and eosin. All residual tissues were preserved in 10% neutral buffered formalin.
2.4. Statistical analysis
Statistical evaluation of the single-dose intramuscular toxicity test was performed by analyzing the body weights. After testing for equipotentiality using the Folded-F test and finding equal variance, Student’s t-test was performed (P < 0.05, P < 0.01). SAS version 9. 3 (SAS Institute Inc., Cary, NC, USA) was used for all analyses
3.1. Effects of TA extract on general health and body weight
During the observation period, there were no abnormalities, general symptoms of ill-health, or deaths in the male or female rats in the control and the TA-treated (1.0 mL) groups. During the experiment, the weights of the male rats in the TA extract and the control groups changed from 198.4 ± 5.8 g (G1) and 196.5 ± 5.2 g (G2) to 336.2 ± 29.0 g (G1) and 329.2 ± 21.4 g (G2), respectively, while those of the female rats changed from 154.6 ± 5.9 g (G1) and 154.5 ± 5.9 g (G2) to 212.8 ± 8.9 g (G1) and 209.0 ± 16.6 g (G2), respectively. However, there were no statistically significant changes in body weight associated with TA injection (Figure 1, (Table
3)
Fig. 3
Figure 1 Effects of the TA extract on the body weight of male (A) and female (B) rats
Fig. 4
(Table
3) Effects of TA extract on the mean body weights in the single-dose intramuscular toxicity test in rats
3.2. Effects of the TA extract on visual autopsy findings
During autopsy, no remarkable findings were noted in the male and female rats, in the control or the TA-treated groups.
3.3 Effects of the TA extract on histology of the injection sites
Local tolerance of TA was tested by microscopic examination of the prepared tissue obtained from the injection sites of all animals. Microscopic examination did not reveal any TA-related changes in this study.
Evaluation of non-clinical toxicity of medicinal plants and herbal medications, forms the basis for demonstrating the safety of these preparations and is also essential for the approval of clinical trials. Currently, a variety of pharmacopuncture medications are used in traditional clinics and several pharmacopuncture preparations have been developed, based on various literature reports and clinical experience. Pharmacopuncture medicines require non-clinical and clinical assessments of efficacy and safety to achieve scientific recognition. The Korea Food and Drug Administration requires nonclinical data on safety, including genotoxicity, single-dose toxicity, and repeated-dose toxicity, as well as non-clinical data on efficacy, to approve clinical trials of herbal Korean medicines [
9-
12]. Scutellariae Radix and Phellodendri Cortex are listed in the Korean Pharmacopoeia and Aucklandiae Radix, Aquilariae Lignum, and Carthami Fructus are listed in the Korean herbal medicine, standard edition, endorsed by the Korea Food and Drug Administration. Therefore, safety data for each herbal constituent may not be required for the evaluation of TA. However, the route of administration is not oral, but rather through am acupuncture point. Therefore, toxicity evaluation should be performed, to establish the scientific basis for its action and assess the safety of this fairly new medication. Although the safety of its constituents has been verified by the Korea Food and Drug Administration, it is essential to carry out a toxicological evaluation study, in order to establish scientific and public trust in the safety of TA [
1,
2]. The single-dose toxicity test, qualitatively and quantitatively, evaluates toxicity that occurs within a short period of time, when a test substance is administered to a test animal in a single dose. Although animal species with metabolic efficiency similar to humans are preferred while conducting toxicity assessments, they may be difficult to perform, at the single-dose toxicity test stage. Therefore, rats are most commonly preferred among rodents and dogs are most commonly preferred among non-rodents. Moreover, sex-related differences in the manifestation of toxicity, may exist, depending on the drug. Therefore, one or more animals of both sexes, must be evaluated for toxicity [
12,
13]. Therefore, we evaluate the safety of 1.0 mL TA injection in 10 male and 10 female SD rats in this study, with 10 rats in the TA-treatment and control groups. For 14 days after the administration of the TA extract, general conditions were observed and body weight was measured. Subsequently, euthanasia was performed for autopsy and local examination of the administration site. We found no changes in general conditions, weight, or histology caused by single-dose intramuscular injection of the TA extract in either, male or female rats. There were also no changes in tissues or organs due to the injection, and no deaths or abnormalities were observed in any of the rats. Moreover, no significant differences were observed in body weight during the 14-day observation period after injection of the TA extract. Thus, pharmacopuncture with TA extract at 1.0 mL appears to be safe in animals and humans. Although this study indicates that pharmacopuncture with TA extract is safe for administration at a dose of 1.0 mL or less, studies on the adverse-effects have not been officially reported yet. Moreover, since this study only investigated the effect of a single-dose injection over a 14-day observation period, further studies on its long-term effects and the effects of multiple doses are required before pharmacopuncture with TA extract can be established as an effective analgesic for patients with pain. If additional toxicity studies, such as in vitro chromosome aberration tests and in vitro mouse lymphoma TK assays, are required to firmly establish the safety of using TA extract for pharmacopuncture in clinical practice.
In conclusion, our study demonstrated that the safe, non-toxic dose of TA extract may be considered to be 1.0 mL or less. Thus, the TA extract may be safe for pharmacopuncture in patients in traditional medicine clinics.
This work was supported by from the National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) grant funded by the Korean government (MSIT) (No. NRF-2017R1C1B5076224).
The authors declare that they have no conflicts of interest.
C Jung designed all experiments. C Jung and JH Hwang performed the statistical analysis, interpreted the experimental results. JH Hwang wrote the manuscript. JH Hwang and HW Jung revised the manuscript. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.
Availability of Data and Material
The data set generated and analyzed during the study is available from the corresponding author on request. All materials used in this study are accurately recorded in the Methods section.
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